
Barney Ford
Barney Ford escaped slavery in Virginia in the mid-1800s, taught himself to read and write, and eventually came to Colorado with his wife Julia seeking a fortune in gold.

By Jon Pinnow

Million Dollar Highway
The stretch of Highway 550 between Silverton and Ouray takes drivers over Red Mountain Pass at 11 thousand feet without guardrails on its narrowest sections.

By Jon Pinnow

Johnstown Meteorite
July 6, 1924. A funeral procession in what is now Johnstown. 200 mourners are startled by four large explosions. A meteor has streaked into the earth’s atmosphere, and breaks up.

By Jon Pinnow

Loveland’s Cherry Industry
Once upon a time, Loveland was the heart of Colorado’s thriving cherry industry.

By Jon Pinnow

Western Meadowlark
You’ll probably hear one before you see it, though seeing the western meadowlark isn’t necessarily hard to do, as they reside in much of Colorado year-round, and they like finding […]

By Jon Pinnow

Breckenridge
In Breckenridge, spelling matters. Thomas Breckenridge – with an E in the middle – came through in the 1840s with the Fremont expedition.

By Jon Pinnow

Boreal Toad
In Colorado’s subalpine areas, you might spot a greenish-gray toad hanging out in shallow waters, sporting a white stripe on its back.

By Jon Pinnow

Alpine Tundra
Colorado’s alpine tundra is most visible in Rocky Mountain National Park above 11,400 feet. It’s a spectacular environment – but cold and severe. Still, life persists.

By Jon Pinnow

AdAmAn
Pikes Peak greets every new year with the flash, sparkle and boom of pyrotechnics. It’s a tradition that began in 1922.

By Jon Pinnow

NORAD
In Colorado – and across North America – where’s the best place to keep a watch on the skies?

By Jon Pinnow

Christmas lights
December, 1914. In Denver, 10 year old David Sturgeon is too sick to join his family downstairs around their Christmas tree.

By Jon Pinnow

Pikas
Look around the summit of Colorado’s many high peaks, and you’ll eventually see the pint-sized American pika – a powerfully resilient resident of the highest altitudes.

By Jon Pinnow

Pueblo
Before the gold rush, Colorado did have boomtowns. One of the first was ideally situated where the Arkansas River spills onto the Great Plains.

By Jon Pinnow

The beaver
There’s only one Colorado rodent that grows to nearly 50 pounds, sees underwater and prefers to spend time next to its own homemade ponds. The beaver.

By Jon Pinnow

Eugene Fodor
It’s rare for a classical musician to become a household name, but in the 1970s, that was the case for Denver-born Eugene Fodor.

By Jon Pinnow

Turkey vultures
Soaring high overhead, riding spirals of warm air, that broad-winged bird may be an eagle, or a hawk.

By Jon Pinnow