Ouray Ice Festival Ramping Up

Visit www.ourayicefestival.com for more information

The 2010 15th Annual Ouray Ice Festival is guaranteed to be a huge success. This year Timmy O’Neill will be the Master of Ceremonies for our Saturday night dinner and Guy Lacelle Superhero theme party.

Here’ s our great slideshow lineup

Thursday night – Caroline George and Andres Marin

Friday night - Majka Burhardt and Steve House

Saturday night – Timmy Oneill hosts our evening auctions, gives a short slideshow presentation and then DJ’s our late night Guy Lacelle SuperHero theme party. There will also be a special world premier screening of the film “THE NORTH FACE”

Sunday morning – Ines Papert will speak at the AAC women’s breakfast at the Beaumont Hotel.

Sunday night – Dave Nettle wraps things up with a great slideshow presentation.

This is going to be one Ice Fest you won’t want to miss.

Alpine Triangle and Ouray County

Organizers Seek Permanent Legislative Protection

OURAY COUNTY – Trout Unlimited has launched a collaborative effort with hunters, anglers and community leaders to gain permanent legislative protection of the hunting, fishing, historic resources, and motorized recreational resources in the Alpine Triangle – roughly defined as the Bureau of Land Management public land between Lake City Silverton and Ouray.

Trout Unlimited’s Sportsmen’s Conservation Project has identified this area as having a very high value in terms of fishing habitat, big game habitat and as an economic driver for the towns of Lake City, Silverton and Ouray, home to the Alpine Loop Backcountry Byway, one of the state’s most revered off-road resources, as well as the headwaters to three trout fisheries including the Animas River, the Uncompahgre River and the Lake Fork of the Gunnison River. Dozens of historic mining sites and ghost towns in this area, which draw annual visitors who tour the area by hiking and off road vehicles.

According to Ty Churchwell, a Trout Unlimited backcountry coordinator based in Durango, the goal of the campaign is to keep the area like it is now and to protect it, to which end the group is seeking federal National Conservation Area designation.

“If you take a snapshot of the Alpine Triangle today – the way it looks and the way it is used – we want to keep it that way,” Churchwell said in a telephone interview on Monday, adding that he wants collaboration with all users of this land to make sure all of its current uses are protected. “I am doing everything possible to reach out to the off-highway folks. I am trying to protect their use as well. The way that they use the Alpine Loop is very responsible and is a great example of where our public lands are used by ATVs and used responsibly.”

Churchwell also said he wants people to continue to visit the ghost towns, cabins and historic mining structures in the area. “When we protect these resources, we are also protecting the big game habitat and trout fisheries as well.” This campaign, he cautioned, strictly deals with public lands; there is no private land involvement, he emphasized.

Churchwell cited numerous threats to the area, including irresponsible development and new mining claims. “We are mindful that there are mining claims up there and people have the right to use them. We are supportive of that,” he said. “What we are trying to do is limit new mining claims.”

Churchwell said those who are collaborating in the campaign are also concerned about forestry issues in the area and are of the belief that mountains “really are best when they are covered with trees.

“Those trees provide the habitat up there and that’s why we go up there,” Churchwell said. “We are really interested in limiting forestry issues.”

Additional campaign goals include designating three wilderness study areas that encompass Handies Peak, Redcloud Peak and American Flats as official Wilderness designation. Combined, the new wilderness areas will total nearly 60,000 acres of land that has been managed by the BLM as de facto wilderness for decades.

“These three wilderness [study] areas have been managed that way since 1981 and if they are turned into wilderness, nothing changes,” he said. “What the legislation does is makes it permanent.”

Churchwell said he wants a collaborative process when it comes to federally protecting the Alpine Triangle, in large part, because will make available a number of legislative tools. By sitting down and personally engaging Hinsdale, San Juan and Ouray county representatives as well as residents and stakeholders, the right-fitting federal protection tool can be decided upon and achieved.

“I am pushing for a National Conservation Area, but the point I am trying to make here is that we are not dictating what happens up there,” Churchwell said. “We are just being the spearhead here and doing the ground work. What happens will ultimately be the wishes of the people. I want everybody to be at the table on this.”

Churchwell emphasized the effort is in its infancy and that it is not uncommon for protection work like this to take upwards of three to five years from beginning to end. He said the organization will be launching a website on the campaign soon and that anyone who would like more information about the campaign can call him 970/259-5116.

Trout Unlimited is a grassroots organization made up of hunters and anglers. It is the nation’s oldest river conservation organization. Its national membership is approximately 150,000.

Written by Gus Jarvis – Ouray County Watch

OURAY – Last week, Ouray was named “Best Destination for Recreation in Colorado” for 2009 by the popular online site, The Official Best Of (www.officialbestof.com).

Ouray will be listed on the website and will be featured on the television program The Best of Colorado, which will air Oct. 24 at 12 p.m. on KCNC (CBS 4) in Denver.

Official Best of solicits nominations for award winners on its website, which is intended to provide TV and web viewers with the official best places to visit in a number of states across America.

Ouray Chamber Resort Association President Karen Avery said it’s been quite the month for Ouray. She notes that the “Best Of” designation comes on the heels of Ouray being named one of the most beautiful towns and villages in the southwest by a book of the same title.

“The Switzerland of America is the perfect escape from the everyday,” said Avery. “Jeeping, hiking, horseback riding and biking are popular summertime activities. The Ouray Ice Park – the first of its kind dedicated solely to the sport of ice climbing – is a huge draw in the wintertime. We host hundreds of the world’s best climbers every January for the infamous Ouray Ice Festival. It’s really quite something.”

Avery noted that there are plenty of cold weather activities for the average Joe, as well. Snowshoeing, cross-country skiing and sledding are popular options, as well as the Ouray Hot Springs Pool, which is open year round.

Ouray Trail Run This Weekend

OURAY – Challenge yourself to a 13.9-mile loop run and contribute to regional youth outdoor education programs this weekend. The second annual Ouray Trail Run takes place Saturday, Oct. 3 on the trails above Ouray, but it’s not your average jog in the park.

Comparable in difficulty to the Imogene Pass Run between Ouray and Telluride, the Ouray Trail Run circumnavigates the City of Ouray using the Silvershield, Ice Park and Portland trails. With the unsurpassed views of Ouray and the surrounding fall foliage, this year’s run will no doubt prove to be one of Colorado’s most beautiful fall events.

“The course is unbelievably beautiful,” race Director Erin Eddy said in an interview on Tuesday. “This has to be one of the most scenic runs in the state because of its timing. The course is just awesome and it is a great race.”

Participants are reminded that the course follows steep and rugged, single-track trails in the high altitude terrain, with a base elevation of 7,700 feet. The course gains over 3,600 vertical feet and includes many steep and loose sections. Another factor participants should keep in mind is the unpredictable fall weather of the San Juan Mountains, which can range from mild and sunny to cold and snowy in a matter of minutes. Ultimately, runners are responsible for their own safety and are expected to use good judgment with regards to their ability to complete the race.

The course will be marked with flagging, cones and signs, and a number of volunteer course marshals will be strategically located to keep runners headed in the right direction.

Eddy said that last year’s inaugural event raised approximately $2,000 for local outdoor education programs, including the San Juan Riding Program, the Ouray Cross County Team, and the Ridgway and Ouray schools’ outdoor education programs. He hopes to raise even more for those programs this year.

“This race is all about getting kids outdoors,” Eddy said.

The $50 race entry fee includes an official race T-shirt, aid-station refreshments, and a post-race barbecue. Prizes, custom made by Ouray glassblower Sam Rushing, will be awarded for overall male and female winners as well as male and female age group winners. Door prizes at the post-race awards ceremony will include Osprey packs, arm warmers, socks and shirts from Sugoi, a sport band for an iPod, and gaiters by JoeTrailMan. Race participants will automatically be entered to win prizes, but they must be present at the ceremony to win.

Race registration will occur on Friday at the Ouray Hot Springs Pool between 5 and 7 p.m., or on race day, between 8 and 9:30 a.m. The race starts and ends at the pool, and has a 10 a.m. start time.

Stick around town after the race for some much-deserved relaxation and revelry at the Ouray Oktoberfest and 45th Annual Jeep Raffle. Popular Bavarian band, The Austrian Connection, will perform, and there will be kids’ activities and costume contests with cash prizes. Traditional German food such as brats, potato cakes, apple sauce and German chocolate cake are on the menu, as well as Colorado Boy brews and wine. Call the Ouray Chamber for additional information at 800/228-1876.

The Ouray Trail Run is a 501(c)4 corporation and all race proceeds go directly to local outdoor youth recreational programs and local youth recreational clubs. For more information, go to www.ouraytrailrun.com.

Ouray County Bypass?

County Seeks Economic Recovery Grant for Paving Project
by Gus Jarvis Sep 17, 2009

STIMULUS GRANT – If Ouray County receives close to $16 million in grant money, County Road 1 (blue) could see paving, widening and drainage improvements.

OURAY – Commuters who travel between Montrose and Telluride could get a shortcut if Ouray County gets over $15 million in federal Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery (TIGER) grant funds to pave and improve County Road 1 between Colona and State Highway 62.

The Ouray Board of County Commissioners on Monday authorized the electronic submission for the TIGER grant application. As proposed in the application, the grant money would go toward highway paving, widening and drainage improvements to the roadway. This includes the removal of existing chip seal and the placement of five-feet thick asphalt. It also includes the improvement of a “poorly aligned” intersection at CR 24D and Highway 62. The total amount of funding requested for the project is $15,952,175, short of the $20 million minimum TIGER grant requirement. Because Ouray County considers itself an economically distressed rural area, they are requesting a waiver of the $20 million minimum, and they are requesting 100 percent funding through the grant program.

According to the application, the proposed project will enhance user mobility through the creation of a more convenient, shorter and safer option than U.S. Highway 550, which travels through downtown Ridgway. CR 1 would provide an alternate route between the east side Dallas Divide and Colona, bypassing Ridgway, which is two miles (or 13 percent) shorter than the current main thoroughfare.

Moreover, according to application, having a safe and alternate route for commuters is “essential to the region.” Grant funds would also promote economic development and create local contracting jobs, while opening the door to new residential development along the road corridor.

“Contractors, developers and interested homeowners will be able to work and reside in an area that has an improved surface, improved environmental component, improved maintenance and enhanced safety,” the BOCC-approved application states.

While the commissioners at Monday’s meeting showed excitement at the notion of Ouray County receiving close to $16 million in grant money, they also emphasized that the public will be given time to comment on the proposed project.

Commissioner Keith Meinert said, “I am sure there is a concern, and there will be even more concerns about this in the public, that it has gone as far as it has without a whole lot of public process, and that is because of the timing. Staff has had to jump through hoops to meet the deadline on grants. It is a tremendous opportunity for the county and we don’t want to miss it. We have said we will hold a public forum on this and I definitely want to commit to doing that. We are going to have a public process.”

Meinert continued by saying even if the county was “lucky enough” to be awarded the grant money, if it is subsequently determined the project is not warranted, “we can turn the grant back.

“We are not making a commitment today by applying for the grant,” he said.

Commissioner Heidi Albritton agreed. “We are just trying to get our foot in the door and we will have some open and candid conversations about this,” she said.

More information on the proposed project can be found at www.ouraycountyco.gov/CR1TIGER.html.