Tag Archives: Longs Peak Inn

Rocky Mountain High Fourth of July…

 

Watching the fireworks burst directly in front of us was a sight to behold. “The Staff” from Long’s Peak Inn had climbed through the woods to a large boulder outcropping that offered a perfect bird’s-eye view of the show being staged from Estes Park below. The fact that we had toted a sparkling new stainless steel garbage can “borrowed” from the kitchen which was filled to a sloshy capacity with the traditional recipe of Hawaiian Punch and grain alcohol

Long's Peak Inn, Estes Park, CO.

Long’s Peak Inn, Estes Park, CO.

had no bearing on the shared mouth-gaping amazement that each of us seemed to feel. It certainly didn’t hurt, but the spectacle alone was enough to wow. Sort of made you…high. Our dude ranch had been around for a great many years and attracted guests and staff from all parts of the world. We offered the basic horseback riding, mountain hiking and trout fishing packages along with kid care and a full bar with knowledgeable tender, hot tub, solar heated swimming pool and in house bakery (that was me!) We welcomed guests on Sunday nights with a staff talent (or lack thereof) show. Kid counselors met the children and parents relinquished control to the fresh-faced crew sporting cowboy hats and western shirts. We participated in the tradition of square dancing and tried to make it look natural despite the fact that hardly a soul was actually from the western states. Those cowboys and girls took off for the summertime beach jobs as soon as the roads thawed. Each week, it took a tremendous effort by the staff to pull off the extensive activities schedule. Making the experience as close to authentic western dude ranch was important and we took our roles seriously. As much as we loved the experience, everybody needs a break; a midsummer’s night dream. Right? It can be agreed that the traditional halfway mark of summer for Americans is Independence Day. No matter what day of the week it might fall, July 4th is reason enough to celebrate before moving forward into the dog days of summertime. Our eclectic crew was no exception to the tradition of marking the event with flair, so plans were made and work was dispensed with in a fat hurry on that nearly sacred day. Being that about half of our staff had come to work for the summer from Great Britain, we Americans felt the need to ensure a memorable Independence Day that would rival any event that the mother country could provide. We did what any typical American kids would do, we mixed up an industrial-sized container of Hunch Punch and set forth to watch the fireworks. Earlier that day, we had cooked and served a traditional “burgers and dogs” barbeque for the guests at the ranch and then made certain that our new friends poured on the right amounts of ketchup, mustard, relish and onions. For my part, hailing from Atlanta, I made certain that the coleslaw was chopped finely enough to mimic that delicious hot dog topping made famous at The Varsity Drive-In located just outside the Georgia Tech campus. It was good eats. Sated, we all completed our cleanup duties and made fast tracks before dark to our predetermined boulder with blankets and whatever else besides the punch that might make for a wonderful Rocky Mountain High kind of Fourth of July… Everybody found somebody to lean against on that chilly outcropping and a feeling of real summer took effect on our group. Inevitably, someone produced a guitar and harmonica. Can’t be dude ranch staff without those tools. Just ain’t right at all. Just as inevitably, John Denver tunes began to serenade our quickly mellowing group. We did get treated to seeing it raining fire in the sky. There were friends around a campfire and whether anybody imbibed or not, everybody found a sort of Rocky Mountain High… Colorado, a great place for summer love and summer secrets. Hollywood could not have staged a better set for showing foreigners exactly what a college-aged American summertime is all about and nobody could have provided a better soundtrack than John Denver himself. Slowly, pairs began to drift off together down the mountain. The singing, strumming and harmony slowed and faded away with the smoke that trailed from the last of the rockets’ red glare. Real stars, their appearance masked by the man made sky show, began to twinkle along with the moonlight that illuminated the aspen path back to Highway 7. It was a path back to our daily routines of waiting tables, baking, frying, cleaning and entertaining an ever-changing group of tourists hungry for horseback riding and trout fishing in the high mountains of the Colorado Rockies that can be found in the colorful pages of travel brochures. But, for that one night, on July 4th 1986, a group of British and American dude ranch staff came together for an unforgettable Rocky Mountain July High.

Twelfth Night…Not Quite…Celebrate Anyway!

December 12th, 12 days of Christmas and others 12’s of December are often mistaken for that beautiful epiphany which takes place in January with wise old kings and gifts. In our family, the 12th of December is marked on our calendar as a day of celebrating a pair of beautiful women. One is my SIL and the other my bestie since birth (some time ago, but not quite ancient…).

On December 12th, our family celebrates Kim and Pam. Both women are pretty amazing. For instance, Kim doesn’t talk about it much, but she served our country. It isn’t something she flaunts or uses to command respect. It simply IS something she did for which her nephews thank her and her FIL salutes her every November when his Barbershop Chorus sings The Armed Forces Medley. As the song moves through the various branches of our military, Kim quietly waits and then rises with the dignity of a soldier to receive a small flag in token of her service during the Air Force Anthem. She sits back down quietly after her song is sung and then moves about her life as if she hadn’t really done anything special. I admire that. While the military life was no picnic, it was pretty good training for the hard-won fight of motherhood.  Little Jackson T. is the light of her life and she and my brother have the business of parenting down pat. While I could name a whole bunch of other things I admire about my SIL, my favorite (next to my nephew) would be her Christmas Eve  baked ziti-no contest.  Now that I HAVE mentioned it, there are just a few days to go before we get to indulge in that tasty delight. What better reason to celebrate the 12th than to count down to ziti night?

The 12th also marks the birth date of the longest relationship I have had to date. Well, that sounds strange, but we shared a crib, a bathtub, a play pen and probably a crusty zwieback cracker or two along the way. Pam and I were born just 6 months apart to four college students in Terre Haute, Indiana. Her mom and dad and my mom and dad managed to pool enough money together on Friday or Saturday nights to crack a bottle of wine and boil some pasta together. We spent lots of time together over the years…sometimes over pasta and later…over wine of our own.

We actually maintained our friendship over 46 years through letters, and occasional long-distance phone calls (if we were lucky!), summer family vacations to theme parks, the 1982 World’s Fair and to a dude ranch in Colorado. Many of our best memories came from our 1986 summer. We returned to the dude ranch at which our families had vacationed and worked for the summer. Long’s Peak Inn in Estes Park was our home for a summer. More specifically, a cabin named Tin Lizzy housed the two of us, a British exchange student named Carrie and a crazy Florida Gator named Janeen. What a summer-think Dirty Dancing Heads to the Rockies….

Being a Notre Dame grad (Catholic like me…) made Pam the clear choice for Godmothering my two boys. Being a Notre Dame grad also made her a more amazing person. Besides being incredibly well-read, beyond-words intelligent and a trusted confidant, Pam has a heart shinier than the gold dome on campus. She spends her days, working with the residents of a nursing home. Their stories are varied, but she loves them all. Sometimes, she reminds me of my favorite aunt, Sharon Ann. Sharon worked at a state mental hospital for many years and the stories she told were always tempered with affection for people in the hospital. Pam reminds me of Sharon in the way she talks about “her” residents and in a variety of other ways. A giving heart, beautiful eyes and a shopping wild-woman, Pam’s birthday is always worth celebrating…perhaps with a bag of peanut M&M’s divided by color and formed into a rainbow along with a bottle of blush wine…but, while that would be following our in our parents’ footsteps…it is quite  another story.

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Happy Birthday Girls! Love you both!

Pam WeddingPammie Carrie and Beth