Sunday, December 30, 2007



The buddha I put under the roots of a fallen juniper has stayed dry despite all the surrounding snow.

There is only one open spot on the creek where our road crosses it. It's next to a mushroomy snow bubble, which I think is a rock. Everything else is covered in ice.


Saturday, December 29, 2007




AFTER THE SECOND STORM

We had one day of no snow after Christmas, then it snowed again all day on Thursday. I took these photos yesterday, from inside where it was warm, so they'll look a little blurry from shooting through windows.

Everything looked kind of marshmallowy and mushroomy with the fluffy white snow piled on top of things outside. There's a shot way up on the hill across from us of the rock formation that looks like a sage or monk. He's covered in snowflakes.

Also there's a shot of our cat seeing the birds coming for seed on our porch and wishing he could be out there, but knowing it's so cold he shakes his paws at the front door and turns around deciding not to go out.

When I drove yesterday to pick up Emma's friend Daniel for a play date the snow at the top of the road that takes us out of the valley and down to the plains had snow on the sides of the road as high at the drive up mail boxes.

The road snow plower does a great job, Dave stopped him on Christmas morning when he plowed around six a.m. and gave him a bag of the freshly baked chocolate chip cookies he and Emma had baked the day before. Rumor had it when I lived in Evergreen that you were supposed to leave a bottle of whiskey for the snow plower on your fence post, but these days we don't want them to get a DUI while driving.

Thursday, December 27, 2007


Our Christmas Bells are Freezing

We've had so much snow that we had to cancel Christmas dinner with my cousin and his family. I was afraid they would get in an accident on the way here. It was really slippery.

In addition to that we didn't have phone service all day Christmas. Luckily our friend and neighbor Bruce called my cousin for us and then emailed us back to let us know when they were contacted on the road. They had been approaching Monument Hill and had decided to turn around and go back to the Springs.

Two days before Christmas I had cleaned the oven and in the process burnt out the heating coil by wrapping aluminum foil over it to keep the oven cleaner off. Yikes, with no oven our Christmas roast and quiches and rolls for a neighborly brunch were unattainable.

Dave and Emma went to Bruce's on Christmas eve and baked cookies. On Christmas morning Bruce baked our cinnamon rolls but declined coming because of the weather. I picked up another new neighbor, Young, a woman from Korea and brought her to our house, got the rolls Bruce had heated up and became very aware of how slick it was. Diane next door, John down the road and Jimmy up the road made it for brunch on their own volition.

So now my cousin and his family will hopefully be able to make it here Sunday. It's snowed all day again today and is supposed to snow through the night. But tomorrow and Saturday and Sunday are supposed to be nice.

We've already eaten the grilled roast, which almost caused our porch to burn down because the water under the roast dried up and then flames started incinerating the roast. So when Dave tried to move the roast it fell into the coals and the flames were leaping to the top of the porch. Luckily we got it under control.So we're going for Indian or Italian food for the replacement Christmas dinner because we can cook them on the stove top without the oven.

It's nice to have our phone service back, one day we will have an oven again. It will be self cleaning and I will refrain from using the harsh chemicals in the oven.

Whew, what a day.

Friday, December 21, 2007



Thursday, December 20, 2007




Monday, December 17, 2007

DAN FONG

Back in 1973, I dropped out of university and started working in Denver in a hip and happening pizza place. I met a man who was a cook and delivery driver there. I thought he was the most beautiful man in the world and he liked me as much as I liked him, which was a lot, it was wonderful. Our boss, who was 8 years my senior and had gone to high school with my sister, had also gone to high school with or hung out in high school with Dan Fong, who was catering concerts when I met him. He would come to the restaurant some times and hang out in the kitchen with us.

He asked our boss, Jay, to help him cater and provide him additional catering staff for I think it was a series of 3 Grateful Dead concerts at the Coliseum. It was so great to be backstage. I also helped on Bob Dylan and The Band. I had missed Crosby Stills and Nash because my boyfriend was not invited to that one. I could have kicked myself, because on of my favorite performers was (and is) Joni Mitchell and she showed up with them unexpectedly. Barry Fey did show up at the restaurant when Dan Fong cooked us a special meal at a private party for everyone who had helped at the Grateful Dead concerts.

Dan is also an excellent photographer. He moved from catering to being stage/(road?) manager for the Doobie Brothers. I was visiting his website: thecreativeye.net and was so glad that someone had written about the beginning of the scene going on at that time.

I was still in high school and my first semester of college in 1972, so I wasn't working at Bilotti's when the below described party happened. I did listen to KFML in highschool. And I was at the Rolling Stones concert in 1972, in the audience. It was the next year when all the fun began for me. I was living on my own for the first time outside of a dorm room, then with my boyfriend, we shared a house with the band he played with (local not famous, but smart and funny.)

So, I enjoyed reading this so much, I'm copying what is written, please know this is copyrighted material as marked (not mine), I'd encourage you to go to the site and look at his photographs (the section that I am excerpting is from the Artist Scoop section):

The Creativeye

home | statement | galleries index | image index | Artist Scoop | contact




WHAT I COULD TELL YOU ABOUT DAN FONG

BY James Pagliasotti
Copyright 2005

There are a lot of stories I could tell you about Dan Fong. In fact, he would pay me good money not to tell you some of them.

But I will tell you this: if you care about the time when rock & roll came of age, those days of Jimi and Janis and the Who and the Stones, then I can assure you Dan was there, camera in hand and sharp eyes focused.

I know because I was there, too. Dan and I grew up together in Denver in the 50s, 60s and 70s. We were there when Top 40 radio gave way to free-form, when singles gave way to albums, when wholesome and carefully coiffed performers gave way to all those long haired freaks with guitars.

We were there when Chet Helms brought the Family Dog to town and settled in on West Mississippi; when Barry Fey began producing shows at the Denver Coliseum; when Stuart Green's Mammoth Gardens erupted in music uptown and Chuck Morris was booking Tulagi in Boulder. We heard it, we saw it, and we spent a lot of time with the people who made it happen. And, unlike many of the rest of us who were too stoned to function at the time, Dan got it all on film.

Most of his photos have never been seen before. Dan in those days was too busy to do anything but shoot them and store them away. Now he has this treasure trove to look through, and he's finally making them available to the rest of us.

As I pour over these galleries, the memories come back like a tsunami. They will for you too if you were there, or if you only imagined you were, or even if you just wanted to be. These photographs capture memories, but they can make them, too.

It was a time unlike any other and there were indeed a lot of scenes to capture, and stories to be told. Let me tell you just one of them.

When the Stones toured in the summer of 1972, Barry Fey was promoting some of their shows. He'd started out in the business a few years before by putting on a concert of the Byrds at a D.U. fraternity party and thereafter kept getting bigger, both in personal girth and the size of his shows. After the Denver Pop Festival in 1969, he became very big indeed. And, now, success hanging on him like slabs of fat on a roast, he wanted to have the Stones to dinner.

Dan Fong not only was a helluva photographer, he also was a serious chef. He'd grown up in a community of fine Chinese restaurants and this boy knew how to cook.

So Barry hired Dan to cook dinner for the Stones. He'd already done a number of backstage catering jobs at Fey's concerts, including both of the Stones' Denver shows, so it was a slam dunk. Mick wanted him so Barry wanted him and that's the way it was going to be. Barry then partnered up with all the freaks at KFML radio to give the evening some flavor, and before you knew it, it was becoming a rather auspicious event.

Keeping it a secret meant keeping it from the public. In the music business in Denver, everybody knew and everybody wanted to come, but not everybody could.

But then, that's what being a kingmaker is all about and Very Big Barry doled out the precious invitations as he saw fit. All we could do was to keep the location secret and somehow we did.

About the only way you could squeeze in a friend was to get them a job on the work crew that was going to help Dan Fong with the serving and cleaning. He'd already recruited his family and his friends at Bilotti's Pizza to help him prep and cook.

So, baby kingmakers that we were, we lined up the best looking girls that we knew to staff the party, figuring those were markers to be redeemed at a later time. I also got my friend Geitz Romo the job as bartender to the stars.

The party was held at Barry's home in Cherry Hills, which was one of those enormous Jewish modern ranch-style houses on an acre of land on Quincy just east of University. The back yard was scattered with dozens of waist-high, multi-colored paper mache mushrooms. Long low tables were set among them luau like and lanterns provided the light.

The piece de resistance was the Stones' newly minted lips and tongue logo in a sculpture some 5 feet tall, which was connected to a machine that was supposed to send clouds of bubbles out of the mouth. Unfortunately, the machine malfunctioned and all night long, this gelatinous goo kept pouring out of it, looking like nothing so much as puke.

So, the court gathered in advance of the stars. There was Barry, of course, and Cyndy, his wife at the time. Tall, blond, ice-blue-eyed Jerry Kennedy, the head of Denver's Vice Squad and Barry's security crew, was there in his captain's uniform, keeping tabs, one supposes.

There was Max Floyd of KMYR and Joe McGoey of KFML and assorted other business types that Barry wanted around. And there was Sandy Phelps and Thom Trunnell, Bill Ashford and Judy Roderick, Buffalo Chip and Reno Nevada and Brian the Super Warthog, David Shepardson and Ronnie Katz, Herb Neu and all the rest of the KFML gang, and Marcello Cabus, and me and the girls, and a host of other pseudo-celebrities.

And, behind a wall of grills and ovens, towering flames and truly huge mounds of food, was Dan Fong and his family, cooking their hearts out, while all of us awaited the Rolling Stones.

That night in those long ago times when things took place that today are actually hard to imagine, let alone to believe, Dan Fong cooked and served a 14 course sit down dinner for 100 people. And it was awesome! There was a little of this and a lot of that and oysters and duck and a roast pig the size of a small Mercedes cooked over an open pit. There were intoxicants of every sort, beer and wine, tequila and whiskey, and all sorts of other stuff, too; and there was that most ethereal of drugs: the bending of elbows with real celebrities, the once and future royalty of rock & roll.

You can bet Dan had his trusty camera handy. And somehow, in the midst of the flames and the grease and the chemistry of fine cuisine, he got some incredible shots, as he always did.

The Stones and their entourage arrived fashionably late, but well ahead of dinner. Mick was dressed in a baby blue jacket with feathers that trimmed the collar, the cuffs and the hem, which was cut off at the bottom of his ribs. It covered a sparkling silver shirt of some sort that also bared his midriff. His pants were dark blue tights and his shoes were satin slippers. His eyes were made up with sparkles and mascara. He seemed to be perfectly comfortable.

Keith was a bit out of it in those days and moved through the crowd somnambulistically, supported by two very tall Nordic women who drugged him and dragged him from place to place. Also very tall Mick Taylor was a friendly pile of blond curls, smiling and chatting and as nice as could be. Bill Wyman was sharp-faced, dark and intense, and good ol' Charlie Watts was just a regular guy.

I was sitting with him on a couch near the window, talking about jazz, and Mick was posing nearby, when Geitz the bartender yelled at me in a very loud voice: "Hey Smooth Dog! Tell that little faggot in the ballerina costume his drink is ready." Mick barely seemed to notice and smiled at me vaguely when I handed him the glass. Charlie laughed so hard that he fell on the floor.

It was one of those nights that kept unfolding like waves in the ocean, one image lapping in after another. We sat on the lawn at the long luscious tables of food and drink, with the lanterns bouncing light off faces that you knew and faces you only had imagined or seen at a distance or maybe on film. The mushrooms seemed to sway in the glow and the puke kept gurgling from the mouth of the Rolling Stones logo. Beautiful women served platters of indescribably delicious food and looked into your eyes for just a moment as though you were all they ever had dreamed of, and just as quickly they were gone in pursuit of any excuse to get close to Mick.

People that you worked for were passing out in the aisles and others that you barely paid attention to were waxing eloquent. Everybody it seemed got turned around completely and then had to reconfigure their bearings. And everybody went home happy.

Everybody, that is, except Dan. All of us first nighters and all of the staff, those beautiful girls and sharp tongued bartenders, everyone it seemed had wandered off into the night. And Dan Fong was left with a pile of pans and dishes and debris and detritus that defied the imagination of the average man among us. And having no other choice, he spent the night with all the crap and all of his equipment. And the next day, he and a couple of his cousins cleaned it all up, packed it away and took it home.

There among the equipment and the trash was his camera and his bag of lenses and film, and a couple of hundred shots he had taken that night that someday he would develop. The day that followed blended into the next and the next thereafter, and Dan Fong kept shooting pictures of the megastars and the lesser lights and some of the rest of us who peopled the portrait of rock & roll.

It was our story, and it was a helluva story, and all we needed was someone to record it. A good photographer is hard to find and so is Dan Fong. But, lucky you, you've found him.