Take an original Saratoga Springs Ghost Tour this summer
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:59:57 GMT
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. (NEWS10) -- Explore the haunting history of Canfield Casino by taking an original Saratoga Springs Ghost Tour this summer, hosted by the Saratoga Springs History Museum. The tours are held on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays at 11 a.m. through July and August. Tickets are available online. Get the latest, news, weather, sports and community events delivered right to your inbox! The tour will cover real-life encounters and personal stories of paranormal activity that museum-goers and workers have had. The Canfield Casino, being one of Saratoga Springs' most historic and haunted buildings, was featured on the SyFy Network's show Ghost Hunters in 2010 and was named number four in the top ten of America's Most Terrifying Places on the Travel Channel in 2019. Guests are asked to arrive five minutes before the tour begins. Parking will be available in Congress Park or in the Spring Street public lot. Celebrate Christmas in July with Great Sacandaga Brewing Comp...New restaurant downtown offers more than the regular experience
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:59:57 GMT
Dining at The Regular, a modern fine-dining restaurant that opened last week downtown, is like taking a seat at owners Sydney Younggreen and Brian De Souza’s own dinner table.Every detail throughout the 44-seat restaurant, located at 1432 Market St., has been carefully thought out: from the old school rock-n-roll music playing on the speakers to the quirky yet cozy furniture in the lounge; from the central fireplace that’s a nod to the one in their own home to the green touches in honor of Younggreen’s favorite color. They even built the bar with no name-brand spirits in order to push you outside of your comfort zone.Owners Sydney Younggreen and Brian De Souza met while working at a restaurant in New York City and have worked at Michelin-starred spots like Le Bernardin and Blue Hill. (Photo by Bird Tree Productions)“Every little thing that you see around – every fork, knife, every plate has been hand selected,” De Souza said. “It’s music that we listen to, not just what’s on t...Taylor Swift Eras Tour Denver surprise song predictions from a local Swiftie
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:59:57 GMT
Singer-songwriter Taylor Swift performs onstage on the first night of her “Eras Tour” at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, on March 31, 2023. (Photo by Suzanne Cordeiro, AFP via Getty Images)The countdown to Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour in Denver is on.The two nights the star will play at Empower Field at Mile High come just one week after she released “Speak Now (Taylor’s Version)” and added six new songs to her already massive discography.If you’ve avoided spoilers of The Eras Tour, Swift announced on opening night that she would be playing two acoustic songs at every show, saying she had enough to make it through the tour without repeating any. The six new songs from the “Speak Now (Taylor’s Version)” vault only add to the options for Denver.Like many a Swiftie, I’ve been tracking the “surprise” songs throughout the tour, so these are my Denver predictions:Denver Night 1, Friday, July 14“Back to D...Loss of Trinidad’s art-car parade and museum robs city of signature cultural event
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:59:57 GMT
In spite of desperate attempts to save Trinidad’s Artocade parade and Art Cartopia museum over the last week, the nationally renowned attractions are set to close permanently, dealing a staggering blow to the New Mexico border town’s years-long efforts to maintain a signature cultural event.“There’s no rescue available, the board voted to do this and that’s just the reality,” said Rodney Wood, an artist and former director of the nonprofit parade and museum. “A lot of the reasons floating around for it on (social media) are fiction. I’m actually getting a T-shirt made about it that says ‘Don’t believe everything you think.’ ”Artocade rocketed to national prominence shortly after it debuted a decade ago, becoming the nation’s second-largest art-car event after marquee gatherings in Houston and Seattle. Like the Artocade parade, the Art Cartopia museum featured hand-designed and repurposed cars made by individual ...Family-run Federal Heating closes after 84 years of business in west Denver
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:59:57 GMT
Federal Heating, a fixture on Denver’s South Federal Boulevard, has closed for good after more than 80 years in business as the third generation to own it contend with a changing industry and marketplace.Bo and Sherry Ramsour, who ran the business started by their great-uncle Bert Ramsour, believe it was the oldest HVAC business in Colorado.“I’ve always told Bo the two of us go out together, we have to go together. We kind of came in together,” said Sherry, who is 58.Bo, whose full name is Robert, graduated from college in 1982 and returned to work with his father, Robert “Bob” Ramsour.“I came back and never left,” said Bo, 63. “It’s been good. I have no regrets.”Federal Heating’s last day of business was the last day of June. Employees Janet Cordes and Mark Monheiser were there until the end and Monheiser said people asked, “What am I going to do now?”“I don’t even know what I’m going to...Denver scrubbed its $40 million migrant crisis plan. Now what?
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:59:57 GMT
The defeat of a $40 million proposal for private security corporation GardaWorld to take over migrant sheltering operations for Denver means the new mayor and City Council can pivot to an entirely different plan.Mayor-elect Mike Johnston has not publicly announced what he plans to do next, and it’s unclear what his advisers will advocate. A representative from his team said he was unavailable for an interview last week. But Johnston has told The Denver Post that the issue is critical and complicated, and one in which he hopes to work “collaboratively to identify an equitable and fair solution to this crisis.”Like his predecessor outgoing Mayor Michael Hancock, Johnston recognizes that the increasing number of migrants making their way to non-border towns like Denver is forcing local governments across the country to come up with strategies to help asylum-seekers without negatively impacting their residents. Hancock has said repeatedly that officials have to balance the desire ...Dramatic protests in Iran over women’s rights are the subject of a show at Leon Gallery
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:59:57 GMT
There is a lot to see in the series of photographs currently on display at Denver’s Leon Gallery: dramatic scenes of civil rights protests that took place in Iran last year; the defiant posturing of activists standing tall amidst chaos; the fires and the flowers that appeared at different times on the streets, alternately signifying anger and hope.In many of the photos, the protesters’ faces are obscured. The situation remains dangerous for them in Iran. (Provided by Leon Gallery)But it might be what you don’t see in these pictures, and what you can’t know about them, that tells a deeper story. There are few actual faces visible in the images, and the colorful, action-packed prints hung on the walls are all unsigned. Both the subjects here, and the photographers themselves, are compelled to remain anonymous. The situation continues to be dangerous for these 21st-century revolutionaries.The exhibition “Woman! Life! Freedom!” borrows its title from the three-word slogan that bec...Travel can cement the bonds of friendship and prepare us for what lies ahead
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:59:57 GMT
Jenny and I didn’t know that those three weeks in Southern California in 1996 would be our first trip of many. That 26 years later, we’d be packing our bags for a staycation at a Boulder hotel to celebrate what was unthinkable to us at the time: her pregnancy, created in a doctor’s office, costing unfair amounts of money, and done entirely, achingly, alone.We only knew that adulthood and babies and, sigh, relationships, were still out there. Beyond our 15-year-old grasps, but floating toward us under a veil of limitless possibility and euphoric certainty. Not among our possibilities? Single parenthood. The reality neither of us had considered but that we’d both, to varying degrees, face.CaliforniaAllyson and Jenny on that first trip together in 1996, to California. (Provided by Allyson Reedy, Special to The Denver Post)Jenny and I met in a seventh-grade Spanish class in 1993. Three years later, were traveled together for our first taste of freedom.She boarded a plane from Denver wit...Cycling documentary touring the globe highlights Colorado attorney
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:59:57 GMT
After a four-year career as an elite racer in road and track cycling, attorney Megan Hottman took up the cause of representing victims of crashes involving motorists. Last summer, she became one of them.Related ArticlesOutdoors | Hit-and-run driver sentenced to 20 years for hitting two cyclists near Evergreen last summer Hottman — who calls herself Colorado’s Cyclist Lawyer — was badly injured by a motorist in a crash last June. Now, she’s back riding and representing cyclists, but she also has a compelling story to tell, and it is being told in a feature-length documentary about cycling, “The Engine Inside,” currently touring the globe.The film focuses on six cyclists with inspirational stories. Three are from the United States; Hottman is the only one from Colorado. The film will be shown Wednesday at the Dairy Arts Center in Boulder, with proceeds benefiting It Could Be Me, a non-profit devoted to improving relations between cyc...This brewery tap room also serves as a trailhead for runners, hikers and mountain bikers | Opinion
Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 05:59:57 GMT
Editor’s note: This is part of The Know’s series, Staff Favorites. Each week, we will offer our opinions on the best that Colorado has to offer for dining, shopping, entertainment, outdoor activities and more. (We’ll also let you in on some hidden gems). The popularity of Golden’s New Terrain Brewing Company tap room and beer garden among runners, hikers, cyclists and mountain bikers has been fueled almost entirely by word of mouth. And, in at least one case, the sound of live music heard high atop North Table Mountain.Thomas Eggar discovered New Terrain from a vantage point 670 feet above it while trail running on North Table.“It was a random Thursday night and I had no idea this place existed,” said, Eggar, 41. “From the top of North Table Mountain, you could hear the faint (sound) of a banjo and drums. I looked down and saw a bunch of lights, a bunch of people.”Eggar was intrigued, so he ran down to check it out. It happens that New Terrain has a sta...Latest news
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