by Alex
Markels
Quaint," "historic," "off the beaten track." Not exactly terms
you'd associate with Colorado's Vail Valley, the condo-choked
uber-resort area long derided as the ski world's prime example of
development run amok.
But nestled just 2 miles off Interstate 70, the snow country
autobahn that whisks snow sliders along the nation's busiest ski
resort corridor, is a tiny 1,066-person hamlet that earns those
idyllic descriptions. Sandwiched between Vail and Beaver Creek like
a thin layer of aged cheese between two colossal pieces of white
bread is funky, century-old Minturn. And many who make it home would
sooner leave the area altogether than relocate to Vail's congestion.
 Postmaster Jim Madril. (Photo
by Tim Hancock) |
"I couldn't live over there," says Patti Bidez, an 18-year
Minturn resident who enjoys letting her two young children run free
through Minturn's cozily disheveled neighborhoods. "I just wouldn't
feel comfortable letting my kids loose in Vail. In Minturn,
everybody knows each other. We keep an eye on each other's kids, we
trust each other and look after each other. There's a real sense of
neighborhood because we all live here year-round."
That's a stark contrast to Vail, where more than two thirds of
the homes are unoccupied for most of the year and where transience
is a frustrating fact of life. "This is a real town with real people
and real history," says Minturn mayor and life-long resident Gordon
"Hawkeye" Flaherty. Flahery is a third-generation local whose father
worked at nearby Camp Hale, home of the U.S. Army's legendary 10th
Mountain Division, and whose grandfather was a blacksmith at the now
closed Gilman zinc mine 8 miles up the road. "Minturn's got a soul,"
Flaherty states simply.
If you detect a whisper of reverse snobbery, well, just amplify
that about 10 times and you'll get the message loud and clear. It's
not that folks from Minturn (or "Meen'ern," as scores of long-time
Latino residents affectionately call it) don't like Vail. Truth be
told, the ski resort's booming economy ensures everyone an ample
living, not to mention property values that have more than doubled
in the past five years. (At a median price of about $260,000, a
single-family home in Minturn still costs about half of what one
does in Vail.) And those who ski and snowboard relish their
proximity to the resorts' slopes. Just 6 miles from the behemoth's
lifts to the east and another 6 miles from Beaver Creek to the west,
locals can access a combined 6,269 skiable acres. As epic as those
days in Vail's legendary Back Bowls can be, locals still breathe a
collective sigh of relief when passing through the Bowls'
backcountry gates to the Minturn Mile, a powdery descent on Vail's
backside that winds down toward the door of the legendary Saloon, a
favorite local watering hole. Its walls are plastered with signed
photographs of movie stars such as John Wayne and Clint Eastwood,
both of whom visited here when former New York Yankees catcher Bob
Cherry owned the place.
Vail may boast world-class ski-in/ski-out accommodations, but
Minturnites find their earthy ski-in/chill-out digs infinitely more
satisfying.
You'll quickly get the picture as you exit I-70 East and drive
the 2 miles toward Minturn. To your left glisten the whitewaters of
the Eagle River, a gorgeous stretch relished by both kayakers and
anglers. Lionshead Rock and the towering pink rock buttes of Cougar
Ridge and Battle Mountain loom over the river. Their massive cliffs
salute the 14,005-foot Mount of the Holy Cross, so named for a snowy
couloir that forms a cross near its crest. To your right stands
Meadow Mountain, a gentle north-facing slope that boasts some of the
area's best snowshoeing, crosscountry skiing and sledding by winter,
and miles of mountain bike trails and lush patches of wildflowers in
summer.
 Cougar Ridge Cafe owners Becky
and Jeff Highter with son Ethan (Photo by Tim Hancock)
|
Simply stated, Minturn's narrow hollow is arguably the Vail
Valley's most scenic stretch. But don't take a biased local's word
for it, trust the State of Colorado, which in 1994 certified the
two-lane Highway 24 between Minturn and Leadville a "Colorado Scenic
Byway."
Unfortunately, Minturn's allure doesn't extend to its
architecture, an unpretentious patchwork of clapboard cottages,
dingy log homes made of railroad ties and several downright ugly
mobile home parks. Founded by railroad men and miners nearly 80
years before Vail's first ski lift even hit the drawing board,
Minturn possessed none of the wealth that lavished nearby silver
mining towns such as Aspen with grand opera houses. Nor have its
town planners had much success preserving the few
turn-of-the-century buildings left standing, let alone preventing an
unseemly smattering of recent construction projects, which have
introduced everything from southwestern adobe to cheesy
condominiums.
But what the town lacks in architectural character, its residents
more than make up for with a salt-of-the-earth friendliness. No one
better embodies the Minturn attitude than Postmaster Jim Madril, a
lifelong, 52-year-old resident, whose tidy post office serves as a
focal point of the community. "I know most folks on a first-name
basis," says Madril. "Lots of people stop by and say hello-even if
they don't have any mail."
Like Madril, many Minturn citizens are long-time locals who
arrived here in the days when the zinc mine and the Rio Grande
Railroad powered the local economy's backbone. The mine closed
nearly 20 years ago, and a billion-dollar railroad merger in 1995
halted the steady stream of locomotives that once chugged through
the middle of town. But their legacy remains, lovingly preserved by
women such as Darla Goodell, another 50-plus-year resident whose
Turntable Restaurant serves as Minturn's unofficial museum.
"I have cinders in my blood," says Godell, whose father and
grandfather were railroad engineers whose locomotives pushed freight
cars up 11,000-foot Tennessee Pass, the highest railroad pass in the
country. Surrounded by photos and mementos of days gone by, she
laments Minturn's fading history and crosses her fingures that the
railroad will return someday. "This was always a railroad town," she
says wistfully. "And we need to hold on to our identity."
 The water tower cum
billboard. (Photo by Tim Hancock)
|
Rather than turn Minturn into a ghost town, the railroad’s
departure has sparked a wave of real estate speculation as the now-
abandoned rail yard and old homes along the train tracks suddenly
become prime river-front property. Postmaster Madril estimates that
nearly a third of Minturn’s old-timers have cashed out, heading for
warmer climes. "I’m the only one left out of six brothers and
sisters," he says with a sigh. "But there’s lotsa nice folks who’ve
moved in." Indeed, a growing cadre of Vail escapees, among them a
sampling of artists, musicians and craftsmen, have taken up
residence here. They’ve started the community’s first non-commercial
radio station (albeit a pirate one), inaugurated jazz festivals,
organized a bustling farmer’s market and opened funky joints such as
Becky and Jeff Highter’s Cougar Ridge Café, another local hangout.
"There’s a new generation of Minturnites arriving all the time,"
Becky says as she coddles her newborn son, part of a mini baby boom
that’s filled Minturn’s sidewalks with strollers in recent years.
"Minturn’s becoming younger, but we’re making sure we hold on to the
community feeling that made it so special in the first place."
That won’t be easy given Minturn’s proximity to Vail. Yet
Meen’ernites can be an ornery and defiant bunch, and they’ve thus
far resisted overtures of large-scale development from over the
mountain. As long as they hold fast to their hard-rock mining and
railroad roots, their historic town will continue to draw
like-minded newcomers who’ll work to prevent their tasty morsel from
turning as bland as white bread.
Articles
Prepare For Liftoff | Colorado's Secret Stash |
