U.S. Cities  

Go Back   City-Data Forum > U.S. Forums > Colorado

Welcome to City-Data.com forum! Make sure to register - it's free and very quick! You have to register before you can post and participate in our discussions with 400,000 other registered members. User profiles and some forums can only be seen by registered members. After you create your free account you will be able to customize many options, you will have the full access to over 14,000 posts/day about local topics and you will see fewer ads. Within the last few months our forum was cited in an article in 15 newspaper and in a story on AOL's homepage.

Get a detailed profile of any city, county, or zip code:
      Search our forums (advanced):

Reply

 
Old 11-17-2007, 10:31 AM
Not a member
 
Join Date: May 2007
1,268 posts, read 441,886 times
Reputation: 152
hello-world has a spectacular aura abouthello-world has a spectacular aura abouthello-world has a spectacular aura abouthello-world has a spectacular aura about
Quote:
Originally Posted by pittnurse70 View Post
Well, no, I don't qualify. If first generation doesn't qualify, then my kids can't have them either. Apparently one's parents have to be from CO for you to be a "real" native?
i wonder what actual natives feel about all this. as in those with more asian (from bering crossing ancestors) than european heritage.

[+] Rate this post positively
Reply With Quote
 
Old 11-17-2007, 05:05 PM
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
886 posts, read 267,182 times
Reputation: 252
suzco is a jewel in the roughsuzco is a jewel in the roughsuzco is a jewel in the roughsuzco is a jewel in the roughsuzco is a jewel in the roughsuzco is a jewel in the rough
Default Go back to these times?

I've been reading some of the other western state boards, to hear what's being said. Check out this thread on the Nevada forum Lander County, NV. Is this preferable to what's happening in what used to be remote Colorado? Jazz Lover, your opinion?

[+] Rate this post positively
Reply With Quote
 
Old 11-17-2007, 05:40 PM
Charter Member -- Nov 2008 = Landslide Obama
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
3,644 posts, read 1,856,094 times
Reputation: 1641
Mike from back east has a brilliant futureMike from back east has a brilliant futureMike from back east has a brilliant futureMike from back east has a brilliant futureMike from back east has a brilliant futureMike from back east has a brilliant futureMike from back east has a brilliant futureMike from back east has a brilliant futureMike from back east has a brilliant futureMike from back east has a brilliant futureMike from back east has a brilliant futureMike from back east has a brilliant futureMike from back east has a brilliant futureMike from back east has a brilliant futureMike from back east has a brilliant futureMike from back east has a brilliant futureMike from back east has a brilliant futureMike from back east has a brilliant futureMike from back east has a brilliant futureMike from back east has a brilliant futureMike from back east has a brilliant futureMike from back east has a brilliant futureMike from back east has a brilliant future
Quote:
Originally Posted by suzco View Post
I've been reading some of the other western state boards, to hear what's being said. Check out this thread on the Nevada forum Lander County, NV. Is this preferable to what's happening in what used to be remote Colorado? Jazz Lover, your opinion?
Interesting thread over there in NV. I just had to add my two cents.

[+] Rate this post positively
Reply With Quote
 
Old 11-17-2007, 06:30 PM
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
886 posts, read 267,182 times
Reputation: 252
suzco is a jewel in the roughsuzco is a jewel in the roughsuzco is a jewel in the roughsuzco is a jewel in the roughsuzco is a jewel in the roughsuzco is a jewel in the rough
Quote:
Originally Posted by jazzlover View Post
Gee, I guess you all won't be applying for a set of these then ( http://www.revenue.state.co.us/mv_dir/formspdf/2836.pdf ), which the State of Colorado was convinced to "sanctify" a number of years ago . . .

And, no, I don't qualify for them--I'm only a first-generation Colorado native.
Pioneer plates . . .
As far as I knew, when the pioneer plates were first issued, your forefathers (foremothers?) had to have been here before 1900. Reading the requirements now, your ancestors had to be living in Colorado 100 years ago; so now I'm qualified as a pioneer. Interesting. They came in 1906, from very foreign shores. Pioneers? Hardly. Refugees? Unquestionably.

[+] Rate this post positively
Reply With Quote
 
Old 11-18-2007, 04:03 AM
RoaredTheirTerribleRoars
Status: "Caturday" (set 2 hours ago)
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Fernandina Beach, northeast FL
7,196 posts, read 3,181,372 times
Reputation: 3502
BlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond repute
BlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond reputeBlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond reputeBlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond reputeBlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond reputeBlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond reputeBlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond reputeBlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond reputeBlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond reputeBlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond reputeBlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond reputeBlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond reputeBlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond reputeBlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond reputeBlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond reputeBlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond reputeBlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond reputeBlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond reputeBlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond reputeBlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond reputeBlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond reputeBlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond reputeBlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond reputeBlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond reputeBlueWillowPlate has a reputation beyond repute
Send a message via Yahoo to BlueWillowPlate
Quote:
Originally Posted by livecontent View Post
I become Executive Chef at the Hilton Harvest House, the next year, 1980. Every weekend, there were parties in the gardens behind the hotel--Friday PM being a big day and when there was a football game--it was chaos. Newsweek or Time, I cannot remember did an article about the parties, telling about all the beautiful girls in danskin tops where dope was traded freely. ----- The next weekend, the local Boulder airport was packed with planes from all other the country, flying into to experience the events and the place was packed for weeks and weeks with jetsetters, yuppies and the leisure crowds from the world.
I remember those nights at the Harvest House very, very well.
But the years I hung out there were '76-78. Also the Mezzanine at the Boulderado. And Tulagi's. My danskin top was plum. Good times.

That native pioneer license plate cracks me up! And they say that Southerners are obsessed with who "their people" are. My mom was born in Denver but I am not sure her family is traced back that far.

[+] Rate this post positively
Reply With Quote
 
Old 02-16-2008, 08:36 PM
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Denver
637 posts, read 228,121 times
Reputation: 149
esya will become famous soon enoughesya will become famous soon enoughesya will become famous soon enough
Default camping and living in the 1970's

I don't know; it seems to be a lot more crowded everywhere. Me and my then-boyfriend went camping everywhere for years without reservations, without leaving midweek, and without planning. My favorite part of camping was waking up at dawn and bathing nude in the icy mountain stream. I just can't see that happening now without a long hike into a remote area.

I also supported myself for several periods with half time jobs washing dishes and doing contract cleaning in Boulder. I am just not sure you could do that now, either.

Once we took a canoe trip down the Green River from Green River WYO to the junction with the Colorado; we saw one other boat in four days. Now you couldn't do that now, for sure.

[+] Rate this post positively
Reply With Quote
 
Old 02-16-2008, 08:49 PM
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Denver
637 posts, read 228,121 times
Reputation: 149
esya will become famous soon enoughesya will become famous soon enoughesya will become famous soon enough
Default Engineer Pass and a bus to Steamboat springs

Yep, we took a suburban over Engineer pass back when several of my friends were CSM (Colo School of Mines) students. We called it the "meatwagon" and instead of a bumper it had a 2 by 6 tied on the front, which of course started dragging before we got over the pass, and we had to keep stopping to tie it up.

I also remember my first summer job up in Slater, Colorado (a post office with ranches around it) and the long long drive up there in the spring, the lodge having a bat in my bedroom the first night, flying around my head. Also the first sight of the signs to the F.M. Light store, and another time taking the greyhound all the way up through Kremmling to see a cowboy boyfriend. I still think of that stop in Kremmling when I go through there--it was just the middle of nowhere back then, even more than now.

[+] Rate this post positively
Reply With Quote
 
Old 02-16-2008, 09:37 PM
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Denver
637 posts, read 228,121 times
Reputation: 149
esya will become famous soon enoughesya will become famous soon enoughesya will become famous soon enough
Default Colorado Pioneer license plate story

Ok, I am hogging the conversation here, but I have to tell a "Native Pioneer" story I heard just last week. The guy who told it was the grandson of a Jewish immigrant. The grandfather came out with TB, and they think he died right after he got here, because they knew he came out, and that was all they heard from him. But the children of the grandfather immigrant were not born here, and neither was the grandson. Later, other family members came to Colorado and researched the grandfather's name and finally found him--not from the burial records in one of the two Jewish cemeteries, but finally from the City of Denver death certificates.

Well the guy telling the story married a real pioneer granddaughter or great grandaughter, only she didn't have any records to prove it. It really bugged the wife, because she wanted that license plate. So finally, for her birthday, he want down and on the basis of his own deceased Jewish grandfather, got her Colorado pioneer license plates.

[+] Rate this post positively
Reply With Quote
 
Old 02-16-2008, 11:13 PM
Curmudgeonly Colo. native
Status: "Plugging away" (set 15 days ago)
 
Join Date: Mar 2007
2,244 posts, read 1,199,179 times
Reputation: 881
jazzlover is a splendid one to beholdjazzlover is a splendid one to beholdjazzlover is a splendid one to beholdjazzlover is a splendid one to beholdjazzlover is a splendid one to beholdjazzlover is a splendid one to beholdjazzlover is a splendid one to beholdjazzlover is a splendid one to beholdjazzlover is a splendid one to beholdjazzlover is a splendid one to beholdjazzlover is a splendid one to beholdjazzlover is a splendid one to beholdjazzlover is a splendid one to beholdjazzlover is a splendid one to beholdjazzlover is a splendid one to behold
Quote:
Originally Posted by esya View Post
Yep, we took a suburban over Engineer pass back when several of my friends were CSM (Colo School of Mines) students. We called it the "meatwagon" and instead of a bumper it had a 2 by 6 tied on the front, which of course started dragging before we got over the pass, and we had to keep stopping to tie it up.

I also remember my first summer job up in Slater, Colorado (a post office with ranches around it) and the long long drive up there in the spring, the lodge having a bat in my bedroom the first night, flying around my head. Also the first sight of the signs to the F.M. Light store, and another time taking the greyhound all the way up through Kremmling to see a cowboy boyfriend. I still think of that stop in Kremmling when I go through there--it was just the middle of nowhere back then, even more than now.
Funny you should mention Kremmling. I got stuck there one time in the 1970's in a horrific snowstorm--in September. A co-worker and I got what was probably the last motel room in town--all of the roads were closed in every direction. This "motel" wasn't really a motel, but a "motor court" of the type built in the 1920's or 1930's. It hadn't been modernized since. It had the original bath fixtures, carpeting, brass beds, the whole nine yards. The only "modern" touch was the television--itself a relic of the early 1950's with a round picture tube. It was a Super Crosley if I remember correctly (the Crosley Company was better remembered for building the first American subcompact car from 1939-52). We had to rebuild the wall heater in the room (also original) to get heat. As I recall, there was about a foot of snow on the ground in town by morning, and summer hadn't even officially ended yet--it was somewhere around September 17th, so summer had a few days left. Like you and your trip, I never drive through Kremmling that I don't think of that memorable trip.

[+] Rate this post positively
Reply With Quote
 
Old 02-16-2008, 11:36 PM
Veteran Cosmic Moodyfan!
Status: "Spinning those tunes!" (set 1 day ago)
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Western Colorado
2,190 posts, read 388,198 times
Blog Entries: 2
Reputation: 1260
DOUBLE H has much to be proud ofDOUBLE H has much to be proud ofDOUBLE H has much to be proud ofDOUBLE H has much to be proud ofDOUBLE H has much to be proud ofDOUBLE H has much to be proud ofDOUBLE H has much to be proud ofDOUBLE H has much to be proud ofDOUBLE H has much to be proud ofDOUBLE H has much to be proud ofDOUBLE H has much to be proud ofDOUBLE H has much to be proud ofDOUBLE H has much to be proud ofDOUBLE H has much to be proud ofDOUBLE H has much to be proud ofDOUBLE H has much to be proud ofDOUBLE H has much to be proud ofDOUBLE H has much to be proud ofDOUBLE H has much to be proud of
With all the problems they are having in Fairplay with the ground blizzards, it reminded me of the Top of the World Cafe there. This was back in the early '70's. The only place to sleep there was on the floor along with about fifteen other people. We were lucky; at least there was a lot of food to eat. Ever been in a ground blizzard? Picture yourself in a bottom of a huge mixing bowl with the blender on medium to high speed and whipped cream is being blended. It is beyond bad.

[+] Rate this post positively
Reply With Quote
Please register to post and access all features of our very popular forum. It's free and quick.

Detailed information about all U.S. cities, counties, and zip codes on our site: City-data.com.



Reply


Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Similar Threads

Forum Jump

Go Back   City-Data Forum > U.S. Forums > Colorado

All times are GMT -5. The time now is 12:24 PM.

Copyright © 2005-2008, Advameg, Inc.