
Square Dance
After a championship season, a Colorado football coach noticed a change in his players’ attitude. And so he turned the team to a more inclusive extracurricular activity: square dancing.

By Jon Pinnow

Abert’s Squirrel
The ears of the Abert’s squirrel are long and fuzzy, like a shaggy cross between bat and rabbit ears.

By Jon Pinnow

The Cash Register Building
The most iconic skyscraper in Denver is quite possibly the one folks call the “Cash Register” building.

By Jon Pinnow

Sugar Beets
A century ago, Colorado’s economy depended upon the sugar beet, a white root vegetable related to red table beets.

By Jon Pinnow

Tom’s Baby
July 1887, Summit County: Two prospectors blast their way into a pocket of GOLD and pull out a massive nugget – 13 and a half pounds!

By Jon Pinnow

Burros
The beasts of burden in the Colorado mineral booms of the late 1800s were burros – the Spanish word for a small, sturdy donkey.

By Jon Pinnow

Greenback Cutthroat Trout
In Colorado’s 6,000 miles of streams, the rainbow trout gets the glory, but the cutthroat trout is the true local.

By Jon Pinnow

Crestone
Believers will tell you the tiny town of Crestone sits at a convergence of powerful forces available for healing and higher states of consciousness.

By Jon Pinnow


The State Flag
In the beginning, Colorado’s state flag was like so many others’: a display of the state seal, which in Colorado’s case includes an all-seeing eye, a Roman ax, a shield […]

By Jon Pinnow

The Angel of Shavano
Every spring, as the snow melts, an angel emerges on a mountainside in the San Isabel National Forest.

By Jon Pinnow

White Pelicans
When a Boulder lake was infested with thousands of goldfish, authorities worried they would destroy the ecosystem. All methods of removing them were unpleasant.

By Jon Pinnow


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