Colorado Springs Pioneers Museum

We drove downtown to the Colorado Springs Pioneer’s Museum. I went inside to see if they were open on New Years Eve. The friendly woman behind the counter said, “If you want to see the museum this year, today is your last chance.”

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They had several displays of varying interest, including one of local businesses that had been in the area for a long time. The horse was wheeled out in front of saddle-makers’ stores to display the wares.

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Nipper, the RCA dog, used by a local radio and TV service.

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Miniature bands like this were connected to jukeboxes. Play a song and the curtain would open and the band members would move to the music.

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A hut for sufferers from tuberculosis. They came to Colorado Springs for the healthy air and were kept outside as much as possible.

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The restored district courtroom.

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The original 1903 elevator that we got to operate!

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The museum looked impressive, but I didn’t come away with as much knowledge about the history of Colorado Springs as I had hoped.

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Ben Lomand Moutain

On Wednesday afternoon, I decided to take a walk. I drove to Palmer Lake and set off south on the New Santa Fe Trail toward Monument. It was a pretty day, chilly enough for a coat, and I was the only person out and about.

Plans sometimes change. I like to wander. I hadn’t gone far before I spotted an interesting bluff off to the east. A side trail headed off that way, so I followed.

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The trial led along the base of the bluff for maybe a mile.

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And then there was another trail, much narrower this time.

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It led around to the north end of the hill and began climbing. So did I. After a few steep stretches that had me panting in the high altitude, I got to the top. There was a dirt road with a few footprints but no tire tracks. It led back toward Palmer Lake.

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Here’s Elephant Rock off to the east.

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Looking north toward Colorado Springs, with Pikes Peak just visible beyond Mount Herman.

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Looking north. Denver is about 40 miles off in this direction.

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The road led me to the edge of the bluff. Here’s another shot facing south.

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The town of Palmer Lake — and the lake.

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Looking off to the northeast, in the general direction of Illinois.

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As I walked back along the trail, I spotted the high point of the hill and climbed to the peak.

I hadn’t planned this adventure, so I didn’t have my camera. I was still on top when my phone conked out for some reason. So I have no shots of the absolutely amazing light the late afternoon sun cast on the face of the bluff as I walked back to my car. And I have no shot of the beautiful buck Mule Deer that stood along the path perhaps 20 feet away from me and engaged me in a staring contest. I’m not entirely sure if I was supposed to be on the hill, but I think it’s pretty cool to live where adventures like this happen by mistake.

I later discovered I was on Ben Lomand Mountain. The top where I stood to take the video is 7,636 feet high. (Which makes it 952′ higher than any point east of the Mississippi.) It’s 296′ from bottom to summit, which is four feet short of being a ranked peak. They take their mountains very seriously out here. There’s a web site where I can log in and mark that I’ve summited Ben Lomand. It also informs me that it’s the 3,577th highest peak in Colorado and the 11,127th highest in the United States.

Hey, I have to start somewhere.

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Denver City and County Building

For years, the Denver City and County Building has been lit up at Christmas. After finished the tour of the Botanic Gardens, we drove about five miles to see it. We were deliberately looking for things to do in Colorado as an annual Christmas tradition. This may be one of them. (I guess the colors sometimes change and there’s music, but neither of those things happened while we were there.)

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Denver Botanic Gardens

On the Tuesday before Christmas, we drove up to Denver to see the Blossoms of Light Show at the Denver Botanic Gardens. We arrived about half an hour before the gates opened and were among the first to get in. Which was good, because the placed was packed by the time we left, and the almost empty garage we parked in was filled beyond capacity with a long line of stopped cars stretching through the neighborhood. Admission was a little pricey — $13 each — but it was probably the most impressive light display I’ve seen.

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The lights in this last display shot up and down and changed color to music. Unfortunately, it wasn’t a set program but whatever passing guests happened to play in a kiosk along the edge. Most of the time it was just kids banging on things, but while we were there, somebody played some real music by, I think, holding a phone up the mic.

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Birds Seen in the Yard of Our House

Here’s one thing I’ll definitely miss about our house in Cary. This is the list of birds I spotted from my study window.

  1. American Goldfinch (5/1/06)
  2. American Redstart (8/29/07)
  3. American Robin (5/1/06)
  4. American Tree Sparrow (12/6/06)
  5. Bald Eagle (1/19/14)
  6. Baltimore Oriole (5/16/13)
  7. Black-and-white Warbler (5/9/06)
  8. Black-capped Chickadee (5/9/06)
  9. Black-throated Green Warbler (5/16/15)
  10. Blue-gray Gnatcatcher (7/10/15)
  11. Blue Jay (5/16/06)
  12. Broad-winged Hawk (4/28/07)
  13. Brown-headed Cowbird (5/6/06)
  14. Black-capped Chickadee (5/9/06)
  15. Brown Thrasher (4/13/07)
  16. Canada Goose (5/16/06)
  17. Cape May Warbler (5/9/06)
  18. Cedar Waxwing (5/21/11)
  19. Chestnut-sided Warbler (5/9/06)
  20. Chimney Swift (5/9/06)
  21. Common Grackle (5/6/06)
  22. Common Redpoll (12/26/07)
  23. Cooper’s Hawk (12/1/06)
  24. Dark-eyed Junco (10/9/06)
  25. Downy Woodpecker (10/23/06)
  26. Eastern Bluebird (10/27/12)
  27. Eastern Meadowlark (4/30/09)
  28. Eastern Phoebe (10/10/16)
  29. Eastern Towhee (4/13/08)
  30. Eastern Wood-Pewee (5/16/15)
  31. European Starling (5/6/06)
  32. Fox Sparrow (11/18/07)
  33. Golden-winged Warbler (5/11/16)
  34. Gray Catbird (5/8/06)
  35. Gray-cheeked Thrush (9/17/16)
  36. Great Blue Heron (6/24/12)
  37. Great Horned Owl (12/29/07)
  38. Hairy Woodpecker (1/29/13)
  39. Hermit Thrush (4/11/15)
  40. Hoary Redpoll (2/2/13)
  41. House Finch (5/1/06)
  42. House Sparrow (5/1/06)
  43. House Wren (5/1/06)
  44. Indigo Bunting (5/9/06)
  45. Killdeer (9/13/09)
  46. Least Flycatcher (5/8/07)
  47. Magnolia Warbler (8/29/07)
  48. Mallard (5/21/11)
  49. Mourning Dove (5/1/06)
  50. Nashville Warbler (8/31/12)
  51. Northern Cardinal (5/1/06)
  52. Northern Flicker (10/9/06)
  53. Pine Siskin (11/1/14)
  54. Purple Finch (12/28/07)
  55. Red-bellied Woodpecker (10/15/06)
  56. Red-breasted Nuthatch (10/5/07)
  57. Red-eyed Vireo (5/16/15)
  58. Red-tailed Hawk (9/2/12)
  59. Rose-breasted Grosbeak (5/9/06)
  60. Ruby-throated Hummingbird (8/24/07)
  61. Sandhill Crane (7/8/06)
  62. Song Sparrow (5/1/06)
  63. Swainson’s Thrush (9/11/16)
  64. Tennessee Warbler (5/19/07)
  65. Warbling Vireo (5/16/13)
  66. White-breasted Nuthatch (8/27/06)
  67. White-crowned Sparrow (5/2/06)
  68. White-throated Sparrow (5/6/06)
  69. Wood Duck (5/11/07)
  70. Yellow-bellied Sapsucker (4/13/08)
  71. Yellow-rumped Warbler (10/1/06)

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