Central Colorado Gems: Chaffee County’s Heritage Area and Collegiate Peaks Scenic Byway
by Alan Robinson- Chaffee County Heritage Area Advisory Board member
Concern for preserving “heritage resources” (the collective natural, cultural, historic and scenic features which define an area’s sense of place) in Chaffee County took a front seat in 2004 when its county commissioners ambitiously declared the whole county a heritage area. They also appointed an 11-member Advisory Board representing public land managers, historical societies, towns, ranchers, local nature associations and the general public, and charged us not only with identifying heritage, but with educating our fellow citizens about its value in social, ecological and economic terms, and with planning how heritage can be managed to preserve and perpetuate those values. Board members volunteer their services but, recognizing future administrative and technical services, the commissioners also appointed non-profit Greater Arkansas River Nature Association (GARNA, www.garna.org) and its director as the board’s executive arm. Read the rest of this article
April , 2010 Comments Off
Backroads & Byways, by John Daters and Drea Kufkin
[amazon-product]0881507873[/amazon-product]Review by Ed Quillen
Tourism – November 2008 – Colorado Central Magazine
Backroads & Byways of Colorado Drives, Day Trips & Weekend Excursions
by John Daters & Drea Knufken
Published in 2008 by the Countryman Press
ISBN 978-0-88150-787-4 Read the rest of this article
November , 2008 Comments Off
Europeans continue to visit Yellowstone
Brief by Allen Best
Tourism – September 2008 – Colorado Central Magazine
Gas prices reached record highs in June. Yet at Yellowstone, the quintessential drive-by national park, visitation reached a record high. What’s going on?
Jonathan Schechter, an economics columnist in the Jackson Hole News & Guide, said there may be an easy explanation for this seeming anomaly: international visitors. Because park officials don’t track the nationalities of visitors, there’s no way to know for sure, he says, but anecdotal evidence points firmly toward that as an explanation. Read the rest of this article
September , 2008 Comments Off
Guten Tag, Buenos Días, Bon Jour …
Brief by Central Staff
Tourism – July 2008 – Colorado Central Magazine
If you work around tourists in Central Colorado, you might want to brush up on your high-school German, Spanish, French, or Italian, as merchants tell us that we’re seeing quite a few more foreign tourists this year, most of them from Europe. Read the rest of this article
July , 2008 Comments Off
Yes, we are all tourons
Essay by Patrick Hannigan
Tourism – August 2007 – Colorado Central Magazine
“How far is it to Harts Pass?” a tourist couple once asked me. I told them it was about 20 miles. “How far is it back?” they asked.
That natural selection has not rendered tourists extinct seems a mystery that defies evolution. And if you believe God created tourists, you’ve probably wondered, “What was He or She thinking?” Read the rest of this article
August , 2007 Comments Off
The economics of 14ers
Brief by Central Staff
Tourism – May 2007 – Colorado Central Magazine
If everyone took federal law seriously, the United States would have gone metric about 20 years ago, and there would be no such thing as a 14er. In meters, those 54 Colorado peaks whose summits exceed 14,000 feet above sea level would be 4,267ers, and that’s not the stuff of lore. Read the rest of this article
May , 2007 Comments Off
Brave New West, by Jim Stiles
[amazon-product]0816524742[/amazon-product]Review by Columbine Quillen
Tourism – March 2007 – Colorado Central Magazine
Brave New West – Morphing Moab at the Speed of Greed
by Jim Stiles
Published in 2007 by the University of Arizona Press
ISBN 0816524742 Read the rest of this article
March , 2007 Comments Off
Save Snippy, save the world?
Article by Marcia Darnell
Tourism – February 2007 – Colorado Central Magazine
THE ’60S ARE REMEMBERED in the U.S. as a time of turbulence, of war and protest, of free love and hippies. When people think of the ’60s they recall love beads and incense, the Beatles and tie-dye, sex, drugs, and rock ‘n’ roll. Read the rest of this article
February , 2007 Comments Off
Breckenridge putting money into heritage tourism
Brief by Allen Best
Tourism – January 2007 – Colorado Central Magazine
Breckenridge town officials have added $360,000 of funding to their talk about boosting heritage tourism. Read the rest of this article
January , 2007 Comments Off
Big fire? Big deal
Article by Marcia Darnell
Tourism – August 2006 – Colorado Central Magazine
MAYBE COLORADANS have become jaded. Maybe we put implicit trust in smoke jumpers. Or maybe it’s just a pervasive case of denial-itis. Whatever the cause, the Mato Vega fire in June caused little disruption to the money flow in the eastern San Luis Valley. Read the rest of this article
August , 2006 Comments Off
Breckenridge wants to focus on history
Brief by Allen Best
Tourism – June 2006 – Colorado Central Magazine
Breckenridge, as a modern tourist resort, has always taken pride in its history as a gold-mining town dating to 1859. The town continues to work toward leveraging that legacy into the lucrative market of cultural and heritage tourism. Read the rest of this article
June , 2006 Comments Off
Where Coloradans want to go
Brief by Central Staff
Tourism – December 2005 – Colorado Central Magazine
The Colorado office of the AAA Auto Club (used to be the American Automobile Association, but everybody called it “Triple A”) maintains a website to help members find the best routes, rooms, and the like. The club also keeps track of the places that get the most inquiries. Read the rest of this article
December , 2005 Comments Off
Heritage tourists spend more, study says
Brief by Central Staff
Tourism – December 2005 – Colorado Central Magazine
For the past couple of years, Chaffee County has been promoting itself as the “Headwaters of Adventure” for tourists. But the local tourist industry might make more money with another catchphrase, one that promotes “Heritage Tourism” rather than “Adventure Tourism.” Read the rest of this article
December , 2005 Comments Off
Great days with the bikers
Letter from Monty Holmes
Tourism – July 2005 – Colorado Central Magazine
Editors:
Well, there were thousands of bikers around this Valley on Memorial Day weekend, and we thank them for visiting! There were so many places (especially with 360º views from a motorcycle) of exceptional beauty, that they were spread out all over the area. And darn nice folks they were! Read the rest of this article
July , 2005 Comments Off
Yet another Royal Gorge war
Brief by Central Staff
Tourism – November 2003 – Colorado Central Magazine
Generally, we think of the “Royal Gorge War” as something that happened a long time ago — specifically, in 1879 when two railroads were battling in court and on the ground for the right to lay tracks in “the Grand Canyon of the Arkansas,” a defile so narrow that there was room for only one set of tracks. Read the rest of this article
November , 2003 Comments Off
Getting Branded
Essay by Ed Quillen
Tourism – August 2003 – Colorado Central Magazine
ONE BENEFIT of the commercial dialect of modern American English is that it often consists of a string of buzzwords, and all you have to do to sound plausible, perhaps even intelligent, is string a few of them together: “Our commitment to diversity and sustainability is a vital component of our strategic visioning …” Read the rest of this article
August , 2003 Comments Off
A real work-out for travelers
Brief by Central Staff
Tourism – June 2003 – Colorado Central Magazine
Salida was named one of “the 48 Best Multi-Sport Towns You Can Drive To” in the June edition of Hooked on the Outdoors, “The Original Backyard Travel & Gear Magazine.” Read the rest of this article
June , 2003 Comments Off
Visits down at San Dunes
Brief by Central Staff
Tourism – December 2002 – Colorado Central Magazine
We often hear that tourism was off last summer, and now we’ve got confirmation from some official U.S. government statistics.
As of the end of October, only 227,648 visitors had entered Great Sand Dunes National Monument. For the same period in 2001, there were 269,634 admissions. Read the rest of this article
December , 2002 Comments Off
There’s no such thing as bad publicity
Brief by Central Staff
Tourism – May 2002 – Colorado Central Magazine
A wise outside observer would probably conclude that in little mountain towns, our main political talent is fighting with each other.
Seldom do these squabbles go further than the local newspaper, but Georgetown was an exception during March and early April.
The old silver mining camp, which sits on Interstate 70 about 50 miles west of Denver, got some national attention — as in Newsweek and Jay Leno — on account of a recall election directed at Koleen Brooks, the mayor. Read the rest of this article
May , 2002 Comments Off
Seeing & Being Seen: Tourism in the American West
[amazon-product]0700610839[/amazon-product]Review by Ed Quillen
Tourism – October 2001 – Colorado Central Magazine
Seeing & Being Seen – Tourism in the American West
Edited by David M. Wrobel and Patrick T. Long
Foreword by Earl Pomeroy
Published for the Center of the American West
in 2001 by University Press of Kansas
ISBN 0-7006-1083-9 Read the rest of this article
October , 2001 Comments Off
New Factory Towns?
Brief by Central Staff
Tourism – August 2001 – Colorado Central Magazine
We were talking to someone from a neighboring town recently, who said he liked everything about Salida except that it had too many festivals: FIBArk, then Artwalk, then the Fourth, then the Brewers Rendezvous …
Well, at least it hasn’t reached the level of Telluride, where there’s a bluegrass festival, a film festival, a mushroom festival — indeed, so many festivals that they have even set aside a “no-festival weekend.” Read the rest of this article
August , 2001 Comments Off
Sacrifice Zone expected to import more workers
Brief by Central Staff
Tourism – August 2001 – Colorado Central Magazine
The projected employment figures for the Sacrifice Zone are almost frightening.
According to the demographics division of the Colorado Department of Local Affairs, in 2020 the resort businesses in Eagle, Summit, and Pitkin counties will need 63,000 more workers than their resident labor pools can provide. Read the rest of this article
August , 2001 Comments Off
‘No Vacancy’ signs get a workout in July
Brief by Central Staff
Tourism – July 2001 – Colorado Central Magazin
If you’re looking for a motel room in Chaffee County, July is when you’ll have to look the hardest, because that’s when room occupancy peaks — 86.3% last year, and 91.6% in 1999. Read the rest of this article
July , 2001 Comments Off
Speculating about our gasoline future
Brief by Central Staff
Tourism – June 2001 – Colorado Central Magazine
Since most of our tourists arrive by auto, and gasoline prices are high, what’s that mean for summer business in Central Colorado and the San Luis Valley?
The short answer is that no one knows, although it’s fun to speculate: Read the rest of this article
June , 2001 Comments Off
Creede residents vote against a tourist train
Brief by Central Staff
Tourism – June 2000 – Colorado Central Magazine
Many mountain towns would be eager to get another 400 visitors a day, but Creede isn’t one of them.
The visitors would arrive by rail on the 21-mile line from South Fork to Creede, which the Durango-based Denver & Rio Grande Historical Foundation plans to purchase from the Union Pacific this summer. Freight service ended in 1985 when the last of Creede’s mines closed. Read the rest of this article
June , 2000 Comments Off
Can Lake County afford to wait while they fix the pass?
Brief by Central Staff
Tourism – December 1999 – Colorado Central Magazine
Independence Pass, which connects Leadville to Aspen via Balltown and Twin Lakes, is the highest paved crossing of the Continental Divide in the United States at 12,095 feet.
The road, also known as Colo. 82, is a popular tourist route that puts people and money into the town of Twin Lakes when it’s open — generally from Memorial Day to the first part of October. It hasn’t been kept open in the winter since 1886, because the railroad reached Aspen the next year. Read the rest of this article
December , 1999 Comments Off
It’s down at the end of Harrison Street: Hearbreak Hotel?
Brief by Central Staff
Tourism – November 1999 – Colorado Central Magazine
On account of its altitude and climate, Leadville celebrates St. Patrick’s Day about six months earlier (or later) than the rest of the world does.
That is, the Irish are honored on March 17 everywhere else, but Leadville holds St. Patrick’s Practice Day on the weekend closest to Sept. 17 — six months away, and generally a better day for a parade in the Cloud City than March 17 (although Leadville also celebrates the original holiday). Read the rest of this article
November , 1999 Comments Off
More tales from the Stupid Zone
Essay by Lynda La Rocca
Tourism – November 1999 – Colorado Central Magazine
THE CURMUDGEON IS BACK! And after enduring another tourist season in the “Stupid Zone,” I’m crankier than ever.
Regular Colorado Central readers already know that a Stupid Zone, a phrase coined by none other than this magazine’s publisher, is a place where the misguided and denial-prone insist on putting down roots (i.e., in avalanche chutes, on crumbling hillsides, within toe-dipping distance of the ocean, next to international airports), only to spend the rest of their lives whining about the adverse conditions that define these sites (i.e., snowslides, mud slides, floods, noise). Read the rest of this article
November , 1999 Comments Off
Devil’s Bargain by Hal Rothman
[amazon-product]0700609105[/amazon-product]Review by Ed Quillen
Tourism – July 1999 – Colorado Central Magazine
Devil’s Bargains – Tourism in the Twentieth-Century American West
by Hal K. Rothman
Published in 1998 by University Press of Kansas
ISBN 0-7006-0910-5 Read the rest of this article
July , 1999 Comments Off
The Myth of Santa Fe by Chris Wilson
[amazon-product]0826317464[/amazon-product]Review by Kenneth Munsell
Tourism – May 1999 – Colorado Central Magazine
The Myth of Santa Fé – Creating a Modern Regional Tradition
by Chris Wilson.
Published in 1997 by the University of New Mexico Press
ISBN 0-826-31746-4 Read the rest of this article
May , 1999 Comments Off
Tourism and Community Identity
Brief by Central Staff
Tourism – April 1999 – Colorado Central Magazine
Tourism and Community Identity
Can a town retain its identity after industrial tourism arrives?
A 16-page article in the Winter 1998 edition of Montana: The Magazine of Western History examines Colorado’s Steamboat Springs and its struggles through the years. The article, “Powder Aplenty for Native and Guest Alike: Steamboat Springs, Corporate Control, and the Changing Meaning of Home,” was written by Nevada historian Hal K. Rothman. Read the rest of this article
April , 1999 Comments Off
Traveling with Dogs in Colorado
[amazon-product]155591375X[/amazon-product]Review by Ed Quillen
Tourism – January 1999 – Colorado Central Magazine
Canine Colorado – Where to Go and What to Do with Your Dog
by Cindy Hirschfeld
Published in 1998 by Fulcrum
ISBN 1-55591-375-X Read the rest of this article
January , 1999 Comments Off
Reader’s Digest encourages you to visit Nathrop
Brief by Central Staff
Tourism – November 1998 – Colorado Central Magazine
Reader’s Digest encourages you to visit Nathrop
We just learned that we’re on one of The Most Scenic Drives in America, as proclaimed in a book of that name issued by Reader’s Digest Association last year.
Salida and Nathrop (Buena Vista just misses) are on the “Colorado Springs Loop” which starts in the Springs, of course, goes to Cripple Creek from Divide, back up past the Fossil Beds to Florissant, and across South Park to traverse Trout Creek Pass. Read the rest of this article
November , 1998 Comments Off
Sometimes you can’t help asking stupid questions
Essay by Columbine Quillen
Tourism – November 1997 – Colorado Central Magazine
Although I had been surrounded by it for most of my life, last summer I finally got a taste of the whitewater rafting business. That’s when I worked for Colorado Whitewater Photography — where my job involved going to various rafting companies to sell their clients pictures of their once-in-a-lifetime whitewater adventure. Read the rest of this article
November , 1997 Comments Off
Confessions of a Survivor of Stupid-Question season
Essay by Shelley Jacobs
Tourism – November 1997 – Colorado Central Magazine
This portion of Central Colorado seems to have four seasons: Rafting Season, Hunting Season, Ski Season, and Mud Season. Now that the Rafting Season (subheading: Mountain biking, Hiking, Fishing, Doing-the-rustic-backwoods- mountain-thing Season) is over, and now that most of those generous vacationers have returned to their own communities to work hard so that they can make enough money for their next vacation, we can talk frankly about them. Read the rest of this article
November , 1997 Comments Off
Grand Tours and Cook’s Tours, by Lynne Withey
[amazon-product]1854105485[/amazon-product]Review by Ed Quillen
Tourism – June 1997 – Colorado Central Magazine
Grand Tours and Cook’s Tours – A History of Leisure Travel, 1750-1915
by Lynne Withey
Published in 1997 by William Morrow & Co.
ISBN 1854105485 Read the rest of this article
June , 1997 Comments Off
Interstate 70′s swath continues to expand
Essay by Ed Quillen
Tourism industry – February 1997 – Colorado Central Magazine
One of the inspirations for starting this magazine occurred several years ago on a snowy afternoon while I was sitting in a saloon in Buena Vista, enjoying the view out its big window until a Copper Mountain bus pulled up and disgorged a dozen or so people. Read the rest of this article
February , 1997 Comments Off
Overwhelmed in Alaska
Brief by Central Staff
Tourism – November 1995 – Colorado Central Magazine
The feeling that your town is being overwhelmed by tourists is not unique to Central Colorado. National Public Radio recently carried a report from Juneau, Alaska, a popular destination for cruise ships. On a summer day, the city’s 30,000 people can be joined by 10,000 visitors fresh off the boat. Read the rest of this article
November , 1995 Comments Off
Santa Fé Blues
Brief by Central Staff
Tourism – October 1995 – Colorado Central Magazine
Is the crash coming? Pinched tourist flows and declining real-estate prices?
What goes up must go down, and a recent New York Times story about Santa Fé indicates that the city may have already hit the top of this cycle, with a downward slide before it. Read the rest of this article
October , 1995 Comments Off
You can’t run and you can’t hide
Essay by Ed Quillen
Tourism – August 1995 – Colorado Central Magazine
This past June was pretty dismal — literally so, because sunshine was a rare novelty, rather than a customary blessing. Looming dark clouds dropped moisture constantly in every known form: rain, sleet, hail, snow. Some streams jumped their banks, and if hot weather had arrived to dissolve the record snowpacks, we could have suffered some devastating floods. Read the rest of this article
August , 1995 Comments Off
Increased Tourist Flow Scenic Byway
Brief by Central Staff
Tourism – June 1995 – Colorado Central Magazine
Even though it often appears that Colorado cares only about its interstate highways and adjacent sacrifice zones, that’s not quite true. Among Colorado’s roads now are 21 Scenic and Historic Byways, selected by a commission named by Governor Roy Romer in 1989. Read the rest of this article
June , 1995 Comments Off
Resort summit produces no magic
Article by Allen Best
Tourism – March 1995 – Colorado Central Magazine
Did you think that 150 people from five counties were going to get together and solve all our resort ills in a day? Don’t expect magic out of the five-county resort summit held at Beaver Creek last December. Any white rabbits delivered from this process will be labored, and unlike fecund rabbits, slow to arrive and in a small litter. Read the rest of this article
March , 1995 Comments Off
Discovered Country, edited by Scott Norris
[amazon-product]0963762303[/amazon-product]Review by Ed Quillen
Tourism – March 1995 – Colorado Central Magazine
Discovered Country: Tourism and Survival in the American West
Scott Norris, editor
Stone Ladder Press
University of New Mexico
ISBN 0-9637623-0-3 Read the rest of this article
March , 1995 Comments Off
Just Say Nine to an expanded golf course
Essay by Ed Quillen
Tourism – March 1994 – Colorado Central Magazine
The hot issue around Salida these days appears to be a land trade between the city and the state highway department that could result in an expanded golf course. Read the rest of this article
March , 1994 Comments Off








