The Gift(s) of Guests

     Living far away from my childhood home, I don’t see family and friends from Europe nearly as often as I would like, excepting this year, when my husband and I were blessed with two rounds of visitors, resulting in multiple excursions to Denver’s airport. Our friend Susanne came for an impromptu stay in April, … Continue reading The Gift(s) of Guests

Garden of Eden

Of all the states in the Union, Colorado boasts the most 14ers (between 52 and 54, according to the source) and the highest mean elevation (6,800 feet), and lies therefore closest to heaven. It is a place of sunshine, natural splendor, and rarefied air, and with this in mind it should come as no surprise that … Continue reading Garden of Eden

Ancestral Puebloans-Part 4: Hovenweep

This is part 4 of a series.  Click here for part 1 (Overview), here for part 2 (Chaco Canyon), here for part 3 (Mesa Verde), and here for part 5 (Bandelier). Hovenweep National Monument was established in 1923. A lesser-known assembly of Ancestral Puebloan relics, it straddles the border of southwest Colorado and southeast Utah … Continue reading Ancestral Puebloans-Part 4: Hovenweep

Ancestral Puebloans-Part 3: Mesa Verde

    This is part 3 of a series.  Click here for part 1 (Overview), here for part 2 (Chaco Canyon), here for part 4 (Hovenweep), and here for part 5 (Bandelier). Once Chaco Canyon lost its prominent role, due to natural or man-made causes, Mesa Verde saw its star shine brightly, before it, too, flickered, then … Continue reading Ancestral Puebloans-Part 3: Mesa Verde

Ancestral Puebloans-Part 2: Chaco Canyon

This is part 2 of a series. Click here for part 1 (Overview), here for part 3 (Mesa Verde),  here for part 4 (Hovenweep), and here for part 5 (Bandelier). Among the best-known architecture of the Ancestral Puebloans is Colorado’s Mesa Verde National Park. It was, however, preceded and superseded in significance by New Mexico’s … Continue reading Ancestral Puebloans-Part 2: Chaco Canyon