Showing posts with label Colorado. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colorado. Show all posts

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Mile High Capitol Adventure

Folks nicknamed Denver the “Mile High City” due to it’s altitude above sea level.

The portion of Denver that is factually a Mile High may be limited to skyscrapers and clocktowers, but there is an absolute and accurate measure: the State Capitol Building.

My buddy David and I resolved to take a hike to the top.

On the way in, we horsed around in the vast fountains on the mall. David lifted up his shirt to show me his belly and said he needed a new pic for “Hot or Not,” the photo rating site that was popular during the first dot com rush.


I was obliged to pose with one of the Capitol’s stately cannons between my legs. This photo op was so popular we had to wait in line behind a trio of teenagers for our turn.


On our way inside the building, David observed that it was 420 and made the appropriate devotion.

It should be indicated that he was not paranoid about this at all! Nor did it in any way influence the security guards to double check the inside of my backpack!

We stumbled upon a docent led tour and merged.

We learned that all the wood, brass materials, granite and marble in the Capitol had been sourced from inside the state. This was so important to the builders that gifts of more valuable materials were turned away.

Also noted: Wyoming was the first state to give women the right to vote based only on a technicality. Colorado proposed and passed the legislation first, but Wyoming had their election sooner.

Something I didn’t expect to be introduced to was a series of portraits commemorating the states race variety!

From the capitols establishment during the industrial revolution, Denver paid lip service to the idea of racial unity signified by newly freed slaves, westward and northward migrants, railroad workers of Asian descent, and the still very robust native population building the state together. In context, it's an uneasy collection.


Whereas once one climbed a long rickety spiral of stairs to ascend the Capitol dome, our way was smoothed by a short elevator trip and a pause at a new, dense museum.

The highlight of this was playing Godzilla with a miniature version of the Capitol.


Inside the dome there are attractions upwards, downwards, and outwards.

City Fathers are remembered with stained glass portraits lining a columnar molding above.


In the center of the dome is the dramatic rotunda - not for those with with a fear of heights.


Outside, in every railing, are brass pointers indicating the direction and the highest mountaintops in view.


While some of the northern peaks are now obscured, I found the pointers reassuring.

Early on, the states’ natural beauty was determined to be more worthy of these plaques that what battle happened where or what business was established in what location.

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Denver Public Bike Adventure

Denver's citizens made their city green partially by design and partially by necessity.

Wealthy Denverites have been endowing huge tracts of land to the municipality since the gold rush in an attempt to urbanize the wide-open feel of the Rockies.

When I was a child, there was still a working cattle ranch in near range of the state capitol. The foothills were underdeveloped and still quite lush.

By the time I went to high school, a boom in development left Denver struggling for air. Once reknown for its numerous sunny days and abundant oxygen, temperature inversions trapped Denver’s carbon emissions in the metro area. Air quality was second only to Los Angeles in severity.

Help was already on the way. As an air traffic hub with millions in federal dollars, Denver made bold plans to enhance its transit and its airport. It took the green road without looking back.

Today, five light-rail lines extend far into the suburbs. A robust bus line, a mall closed to vehicles, and wide sidewalks help its natives get granular with civic attractions. Denver also boasts more parks per capita than any other city.

The public bike system is a further enhancement. One can rent bikes in a number of convenient, high traffic locations near parks and businesses.

I paid five dollars for a 24 hour membership to see how much of the local character I could take in during one day.

I went from The Denver Post building to Cheeseman Park. I continued through the Speer Boulevard Bike Trail to the Denver University stop off near Larimer Square.



The racks of public bikes are make more striking by their bright red color. Also, every bike has a basket. Perfect for shopping!


This is some of the public art along the Spear Boulevard bike trail. What was once an inconvenient ditch has been transformed into a twisting, elegant trail that takes cyclists from the South East part of Denver into LoDo or Lower Downtown.


File under "This is not a water feature." The trail follows an indigenous whitewater stream the downtown area was constructed around back in the day.



The gardens at Cheeseman Park. There are several bike racks around the park.



The giant clocktower at Arapahoe in LoDo where Denverites ring in their new year!


Larimer Square is a historic preservation district in LoDo with restaurants and shopping.


One of my all time favorite rest-stops at the end of any jounery! The Tattered Cover is a world-reknown independent bookstore with a lovely cafe. This is Jackie's Corner where authors covet the chance to be featured.

Monday, April 11, 2011

Game Day Adventure at Coors Field

It's tough to snag good seats to watch the World Champion San Francisco Giants play baseball in their hometown.

Seeing them Coors Field in Denver is an excellent compromise. Seats just to the left of home plate were absolutely attainable.

The Colorado Rockies franchise is relatively young, only 15 years old. Their design of their expansive stadium has quirky touches appropriate for a team looking to endear themselves.

Wynkopp Street, which leads pedestrians from the heart of LoDo (Lower Downtown) to the stadium, is trimmed with baseball themed sidewalks and an asymmetrical arch which is a tribute to game balls.

Inside the park is another playful touch. A small pond, stocked with mallards, is tucked at the edge of the first base outfield.

When a home run is hit, the scoreboard lights up with the phrase, "Watch Out Ducks!"

Entering Coors Field from Wynkopp Street


Yours truly beside the columns of the ball arch, where various balls from the koosh ball to the croquet ball are commemorated


I'm standing fewer that twenty rows back


Fresh popcorn and fresh lemonade (hold the sugar) are de rigueur vegan ballpark treats


"Watch Out Ducks!": the fountains shoot up every time there is a home run at Coors Field

Friday, April 08, 2011

Nightlife Adventures in Denver, Colorado

When I fly into Denver, I usually stay with my Mom just north of here. So staying with a friend in town for a few days and nights is an adult treat.

My pal David is typical of Californians emigrating to Colorado. He used to have a high-powered career and an overpriced home. He now has greater disposable income relative to necessities and a more conservative outlook on healthy living.

David lives in Capitol Hill, walking distance from dozens of brew houses, restaurants, and alternative businesses. He lives with his 15-years-young Pomeranian, Teddy and cultivates a contrarian sense of humor.

Because Teddy is mostly bald, people ask what breed he is when one walks him. David says his breed is “old.”

His computer is programmed to play a riff from “Master of Puppets,” Metallica’s famous drug-addiction song, whenever one of his friends logs onto Facebook.

The vibe in this part of downtown Denver skews younger and more transient than other U.S. cities. There is no rent control. The market is filled with attractive affordable sale apartments. There are lots of alternative businesses.




It is more diverse than the rest of Colorado, where the dominant Mexican-American and Euro-mutt contingents saturate a landscape covered with churches and schools. There are tons of black folks and gays and a small international crowd.

Many of the nightspots in Denver give casual nods to the its Wild West roots. It is not unusual to see cowboys or wagon wheels or beer barrels. Instead of a disco ball, Charlie’s has a pair of mirror paneled shit-kickers hanging over the dance floor.


Wednesday, June 16, 2010

New Adventures


I’m on the road again!


If you are near one of the following locations, please get in touch with me deltamagnet@yahoo.com so we can get our social network on.


- Columbia, Missouri

- St. Louis, Missouri

- Nashville, Tennessee

- Knoxville, Tennessee

- Asheville, North Carolina

- Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina

- Denver, Colorado

- Boulder, Colorado

- Greeley, Colorado


And be sure to friend me up on Facebook if you have not done so already.




Friday, September 04, 2009

Reviving Frequency Hopper

For the next four months, I'm reviving Frequency Hopper, the travel blog I began in 2006 to commemorate a Transatlantic cruise I took with my mother.

Presently, I'm traveling to Costa Rica, Panama, Ecuador, Nicaragua, Missouri, and Colorado.

My first stop is Abercam La Fortuna, a resort exclusively for gay men located in the heart of Costa Rica, as close to the active Arenal Volcano as is legally possible. I will live there for close to two months.

Unlike Delta Magnet Blog, which I've nurtured during roughly that same period, Frequency Hopper will lean more toward the plain spoken.

Travel has an implicit reward which adjectives detract from. It's an altered state without drugs or sleeplessness.

For the purposes of clarity, all times will be stated on a 24 hour clock.