Dizzy’s Donuts: Boulder’s Guilty Pleasure

 

Dizzy’s Donuts: Boulder’s Guilty Pleasure

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There has been a serious drought going on in Boulder for a few years now. I’m not talking about the diminishing snow levels but the lack of a quality donut store in town. I’m blaming all those pesky professional athletes and extreme dietary restrictions.

Sure, you could pick up a dozen at the supermarket but we can all agree that the quality doesn’t hold up. If you want a delicious donut, do you really have to drive to Louisville to satisfy your craving?

Not anymore! With Dizzy’s Donuts located near the intersection of Conestoga and Arapahoe, Boulder now has a destination donut place.

The owners knew that if they wanted to succeed in one of America’s top foodie towns, there were going to need to offer a delicious and gourmet version of the supermarket donut. Lucky for us, they’ve done just that.

PB&J

With high-end flavors like creme brulee, key lime pie and maple bacon, Dizzy’s is not afraid to try new things. They have their own version of the traditional jelly-filled, but with the addition of peanut butter mousse, making it a PB & J (I can personally recommend this one). If you’re an old-school donut lover, have no fear. You can still find a classic glazed or original in the case right next to the fancy ones.

Dizzy’s started at the Erie Farmer’s Market in 2011 and would sell out of donuts every week. After that strong showing,  it was time to find wider distribution. Ozo and Que’s were the first coffee shops in town to carry the donuts and from there, it was a short journey to opening a storefront in September of 2012.

As Jane Boggs-Guthrie, one of the owners of Dizzy’s, said, “People, even people in Boulder, want a good donut every now and again. We’ve been pleasantly surprised by the welcome reception we’ve received.”

Coming up on their first-year anniversary, Dizzy’s is definitely going strong. With a nice interior, good coffee and ample space for the kids to run off their sugar, Dizzy’s Donuts is a necessary stop for anyone looking for the best (and only) independent donut maker in town. Just get there early. They often sell out.

 

 

 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

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The Goat at the Garage

 

The Goat at the Garage

laughing goatEveryone knows about The Laughing Goat on the east end of Pearl Street andcollege students frequent the Goat on the CU campus. But now, there’s a new member to the Goat family. The Baby Goat, also known as The Goat at the Garage, is adjacent to the Green Garage on the corner of 55th and Pearl. Those of us in the neighborhood, or waiting on car work at the Garage, couldn’t be happier. Or more caffeinated.

Along with the many tables inside, the Goat folk have built out a nice front patio, complete with benches and a swing. Sturdy wooden partitions give the area asense of space and the owners can be complimented on creating something relaxing out of a difficult location. It’s easy to ooze ambience on Pearl Street but a little harder in a light industrial setting. The Goat has a bike rack on the way and features lots of parking for cars. You can almost forget that a post office is right next door. Almost.

The coffee, roasted by the Kaladi Brothers of Denver, is just as delicious at this location as the Goat downtown, the baristas just as helpful and the gluten freepastries just as plentiful. At this Goat though, you don’t have to worry about fighting anyone to get a table.

The coffee shop has only been open since the beginning of summer so plans for nighttime entertainment are still in the works. While there are definite challenges to being located in East Boulder, the close proximity to the bike path and Valmont Bike Park make The Baby Goat most welcome in the growing scene out east. All the people drinking beer at all those microbreweries within a one-mile radius of the coffee shop are going to need to pep up if they want to keep drinking beer at all those microbreweries.

Tara Callihan, YourBoulder

 

 

 

John Marcotte

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Stress Solutions

Stress Solutions
5 Habits of Highly Relaxed People

Stress Solutions -  5 Habits of Highly Relaxed People

You’re probably too busy: Too many deadlines, too many activities and too many people demanding more of your time. We should treat stress just like the warning light on our dashboard–when it comes on, it’s a good idea to pull over and figure out the problem. Read on for the latest stress relief techniques:

Take five. Or ten! Taking a few minutes out of a stressful day can go a long way. Take a short walk and practice deep breathing, read something inspirational (not the news), or write a few lines in your online journal about how you feel. You’ll find your outlook improves faster than just pushing through the stress.

Take it easy on yourself. Negative self-talk adds pressure and guilt, but being kind to yourself is scientifically proven to give you positive psychological health. Everybody has tough days, and understanding that will help you relieve some of the burden.

Think about progress, not perfection. Research psychologist Dr K. Anders Ericsson of theUniversity of Florida says time is the key to mastering any skill. Once you find out the average time it takes to master your given subject, start the clock. Track your time and improvement will come as a matter of course.

Make routine, routine. Calendar your activities. There are only so many hours in a day! Subtract sleep, meals, regular exercise and family time from your 24-hour day before you schedule; you may discover there truly aren’t enough hours in the day and you can feel better about saying “no” to yours or someone else’s unrealistic expectations.

Half full… or not. Not everyone is an optimist, and that’s the way it’s supposed to be according to the psychologists and authors of Focus: Use Different Ways of Seeing the World for Success and Influence. Promotion focused optimists, are dominant in seeking opportunity; while prevention focused defensive-pessimists are dominant in minimizing loss or avoiding danger. One isn’t any better than the other, but being forced to adopt your opposite style can create more stress, so whichever you happen to be, embrace it!

Courtest of YouMagazine

 

 

John Marcotte

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Boulder homes for sale 

 

Stapleton senior housing

Stapleton senior housing

Greenway at Stapleton

Greenways at Stapleton

The first market-rate apartment community for active adults at Stapleton is officially breaking ground today.

The 108-unit development, called Greenways at Stapleton, is in the heart of Stapleton at the intersection of Martin Luther King Boulevard and Ulster Street.

“Greenways is a smart choice for people aged 55+ who want to live a maintenance-free lifestyle close to all that Stapleton offers—shopping, dining, parks and events,” said John Thode, director of development for Wisconsin-based Horizon Development Group. “We’re already hearing from folks who want to live closer to family or retire in the area.”

The Greenways will feature 48 one-bedroom, 53 two-bedroom and seven two-bedroom plus den apartments.

They’ll offer a wide variety of floor plans, with apartments ranging in size from 700 to 1,200 square feet.

All apartments feature functional layouts, nine-foot ceilings, full kitchens, in-unit washers and dryers, energy efficient design and appliances and private balconies or patios. Rents start at $1,000 per month. For other senior living options, visit sites like https://www.carltonseniorliving.com/community/sacramento/.

Amenities for residents include a large clubroom with kitchen; outdoor landscaped plaza; fitness room; café with free WiFi; private dining/meeting room; activity room; and underground parking. A community manager will schedule on and off-site gatherings. Insidernews.com

 

 

 

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A Must-See Concert for CU Students: Krewella on August 24

 

A Must-See Concert for CU Students: Krewella on August 24

boulder CU welcomefest 2013

Are you a CU Boulder Student? If so, you’ve got quite the slate of events lined up for you by the University of Colorado Program Council this year. First and foremost? The 2013 Welcomefest concert on August 24 at Farrand Field.

This year, CU students can attend the Welcomefest concert for free. Krewella will be headlining the entertainment for the evening this year. The other detail that you need to know? The concert is ONLY for currently enrolled CU students. You’ll have to present a valid BuffOne card at the gate.

Now, what can you expect to find at this year’s Welcomefest to kick of the fall term? Here’s the scoop from the event’s Facebook page:

Krewella is an American EDM group comprised of two singers and a DJ, based out of Chicago, Illinois. Krewella are known for their high energy songs that will get any naysayers dancing. Fresh to the scene Krewella came out with their first EP in 2011, Play Hard. A few of Krewella’s most notable hits include “Alive”, “Killin it” and “Live for the Night”. Krewella’s single “Alive” topped the Billboard Dance Radio Airplay at #1 and The Billboard’s Hot 100 at #32. Headlining a variety of festivals including Ultra, Electric Daisy Carnival and Stereosonic.

Now, just a reminder that RSVPing to the Facebook page isn’t a guaranteed event entry. Be sure to visit the Facebook event page for tickets and exactly how to use your BuffOne card to get through the concert gates. But between now and then, gear yourself up for Welcomefest and kicking off another year as a student in Boulder — possibly one of the best towns ever to be a student in!

By  YourBoulder.com

 

 

John Marcotte

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Hiking in Boulder: Royal Arch at Chautauqua

By  of YourBoulder.com

Royal arch boulder hiking

To Royal Arch from Chatauqua — ~1.7 miles

Elevation change – 1,205 ft (net gain) [via protrails.com]

Dogs Allowed – yes

Among the fascinating and mind-boggling rock formations along the Flatiron trails is the Royal Arch, a massive formation that forms a completed curve over a 20 ft. span.  The arch tops out at an elevation of 6,915 ft. and offers – as most peaks do in this area – an amazing panoramic view of the entire Boulder Valley all the way out to Denver.  This is one of the steepest trails in the area, but the gorgeous forest scenery and the big summit payoff are well worth the effort.

Take Bluebell Road (the big gravel one that runs alongside Chatauqua Park) and follow it for about 15 minutes.  There will be a fork in the path that is easily marked by the large permanent restroom – head west, directly toward the looming Flatirons.  The next 200 yards is full of great picnicking spots, where you can find plenty of tables and the very posh Bluebell Shelter that’s fit for a party.  However, you aren’t on this trip to relax — you’re here to conquer some gnarly hiking terrain!

royal arch hiking boulder 2

I suggest you adopt this attitude as quickly as possible, because once the path starts to get rocky, it gets more difficult from there.  Once you’ve passed the large boulder field on your right, you have stepped across the threshold.

The rest of the trail is very steep.  There are plenty of solid man-made staircases (and by man-made I mean “strategically placed rocks”) but there are also times you’ll wonder where the trail went.  Don’t get me wrong – every turn of the trail has a new and beautiful sight.  But in terms of athleticism, I’d say the trail veers somewhere between “daunting forest monastery” and “Chief Stairmaster’s Revenge.”

 

 

royal arch hiking boulder 4

 

 

royal arch hiking boulder 5

You will arrive at the Royal Arch like a very sweaty piece of twine ready to thread the eye of this needle.  The late summer sun will be eclipsed by the top of the arch, creating an imposing shadow that is quite breathtaking.  Through the arch is a family of large boulders that make a great perch as you take in as much horizon as you can handle.  You have officially accomplished your mission!

 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

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Obama to back mortgage finance reform to speed housing recovery

 

Obama to back mortgage finance reform to speed housing recovery

U.S. President Barack Obama smiles as he returns from a birthday weekend visit at Camp David to the White House in Washington, August 4, 2013. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

By Mark Felsenthal and Margaret Chadbourn

WASHINGTON | Mon Aug 5, 2013 8:03pm EDT

(Reuters) – President Barack Obama will propose overhauling the U.S. mortgage finance system in a speech on Tuesday, weighing in on a tangled and polarizing problem that was central to the devastating financial crisis in 2007-2009 and that continues to slow the economic recovery, the White House said.

Obama will propose eliminating mortgage finance entities Fannie Mae andFreddie Mac over time, replacing them with a system in which the privatemarket buys home loans from lenders and repackages them as securities for investors, senior administration officials said. The mortgage securitization process is deemed essential to the smooth flow of capital to housing markets and the availability of credit.

The government’s role would be relegated to providing some form of insurance or guarantee, and to providing oversight, according to officials and a White House statement.

The departments of Treasury and Housing and Urban Development have been working on an outline for housing finance reform. They outlined several options in a white paper to Congress in 2011.

After plunges in home values that wiped out an estimated $7 trillion in homeowner equity and wrecked many Americans’ finances, housing markets are staging a modest recovery. Obama, as part of a series of speeches pushing for steps to boost tepid economic growth, is focusing on housing issues in a speech in Phoenix, Arizona, in one of the regions hardest hit by the housing bust.

The president generally agrees with the bipartisan Senate proposal that would replace Fannie and Freddie with a system that would allow private firms to securitize mortgages, a senior administration official told reporters in a conference call. A government reinsurer of mortgage securities could backstop private capital in a crisis, the official said.

Obama would want the Senate measure to go farther in helping first-time home buyers and in making sure affordable rental housing is available, the official added.

The Senate bill, though, remains at odds with the bill advancing in the Republican-controlled House of Representatives that would liquidate Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac over five years and limit government loan guarantees.

RESTRUCTURING MORTGAGE SYSTEM TO TAKE YEARS

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac became dominant players in housing finance when private lending to home-buyers declined after the financial crisis. The government-backed companies own or guarantee more than half of all U.S. home loans and are critical to keeping capital flowing to lenders and borrowers.

 

 

(Reporting by Mark Felsenthal and Margaret Chadbourn; editing by Jackie Frank)

 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

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Boulder History Museum’s History Mystery Challenge

Boulder History Museum’s History Mystery Challenge

boulder history museum

I knew you’d click if I put “beer” right in the headline. And you should. It’s time to get your beer on for some Boulder-style shenanigans, brought to you by the Boulder History Museum.

On Thursday, August 15, grab your buddies and head down to the 6th Annual History Mystery Challenge:’Downtown Beer’ Edition, sponsored by the Boulder History Museum. Teams can have from two to six people on them and teams will run around Boulder in search of answers. It’s time to bone up on your Boulder historical trivia AND don your best beer-themed costume in the process. And don’t worry about the extent of your Boulder historical knowledge. In true Wheel Of Fortune style, you can buy clues (instead of vowels) throughout the event to move you along from one place to another.

Grab that registration form here. Deadline for entry is August 9th.

The event runs from 5:30-8:30PM on Thursday, August 15.

Oh — and leave your smartphone at home. They’re against the rules. You’re going to have to run this race the old fashioned way. Like without blue dots and Google.

 

 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

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Bring on Boulder Outdoor Cinema!

Bring on Boulder Outdoor Cinema!

boulder outdoor cinema 2013

Ah, summertime in Boulder! We’re a few weeks late to the party this year, but it’s time once again for Boulder Outdoor Cinema!

Every Saturday night from now until August 31, grab your friends and family and head down to the movies. Movies are shown outdoors in the lot behind the Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art (1750 13th Street). Gates open at 7PM and there’s a rockin’ band on stage every evening by 7:30PM. So when’s the movie? Well, movies start “at dusk” (read: when it’s dark enough to show the movie).

Boulder Outdoor Cinema is an event fueled 100% by donations. There’s a suggested $5 donation at the door and they thank you (with GUSTO) for your donations to help pay for licensing fees, venue, and equipment upkeep and the like.

Wanna see what’s showing this year? Here’s the scoop:

July 20–Rocky Horror Picture Show

July 27–Moonrise Kingdom

August 3–Princess Bride

August 10–Wayne’s World

August 17–Tombstone

August 24–Monty Python and The Holy Grail

August 31–Big Lebowski

Let’s just say that I’m sad I have plans on Saturday in Denver and I’m stoked about being completely available on August 24 and 31.

Here are some tips to keep your Boulder Outdoor Cinema experience most bueno for you and your fellow moviegoers:

  • Seating: People bring blankets or low beach chairs. Don’t bring your camp chairs as people sitting behind you won’t be able to see. Don’t be “that guy.”
  • Snacks: You’re welcome to bring snack. In fact, many folks make this a picnic-like event. They also have standard movie fare like popcorn and soft drinks for sale on-site.

 

 

 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

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A Perfect Day Outdoors

A Perfect Day Outdoors

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Breakfast: Enjoy breathtaking views from Chautauqua Dining Hall, 900 Baseline Road, 303.440.3776. While you’re there:

  • Drive up Flagstaff Mountain for a bird’s-eye view of Boulder.

Mid-Morning: Experience some of Boulder’s recreational activities: (Call 303.442.2911 for rentals and instructors)

  • Hike in the open space next to Chautauqua. Stop at the Ranger Station for trail maps.
  • Bike or rollerblade along Boulder Creek Path, which spans 5.5 miles through the center of town.
  • Visit the kayak course on Boulder Creek. Located just west of Eben G. Fine Park at the west end of Arapahoe Avenue.
  • Attempt fly-fishing in Boulder Creek with a professional guide.
    Kinsley Outfitters, 1155 13th Street, 303.442.6204
    Rocky Mountain Anglers, 629-B S. Broadway, 303.447.2400
  • Enjoy a tubing adventure down Boulder Creek. Tubes can be purchased at Conoco Gas Station, 1201 Arapahoe Avenue, 303.442.6293.
  • Try rock climbing with instructors from Boulder Rock Club. 2829 Mapleton Avenue, 303.938.1411.
  • Rent a canoe or paddleboat at the Boulder Reservoir, 303.441.3456.

Lunch: Pack a delicious picnic lunch at a local health food store:

  • Whole Foods
    2905 Pearl Street
    303.545.6611
  • Whole Foods
    2584 Baseline Road
    303.499.7636
  • Alfalfa’s
    1651 Broadway
    720.420.8400
  • Ideal Market
    1275 Alpine Avenue
    303.443.1354
  • Stop by the Boulder Farmer’s Market,
    located on 13th Street between Canyon & Arapahoe. Saturdays 8am-2pm, April-October and Wednesdays 4-8pm, May-October.

Afternoon: Take pleasure in:

  • A scenic glider ride with Mile High Gliding, 303.527.1122.
  • A magical voyage in a hot air balloon ride with Fair Winds Hot Air Balloon Flights, 303.939.9323.
  • A stroll along Pearl Street Mall, filled with shops, galleries and sidewalk cafés, 303.449.3774.
  • One of Boulder’s 30,000 acres of open space, 303.442.3282.
  • A drive to Boulder Falls a few miles west on Canyon Boulevard.
  • A scenic drive along Peak to Peak highway, 303.442.2911or visit Rocky Mountain National Park, 970.586.1206.

Evening: Dine at one of Boulder’s unique restaurants: (Call 303.442.2911 for a Restaurant Guide)

  • Flagstaff House
    1138 Flagstaff Road
    303.442.4640
  • Red Lion Inn
    38472 Boulder Canyon Dr.
    303.442.9368
  • The Med
    1002 Walnut Street
    303.444.5335
  • Boulder Chophouse & Tavern
    947 Walnut
    303.443.1178

Read the entire article here

 


 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

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