
Dark skies
Colorado’s high elevation and dry climate make for good stargazing unless you’re near a city that glows with light pollution, making it hard to see any but the brightest stars […]

By Jon Pinnow

Colfax
When he first visited Colorado, Schuyler Colfax was stepbrother to a Denverite – and near the front of the line of succession to be US President.

By Jon Pinnow

Capitola
For a few hours in April 1902, child welfare was on the minds of Colorado lawmakers. Specifically, one child’s welfare, because someone had left a baby inside the state capitol.

By Jon Pinnow

John and Elizabeth Iliff
In the mid 1800s, Colorado’s growing population was hungry. Meat-eaters typically ate animals that came up from Texas on hoof, somewhat worse for the wear.

By Jon Pinnow

James Peak
Pikes Peak once bore the name of the first non-native to reach its summit, Edwin James, who called the landscape a “region of astonishing beauty.”

By Jon Pinnow

Aspens
A grove of Aspen, all turning one vibrant color, is also a sign of something underground: those hundred golden or fiery red trees are all one organism.

By Jon Pinnow

John B. Stetson, Boss of the Plains
John B Stetson traveled to Colorado as a young man, to see the Rockies while he still could. He had tuberculosis.


The Pueblo chile
The Pueblo chile may not be as well known as its cousin from New Mexico – the Hatch chile – but fans of fiery flavor know which one tastes better.

By Jon Pinnow

Antlers
In the late summer, male deer, elk and moose are often seen with red shreds and ribbons hanging from their antlers. It’s not necessarily the result of a gory fight.

By Jon Pinnow

Cheeseburgers and root beer floats
A small monument in Denver marks one of history’s more prosaic moments. It reads, “On this spot in 1935, Louis E Ballast created the Cheeseburger.”

By Jon Pinnow

Colorado on four wheels
Colorado is rich with a history of four-wheeled adventure. A century ago, the Ford Motor Co. even made trucks in Denver.

By Jon Pinnow

Telluride
At the height of the gold rush, 5000 people piled into a box canyon in southwest Colorado to strike it rich.

By Jon Pinnow

Stegosaurus, state fossil
It was 30 feet long, 14 feet tall and weighed 14 thousand pounds. 150 million years ago, the plant-eating Stegosaurus lumbered across Colorado.

By Jon Pinnow

Palisade peaches
A Palisade peach, unforgettably sweet and juicy, packs a lot of Colorado inside its fuzzy skin.

By Jon Pinnow

The Durango and Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad
In Southwest Colorado, in the 1880s, Animas City expected big things. Railroads were expanding deeper into the state, and the Denver and Rio Grande was coming.

By Jon Pinnow

Mount of the Holy Cross
“There is a mountain in the distant West / That, sun-defying, in its deep ravines / Displays a cross of snow upon its side.”

By Jon Pinnow