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Living the Dream in Aspen: Skiing, Lifestyle, Parties, Events, Travel, Gossip, Society, Entertainment, Restaurants and Bars, Nightlife, Photographs.

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Entries from November 1, 2012 - November 30, 2012

Friday
Nov162012

Aspen Sports & Chris Davenport : Ring of Fire (in store 11/21)

Chris Davenport ,Photo: SpyderAt AspenSpin we may be a little old for hero worship...but Aspen's own hometown hero Chris Davenport has truly earned and deserves all the accolades he receives in the skiing world.

If you know Chris Davenport you know he's a great guy, a family man, friendly to everybody, nice, polite, patient with the fans and a true ambassador to skiing. Not to mention... he's a ripping skier.   Dav comes from a skiing family and was a ski racer in college at The University of Colorado.  Later, after moving to Aspen he won the World Extreme Skiing Championships, an X Games medal, the 24 Hours of Aspen and competed in many other contests and World Class competitions.  Today, he is one of the most accomplished BIG MOUNTAIN Skiers in the World.

In 2006 when Dav hiked and skied all 54 of Colorado's 14,000 foot peaks in less than one year he became a ski mountaineering legend.  Since then he's bagged numerous highly technical first descents, hiked and skied peaks all over the world, including Antarctica.  Chris has been in more than 30 ski movies and appears in all the ski mags.  He's also a highly regarded TV commentator and an author.  Perhaps his greatest work is with POW (Protect Our Winters) a non-profit organization that has mobilized the winter sports community to take action against climate change.

 Davenport's athletic ability and skill along with his complete attention to detail and safety has allowed him to carve out a spectacular career as a professional skier.  He creates his own adventures now.   Last spring, Chris and a bunch of his friends tooled around the Great Northwest hiking and skiing all the Volcano's they could find. 

It became known as:

The RING of FIRE Tour.

WEDNESDAY November 21 at 6 pm at ASPEN SPORTS (Cooper Street Mall location), Davenport will be giving a brief talk about The RING of FIRE Tour.   You'll have a chance to meet & greet Chris Davenport and hear about all his BIG MOUNTAIN exploits. We'll assume there will be posters, autographs and plenty of swag from Spyder.

See all the details by clicking:

ASPEN SPORTS and CHRIS DAVENPORT / RING of FIRE (in store).

Chris Davenport doing his thing. Courtesy Photo: Photo by Christian Pondella.

*AspenSpin recieved promotional considerations for this post.

Wednesday
Nov142012

Helmet Band-Its: Safe & Stylish on the Slopes

Helmet Band-Its. Safety Meets Fashion.According to SIA (Snowsports Industry of America) 67% of skiers & riders in America now wear helmets on the slopes.   That figure is up considerably from the 25% who wore helmets in 2002/03.  AspenSpin has been advocating helmet use and skier safety for many years, ever since a helmet-less Andy Party collided head-on with a BIG Aspen tree at high speed.  The tree did not move, but luckily A. Party was not seriously hurt.

In Aspen...everybody wants to look super-stylie on the slopes...and sometimes ski helmets can create a style quandary.   Not so any more with the advent of Helmet Band-Its.

 Helmet Band-Its allow safety and fashion to work together.  Helmet Band-Its are a modern fashion accessory that allow thrill-seeking fashionistas to combine substance and form and convert their plain old safety helmet into a trend-setting headpiece.

Click to Shop for Helmet Band-Its

Robin Dorman created Helmet Band-Its after sustaining serious injuries in a ski accident...without a helmet.  As a result she developed Helmet Band-Its, a full line of sleek, easy to use, modern fashion accessories to make any helmet look chic.  The Helmet Band-Its line includes both premium fur and faux fur and comes in a wide variety of styles and colors.  Helmet Band-Its are versatile and interchangeable accessories that can be stylishly worn with your helmet, as a headband or as a shawl.   They can also be matched with wrist cuffs to complete your elegant look.  Helmet Band-Its are made in the USA and only use the finest European faux and premium furs.  Women, teens and children can all look their best while staying safe with Helmet Band-Its.

Helmet Band-Its. Click to Shop.Skiing in Aspen is all about style.  We are exposed to all the newest, coolest and most exclusive winter  fashions on our slopes...from duct tape to mink.  Helmet Band-Its allow skiers and riders to look dashing, cultured and in vogue while still protecting their most important body part...their brain.

See the full line and SHOP:

HELMET BAND-ITS

Chic, Stylish and Practical.  Helmet Band-Its allow you to go from Snow to Show...and still remain safe.

All images and promotional considerations provided to AspenSpin by Helmet Band-Its.



 

Tuesday
Nov132012

Aspen Style Session: Radio @ The Wheeler

The 10-day warning was sounded in Aspen last night.  There are only 10 days until the lifts in Aspen start spinning for Ski Season 2012/13. Radio Boardshop and The Wheeler Opera House marked the occasion with a "locals only" fashion extravaganza and season kick-off party.  250 of  Aspen's most stylie locals came out on a Monday night for art / drinks / food / music ...and of course some of this Winter's  siiiiiiiiiiickest looks for snow and street.

Click 4 pix:  Aspen Style Session.

The crowd seemed insatiable as they feasted on hors d'oeuvres, quenched their thirst at an open bar while enjoying music and art from local artists. Let's not forget...there were plenty of models in the house.  The 2nd floor lobby at The Wheeler Opera House is a fantastic venue for any event...but last night the room was buzzing and glowing and radiating and vibrating in anticipation of the upcoming ski season. 

Suffice to say... there was a lot of pent up demand for POW POW in the room. 

Click 4 PIX  Aspen Style Session

Psyched 4 Snow: Ski Season 2012/13 is upon us. Click 4 pix.Veteran model John Gates showed off his moves on the catwalk. Click 4 pix.Tyler Lindsey goes full-on Camo at the Radio Fashion Show. Cllick 4 pix.Aspen's supermodel Leslie in Red showing looks for off the mountain. Clcik 4 pix.Local pseudo artist Stosh Bellsky with a bevy of Aspen beauties. Click 4 pix.30 seconds to showtime: Genna and Lauren from The Wheeler and Travis from Radio were ready. Click4 pix.

 

 

Saturday
Nov102012

Wiley Maple: Aspen's World Class Ski Racer

Wiley Maple, Aspen's World Cup racer. CourtesyPhoto: US Ski Team.Wiley Maple was born and raised in Aspen, Colorado.  He's the son of a skiing family.  Wiley is now a 22 year old world class ski racer who came up through the ranks chasing gates with AVSC.  As a grom he landed on the podium more often than not.

Wiley Maple now races against the world's best competition on the FIS World Cup circuit,  the major leagues of ski racing.   He scored his first World Cup points last season...and this Winter he's back for more as a member of the U.S. Ski Team.  Wiley is currently prepping for the upcoming World Cup season after overcoming a complicated knee surgery and the corresponding summer-long re-hab.  Wiley trained extremely hard all Summer according to our sources at Park City's Center for Excellence, where the U.S. Ski Team trains.  He is currently ripping laps on the snow at the U.S. Ski Team's Speed Center at Copper Mountain.

Wiley's Boyz came out to support him. Click 4 pix.Last night the whole town of Aspen came out to support Wiley with a fund-raiser at the Wheeler Opera House. It's an expensive proposition to be a ski racer.  Travel costs alone are a small fortune.  Mike Marolt and Montezuma Basin productions helped roll out the red carpet with a siiiiiiiick silent auction and the showing of the cultier than cult film...Deep Winter. 

Click: Wiley 4 more pix

It's not to late to do Wiley a solid.   Wiley needs to raise $22,000 for expenses not covered by the U.S. Ski Team.   He'll be heading to Europe soon,  so  c'mon skiers, Aspenites, all 1% ers, 47 %ers....everybody.  Let's help Wiley realise his full potential.  Click the link to Wiley Maple's Pay Pal  account and give generously.

 WILEY MAPLE's WORLD CUP Page.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Ed Cross and Richard Allen are Aspen veterans who came out to support Wiley Maple. Click 4 Pix.

Aunt Marlene's decadent Marvelous Hot Fudge was a HUGE seller. Click 4 pix.These groms came out to support their home town hero. Click 4 pix.

Wednesday
Nov072012

The Party Farm

Detroit's Central Train Station. Now Empty.I'm not a scientist and I'm not a politician. I'm just a ski bum,  but I'm very concerned about our enviornment.  Living in Aspen at an elevation of 7908 ft. for the past 10 years I feel as if I can see the climate changing right before my eyes.  From the top of Aspen Mountain you can see for a hundred miles or more.  You can see the weather blowing in with a 360 degree view.  I'm worried...very worried.

Sure...I'm a rational guy...and I understand that weather patterns are cyclical...and that there has always been a changing climate.  But during the recent election process I encountered many seemingly smart people who would not even acknowledge that there is a problem with our enviornment.  They wanted to debate semantics and they chastised me for using the terms "global warming" and "climate change".  I tried to provide an explanation for my concerns about the environment by using a few simple personal examples:

* March 2012 was the hottest in Colorado history.  It was 60 degrees or hotter for 30 straight days.  June may not have been record setting for heat...but it was close.  Cyclical??? Maybe.   But 10 of the hottest years on record have occured in the past 13 years (according to a Michigan State University Professor).

* SNIRT:  An unusal wind event in the Utah desert created snow clouds filled with red dirt which later produced snow mixed with that dirt (hence Snirt) here in Aspen.  You could see the Snirt layers on the roof tops.  The Snirt had a terribly negative effect on the skiing and it caused the snow to melt much faster than normal.  One friend said..."we've been having sand storms for a 1000 years...read the bible".

*The Colorado River is drying up:  I drove 1000 miles from San Diego to Aspen.  The route is beautiful...but this Summer...the land looked like scorched earth.  The Mighty Colorado appeared to be extremely low.   Did I get out of my car to measure the water levels?...no.  Did I feel an immediate sense of urgency just by...you know, eyeballin' it?   Yes.   Did I see all the neon lights in Las Vegas...and for the first time think about the drain that the city of sin has on The Mighty Colorado.  Turn up the A/C in the cabana, bro.

*Snow conditions.  2011/12 was the worst season I've seen in Aspen.  It was a difficult Winter in many other ski resorts too.  Maybe it was just an off year?  I truly believe that the quality and consistency of our POW POW is changing much faster than anyone (even Al Gore) predicted or wants to admit.    Our POW is getting heavier and wetter. Why?   Because the whole planet is getting warmer.  I don't really know much about the polar ice caps or glaciers...but I know they are melting like MoFos.

Super Storm Sandy:  'nuff said.

So I decided to try to do something.  I want to be a man of action.  I want to get my hands dirty.  How can I make a difference??? 

Detroit. City of the Future. I hope so.In August I was visiting my hometown of Detroit, Michigan and I accidently got lost in a very rough neighborhood on the East side of the Detroit.  Driving around, I saw burned out buildings, crack ho's &  acres and acres of abandoned, barren, trash-infested, vacant land.  I won't say I had a vision or an epiphany...but something like that.  I visualized acres and acres of farm land...right there in the City of Detroit.  Honestly,  this was not a new idea, but I could see it...right there in my mind.  People have been talking about urban farming in Detroit for years.   Detroit's Mayor, Dave Bing (former NBA star) wants to do it.  The City wants to do it. Michigan State wants to do it.  The Detroit Public Schools (DPS) want to do it.  DPS has lots of deserted school buildings and playgrounds.  All told, Detroit has more than 50,000 acres of vacant land within the city limits.  The land includes desolate former industrial sites, and once thriving residential neighborhoods that have been razed to the ground in addition to all the voided school yards.  The population in Detroit has dropped from 2.1 million to 700,000 in the past 20 years. I saw it....in my head,  Farm land... what else could it be?  It clicked in.  Growing local fruits and vegetables theoretically can produce better, healthier, fresher food...and save on transportation costs to boot.  Farming could be used to help educate an urban society (mostly African American) that sorely needs to learn to fend for itself.

Fortunately I'm still well connected back in the 313.  I made a few calls and was referred to Dr. Richard Foster, a professor at Michigan State (my alma mater) who is in charge of Food, Society and Sustainability at MSU.   Foster has a vision to make Detroit an "innovation center" for sustainable farming for the next generation.  Detroit has the land, the access to fresh water and the need to re-create itself for the 21st Century.  Foster's plan is just the type of large-scale project that I had visualized. I returned to Detroit to meet with Dr. Foster and others about the prospects of my pitching in.  When I asked Dr. Foster what was holding him back...he replied with a one-word answer, "money".  I thought to myself...that's not a problem...I know every rich guy in the State.  Maybe I could get this thing going in Detroit.  I felt like I could be the catalyst for change. 

That was before I saw all the hurdles.  

Initially my objective for getting involved with urban farming was for the "greater good".  It was an opportunity to give something back and to create something out of nothing.  We could produce food locally,  build an engaged community around self-sustaining agriculture.   Could I raise $100 million to make this a reality???  Maybe...I've done it before.  MSU thought I could help them raise the money.  I knew that  to be successful at fund raising,  I would need to be passionate about the project.   I would need to be immersed in urban farming and food production.  I would need to believe my own sales pitch. 

So I started kicking the tires.  I set up some meetings.  Drove around.  Asked a lot of questions. I got the VIP treatment from the Quicken Loans executive team. Quicken, Rock Financial, Dan Gilbert and his host of entities are making an impact in Downtown Detroit. They are making great strides and they may single handedly bring back the city.  I met with The Greening of Detroit, a non-profit that has been planting trees in the City since 1989.   I spoke to the President of Hantz Farms who has been promoting the concept of urban farming in Detroit for 5 years.  Hantz has 180 acres tied up and $30 million dedicated to urban farming...but they have yet to plant a seed.   I toured the city and saw some impressive and very productive "Market Gardens" (3 acres or less).  Market Gardens fall below city laws that prohibit commercial farming.  Those laws are expected to be changed.  When?   No body knows.  There are already 1600 gardens in Detroit...but comprising only 300 acres...a drop in the bucket.   The farming efforts were highly fragmented. 

I dove deeper into the culture. A culture in which I had been raised in.  I checked out some of the new energy happening in Detroit. Campus Martius, Cork Town, The Eastern Market etc.  I ate at a few of the new places downtown...and some of the old ones.  I hung out after dark to see what happens at night.  I attended the World Series and cheered my a$$ off for the Detroit Tigers.   I could feel the energy, the positivism...for the first time in decades Detroit was on the upswing.

I was fired up.  Enough talk...let's do this.  Call it phase 1.   Let's find 3 acres, move some soil, plant some seeds and produce some food.  We'll see what happens...get the ball rolling.  If PARTY FARMS could become a self-sustaining entity...then anyone could do it.  The Party Farm could be the first step in a much more grandiose plan, with MSU, with the City etc.  My friends in the suburbs were laughing at me.  The naysayers were abundant.   More meetings..with Michigan State, with The Greening of Detroit.  A sit down at the Green Garage an environmentally friendly co-working space.   More talk.   I hadn't yet approached the City Government or the Detroit Public Schools... but already the bureaucracy and resistance was palpable.  I couldn't get my arms around the economics.  It became apparent very quickly that this was going to be a very difficult and uphill battle.  I was looking to do something out of the box, altruistic, for the greater good.  But I didn't want to bang my head against the wall.

Let it Grow, Let it Grow.I requested some basic info from MSU about creating a 3 acre market garden.  Start-up costs, projected revenues, a time-line for growing season,  ways to maximize production.  A brief outline would have been sufficient.   I would have thought that a big-time Agricultural school like MSU could get that cranked out in a few minutes.  Basic stuff...farming 101.  I'm still waiting for the information. I hit the library myself in an attempt to quantify and project what I could produce on 3 acres.  I even looked at a few prospective sites.   I had a very hot restaurant interested in buying brussles sprouts...if I could grow them.

It was only 30 days...but I learned plenty.  I came to the conclusion that an entrepreneur like myself could not really count on much help, if any from the HUGE institutions with whom I was trying to collaborate.  Even though my motivation was purely altruistic, support from "the man" appeared unlikely.  I realized that even though I wanted to move forward with speed and agility , the other players were content to continue to talk, talk, talk.   They were working in concepts and theories and I wanted to take action.  I also realized the science and the horticulture were not my area of expertise or my passion.  I caught on to the fact that farming is not easy... in fact its hard as sh*t.    I became aware of the latent racism that still exists in Detroit.  No one said it to my face but I could feel it..."what's Whitey doing coming down here to Detroit from the suburbs...taking our land...turning us back into share croppers".   The crime & security issues are still extremely important in Detroit.  The history of graft, deceit and fraudulent activities that have plagued Detroit's government for generations still exists...although Mayor Bing is trying to change that.   But looking at the lineage from Kwame Kilpatrick, Coleman Young etc...it's not an easy fix.

My desire to effect change, to create something from nothing and to contribute to the greater good still burns inside.  The barriers to entry in Detroit are very low.  Real Estate is cheap...so cheap,  that one can afford to experiment.  I think Urban Farming in Detroit is a great concept.  I hope someone takes the ball and runs with it.  Unfortunately it's not going to be me.  I commend Dan Gilbert and Quicken Loans for their efforts Downtown.  I respect Dave Bing and I'd love to see him succeed in bringing Detroit back.  With 2/3 of the population gone...Detroit has a long way to go.

So Andy Party will be back in Aspen this Winter.  Skiing every day and partying every night.  But one thing will be different this season.  I'll be wearing my thinking cap all Winter.  I will be synthesising every thing I learned about ecology, food production, water, and the City of Detroit.  Maybe I can come up with a way to contribute to the re-birth of a once great urban area.  But one thing is for sure...you won't see me behind a plow wearing overalls.