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Jackson Hole and Aspen: 2 ski towns, 2 ways to shred the spread

But manager Jim Morrison can’t say why, exactly. “Of course our business is down,” he told the News&Guide. “It’s just too difficult to say how much is purely affidavit driven, COVID driven, or snow driven. It’s pretty evident that people are willing to risk traveling in COVID environments, even at a high risk level.” Why hotels in the Roaring Fork Valley are seeing so much less traffic than those in resort towns like Jackson Hole is a central question in an ongoing debate in Pitkin County. Health officials there have reacted to the COVID-19 pandemic in two ways that health officials in Teton County have not: by requiring visitors to fill out a form confirming they’ve tested negative before arriving in Aspen and shutting down indoor dining when cases peaked in early January.

AXD Babe in Carbondale strives to make the new normal fun

Chelsea Self / Post Independent The origin story of AXD Babe on its website is part fact and part fiction, but one that came to be from Taylor Freeman’s decision to roadtrip with her dog Finn in her renovated Airstream throughout the West. “One of the spots we ended up in was the Redwoods and the Paul Bunyan like fable is huge there and I knew nothing about it … (It was) definitely good enough space from here to be able to create something different, something new, and I just wanted to create some fun … that’s where the seed (was) planted, I kept seeing (axe throwing) across the Northwest,” Freeman said.

Local Faces And Stories Illuminate the Impact Of Climate Change In The Roaring Fork Valley

3:26 These are recorded moments from the “Stories of Climate Change/Historias del Cambio Climático” community mural project. If you find yourself wandering the streets of Aspen, Carbondale, or Glenwood Springs this month, you will be greeted by collages of oversized self-portraits pasted on Colorado Mountain College buildings. The valley-wide art installation is made up of the faces of 89 community members who recorded stories of their experiences with climate change. They spanned ages two to 78 and they told their stories in both English and Spanish. They shared a connection to the Roaring Fork Valley and to this prompt: “Climate change knows no boundaries. The health of the planet affects and unites us all. What has your experience been?” 

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