Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for the 'Kurt Schroeder' Tag

IT’S A GREAT TIME TO BE A BIKING FAN

August 21st, 2011, 9:00 am by

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The big project for the city's trail staff in 2011 is completing the 3.5-mile Midland Trail from America the Beautiful Park to Manitou Springs. A $2 million grant from Great Outdoors Colorado paid for the project, due to be completed in October.

Perhaps the most exciting three-day sports weekend in Colorado Springs history culminates Monday when 135 or so pro bike riders launch themselves from Garden of the Gods and race downtown at upwards of 50 mph.

It’s the prologue of the USA Pro Cycling Challenge, and it follows the Pikes Peak Ascent and Marathon over the weekend.

I’m totally psyched!

And it reminds me how lucky I am to live in a community that embraces cycling and encourages it with a network of neighborhood trails.

Side Streets columnist Bill Vogrin prepares to bomb down a ski run at Breckenridge.

The trail system isn’t perfect. I’ve done my share of bushwacking when a trail abruptly ended. And I’ve gotten lost a few times trying to find connections.

But I’ve also lived in cities where I wouldn’t dare commute 10 miles on a bike, as I do from my Rockrimmon home to downtown.

Check out a video I made of my commute.

Hang on as you climb onto the handlebars of my old Stumpjumper and rocket along with me at 60 mph — thanks to the magic of time-lapse editing — down the Pikes Peak Greenway along Monument Creek, over to the Shooks Run Trail and finally to The Gazette.

Or take a longer, full-length 40-minute trip with notes inserted to point out landmarks and street-crossnigs.

It was a blast making the video. And I’d love to see videos of your commutes.

Signs like these help trail riders find their way through the city's network.

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Some signs are in better shape than others.

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Here's another map in the Patty Jewitt Neighborhood

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It got me wondering about the status of area trails, especially with the severe budget cuts experienced by the parks agency.

Actually, a lot is going on.

Kurt Schroeder, manager of the city’s parks, trails and open space, said his staff remains committed to developing trails and piecing together missing links that sometimes frustrate folks on two wheels.

“It’s a slow process,” Schroeder said. “We have little money for rebuilding old trails. But we can still get money for new trails.”

In fact, the city expects to finish in October most of the 3.5-mile Midland Trail from America the Beautiful Park to Manitou Springs, thanks to a $2 million lottery grant from Great Outdoors Colorado, or GOCO.

Trail is being built along Sand Creek out east as well as from North Nevada Avenue to Dublin Boulevard near Cottonwood Creek, said Sarah Bryarly, the city’s trail guru.

Her wish list includes expanding the Rock Island Trail, punching Shooks Run Trail south to Fountain Creek and expanding Cottonwood Creek Trail from Vincent Drive.

It all sounds great to me. I can’t wait to ride them.

And I can’t wait to see your photos and videos!

Here’s some of the sights you’ll see on my video:

On my commute, I enjoy crossing the bridges over Monument Creek and its tributaries.

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Going under bridges can be spooky like this crossing under Pikes Peak Avenue.

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Stay alert. You never know when you might encounter wildlife . . . even the prehistoric kind.

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The city has placed mile markers along the Pikes Peak Greenway to help you keep track or your progress.

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This is one of my favorite spots popping up from under the Garden of the Gods Road bridge and seeing the sunflowers along the edge of Pikeview Reservior and Pikes Peak in the background.

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I like this overpass that carries you over Cache La Poudre Street and into Shooks Run Park.

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Down along Monument Creek near Roswell neighborhood.

Colorado Springs Parks, Recreation and Cultural Services Department has a trails page with tons of useful information.

Check out this

trails page: http://www.springsgov.com/Page.aspx?NavID=1881
pikes peak greenway trail: http://www.springsgov.com/units/parksrec/maps/pdfmaps/24x36ppgy.pdf
midland trail map: http://www.springsgov.com/Page.aspx?NavID=2289

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PLAYING THROUGH! I’M GONNA BURY THIS PUTT!

July 13th, 2011, 1:16 pm by

Andrea Brown, former Gazette columnist

My former colleague, Andrea Brown, wrote a piece in 2007 about how her family kept the ashes of her mother-in-law, Grandma Brown, in a cardboard urn in a linen closet.

It was a funny piece. Read it here. Of course, Andrea often made me laugh. Even when she didn’t mean to.

Anyway, I thought of Andrea and Grandma Brown when I learned what other folks do with the cremated remains of their relatives.

Turns out, lots of folks spread ashes around Colorado Springs parks, trails and even golf courses.

Playing through!

In fact, back in 1995, maintenance crews at Patty Jewett Golf Course, found a strange-looking substance spread on the 17th green.

 
 
 
 
 
 

Patty Jewett Golf Course boasts spectacular views.

Dal Lockwood, manager of the city’s golf enterprise, tells the story:

“There was a fair amount of stuff spread all over the greens. One of our old guys, an old sage, tasted it. He said it tasted salty. We had it tested. It was cremated remains.”

Wonder if it tasted like chicken?

Anyway, it’s a pretty common practice, as I learned. City parks, trails and golf courses get used for a lot of things besides the obvious.

Of course, weddings are a common activity especially during spring and summer. Some places must be reserved for a fee. Learn more here.

Garden of the Gods Park

 Topping the list are the Garden of the Gods and Grandview Overlook in Palmer Park, says Kurt Schroeder, parks, trails and open space manager for the city parks department.

Both parks offer inspiring views and spectacular backdrops for ceremonies and photos.

Some prefer getting hitched atop Pikes Peak with the panorama of the city as their backdrop.

Others like the American Mothers Chapel at Rock Ledge Ranch or the

Heritage Garden in Monument Valley Park.

 The gazebo and pond at Nancy Lewis Park is a favorite spot for tying the knot. The splashing waters of Helen Hunt Falls in Cheyenne Cañon attract some for their nuptials while others exchange vows at the Red Rock Canyon Open Space pavilion.

And there have been plenty of wedding receptions of Patty Jewett.

But I was surprised how often the same venues are used to spread cremated remains.

“The Garden of the Gods is probably the place the most ashes are scattered,” said Paul Butcher, retired parks department director. “We’ve always had hearsay stories that people scatter ashes in Garden of the Gods, Palmer Park and from the top of Pikes Peak. It happens. We never encouraged it. But I’m 100 percent sure people have done it.”

In fact, Native American groups tried unsuccessfully to stop construction of the visitors center in 1994 by claiming the garden was a sacred burial ground of the Kiowa, Cheyenne and Arapaho tribes.

Here’s a link to a video about Patty Jewett Golf Course.

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‘ROGUE’ HIKER TICKETED FOR GOING OFF-TRAIL

May 15th, 2011, 12:00 pm by
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Signs like this are posted in Stratton Open Space to keep hikers out of reclamation areas. Rick Bergles said the signs are illegal and has been ticketed for ignoring them and walking past them onto closed trails.

Rick Bergles says it’s a crime what the Colorado Springs Parks Department is doing in Stratton Open Space.

So why is Bergles the one facing trial?

Kurt Schroeder, manager of city parks, trails and open spaces, says Bergles is a rogue hiker who ignores signs warning people to stay off reclamation areas.

Schroeder said Bergles refuses to stay off closed trails and even removes brush barricading the closed areas.

After repeated reports of Bergles going off-trail and removing brush barricades, parks officials ticketed Bergles. He has asked for a trial in municipal court, perhaps later this month.

We’re talking signs and barricades like these:

Colorado Springs Parks Department trail builders have piled tree branches across social trails in Stratton Open Space and buried limbs in paths that have turned into gullies in an effort to stop erosion and reclaim the paths. Hiker Rick Bergles objects to the piles and has been ticketed for ignoring the signs and walking on reclamation areas.

Winfield Scott Stratton struck gold in Victor, Colo., and used his wealth to benefit Colorado Springs

Bergles insists the signs are illegal. He said the city has no right to restrict his movement inside an open space.

He fears the pilies of slash dramatically increase the danger of wilfire in the park, creating what he calls “fire highways” that will intensify any blaze that occurs.

It outrages him to see the trees that have been cut and used to block the social paths and fill the gullies that criss-cross the 318-acre park.

There is anger in the cutlines of the photos he posted online.

You can hear the anger in his voice when he talks about it on a couple videos he has posted online in his effort to plead his case.

One video shows the slash piles and another takes viewers on a hike in Stratton with Bergles up to an area where a wildfire burned in March.

In this image from FlashEarth.com, a spider web or social trials is visible in Stratton Open Space. xxx Tree branches are piled in a deep gully to catch soil and gravel that washed downhill in rainstorms on the Stratton Open Space. Parks officials buried the slash in the gully, angering Rick Bergles who said it was unnecessary.

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Rick Bergles calls this pile of tree branches a “fire highway” and fears a wildfire in Stratton Open Space will be fueled by similar piles used by the Colorado Springs Parks Department to close social trails and eroding gullies.
I talked to Christina Randall about the piles of slash used to block social paths in Stratton. She is the wildfire mitigation administrator for the city. She said the piles of slash do represent “jackpots of fuel” to a wildfire. But the piles are not near fences or any structures. So they pose little risk.
Rick Bergles is shown in an interview with KOAA News First 5 after the March wildfire in Stratton Open Space.

 And Randall said the benefit created by using brush to plug gullies and catch soil and sediment in reclaiming the area outweigh any risk of intensifying a possible wildfire.

Bergles was cited under a couple city ordinances dealing with destruction and damage to city parks. Here is a link to them.

This link gives some good information about sustainable trails and why social paths that follow the most direct route up a hillside, or along a “fall line,” are bad and contribute to erosion.

A new trail biult at Stratton Open Space is seen parallel to a closed trail that has been filled with buried slash.

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BONFORTE COULD BECOME GARBAGE ORPHAN

October 24th, 2010, 12:01 pm by

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Robin McPeek  believes in giving back to her community.

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 She appreciates Colorado Springs and particularly enjoys walking her dog in Bonforte Park and along the Rock Island Trail.

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So when the Colorado Springs Parks Department announced in February it was pulling 396 garbage cans from 128 neighborhood parks as a cost-cutting measure, McPeek worried what would happen.

The Parks Department took them away to save $40,000 in liners, roll-off service costs, landfill fees and worker time.

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She feared the park and trail would become trashy places.

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That’s why McPeek volunteered when Springs resident Steve Immel created Proud of Our Parks to encourage people to adopt their neighborhood parks and collect the trash.

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McPeek thought it would be no big deal to picked up the trash bags  from Bonforte Park once a week.

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Six months later, she has had a change of heart.

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She still loves her park and trail.

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 But she issick of hauling garbage and feels unappreciated.

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McPeek is so burned out she says she will not continue collecting the garbage next summer.

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If the city doesn’t change its policy and start picking up the trash, Bonforte will again be a garbage orphan.

Not all the Proud of Our Parks volunteers who adopted parks are burned out. Of the 160 or so trash cans being patrolled by volunteers, about one-third are sponsored by businesses and the rest are mostly neighborhood groups, Immel said.

Sue Iverson, Tony Valdez, Bonnie Hansen, Mike Lucas and Mitch Lucas have shared the duty of taking out the trash at Broadmoor Glen park since March 2010.

Real estate agents have their smiling faces on many cans. Restaurants are frequent adoptees, too.

A typical neighborhood group is one organized by Sue Iverson to patrol Broadmoor Glen Park in the 211-home Reserve at Broadmoor Glen neighborhood.

Iverson said she rotates with three other families. They emtpy the garbage twice a week. They learned to use Bungee cords to secure the bags and everything has gone smoothly.

Iverson said one family used the trash can project as a chance to teach their son about giving back to his community. For her, it’s a chance for community service and to protect the property values in the neighborhood where she has lived 11 years.

Kurt Schroeder of the Parks Department applauded all the volunteers who have adopted parks.

He said the program worked well all summer. He said a few glitches involved garbage cans left unattended during volunteers’ vacations. But he said the program is a huge success.

Schroeder said it’s unknown if the City Council will approve money for trash removal in the 2011 budget.

Here’s an earlier column I wrote about Proud of Our Parks and my previous blog on the subject.

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NEIGHBORS TRYING TO KEEP HOPE ALIVE FOR VENEZIA PARK

September 1st, 2010, 1:18 pm by

 At the corner of Briargate Parkway and Union Boulevard sits 108 acres of rolling prairie meadow . It’s mostly grasses and a few trees. The south fork of Pine Creek meanders through it.

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For 20 years, it has been envisioned as a community park with pavilions, sports fields, courts and other amenities.

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It was billed as a place where people from the region would gather, as compared to neighborhood parks designed to serve a limited area.

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But for now, and the forseeable future, it will remain a field — a place for joggers, for watching birds and other wildlife, for dogs to run.

Cathy Post, librarian at the Academy International Elementary School, is flanked by the undeveloped 108-acre Venezia Park. Post has worked since 1991 to get the park developed.

And it will remain a huge  disappointment to people like Cathy Post, a librarian at Academy International Elementary School, who moved to the surrounding neighborhood 12 years ago thinking her family would enjoy the huge park.

She even got her students involved in the planning process. They wrote letters, drew pictures and even attended a City Council meeting to urge approval of the park. When it finally given the go-ahead, she raced back to school and made an announcement over the PA system to celebrate. Her students, she said, were so happy.

The park was so close to becoming a reality it started showing up on maps as “John Venezia Park” — named for the developer of the area. But it’s just a field.

Plans are impressive. They call for 30 acres to be developed and the remaining 78 or so to be left as open space to protect habitat for the endangered Preble’s meadow jumping mouse. Here’s a look at the blueprints.

The city was poised to begin construction in 2008. It’s first plan was to use $1.7 million to launch work on the infrastructure – electrical, plumbing, curbs and gutter.

 The money was a combination of $700,000 from the Trails, Open Space and Parks tax and $1 million from a fund created by fees developers pay in lieu of building neighborhood parks, says Sarah Bryarly of the cityparks department.

Rather than build it in phases, the city decided to use a funding mechanism called “Certificates of Participation.” They are sold to investors and paid off over several years, like bonds.

But before the COPs could be sold, the nation’s economy crashed and financing evaporated.

Now, no money exists for new parks. The city’s sales tax revenues have collapsed, forcing City Council to slash the parks department budget, along with others.

But not everyone is ready to give up. Cathy is determined to keep hope alive for Venezia Park. 

She is attending meeting and lobbying for officials to find money, somewhere, to get the park built.

Prospects for the park are not good.

Bryarly said construction could start immediately if money was available.

But Kurt Schroeder, a parks department official, said even if the city could find $9.5 million to build it, there’s no money for ongoing maintenance.

His agency’s budget has been slashed by 80 percent and it’s not likely to be restored anytime soon. Absent a windfall, Venezia will remain on the shelf.

“It doesn’t make a lot of sense to add facilities if we don’t have maintenance money,” Schroeder said.

Here’s a link to the city’s community parks web site for more information.

And here’s a Feb. 26, 2007 column I wrote on the park.

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