Down and Out in Denver

Pizza Found!

Posted in bars, food, movies by Blake on March 1, 2010

Readers of DOD may remember my post of a number of weeks ago in which I lamented my inability to find good pizza here in the Mile High City.  Some of you wrote in with suggestions.  I am happy to report that in the last weekend I enjoyed not one, but two good pizzas.  The first was at Osteria Marco (which Alastair wrote about yesterday here).  The second was to be found at Proto’s Pizza on Platte at 15th in LoDo.

Delicious! More, please!

After a later night on Friday Alastair and I decided to take it easy on Saturday and so we headed to Proto’s for a pizza.  Though it was crowded we were seated immediately.  We each opted for a beer and then set about deciding what to order.  We ended up splitting a large caesar salad to begin.  The dressing was tasty, tart, and salty.  The extra-large croutons (almost like wedges of a pita with herbs and seasonings) were quite nice.  The promised anchovies, however, amounted to only two.  I recognize that some people may not like anchovies all that much but those people can request to have them left off their caesar salad.  For some of us, the anchovies are at least half the draw in the first place.  More, please!

Alastair, who had visited Proto’s before, assured me that a small pizza would be plenty for one person, so we ordered one each.  I went for the Proto: tomato sauce and mozzarella, basil and sausage. Alastair was in the mood for a white pizza and got for the Pontiff: olive oil, garlic, fresh spinach, mozzarella and feta cheeses.  Normally it would also have sundried tomatoes but Alastair substituted roasted red peppers, despite the fact that the menu explicitly discourages substitutions. He’s cheeky that way sometimes.  The pizzas were great: thin-crusted, well sauced, and with plenty of cheese.  They were not, alas, large enough.  I’ve got a big appetite and I could easily have consumed two smalls, meaning that I would advise a medium for one person.  If you’ve got leftovers, you can always take them home.  But they’re so tasty, this seems unlikely!

Because we were both still a little hungry we said “yes” to dessert, which is not our customary answer to that query.  I had the New York cheesecake with a raspberry coulis and Alastair sampled the affogato: ice cream (he chose vanilla) in a shot of espresso.  I am very picky about my cheesecake so this was a bit of a risk.  To my mind cheesecake should be seriously dense, have a great graham cracker crust, and should always be served quite cold.  I’m also a purist; while I recognize that there are many fun flavor combinations to be had, I much prefer the traditional version.  If done right, it’s got enough flavor without messing with things.  And I’m happy to report that Proto’s did not disappoint.  It fulfilled all my requirements and thus I cleaned my plate within about 2 and a half minutes.  Delicious!

After dinner we had a quick drink at the nearby My Brother’s Bar (which is currently stocked to the rafters with Girl Scout cookies; they have a large sign advertising themselves as an “official” sales site) and then headed off to the Tivoli to see a showing of “An Education,” the British film about a 1960s schoolgirl named Jenny (played by Carey Mulligan) who is seduced by a dashing older man (played by Peter Sarsgaard) and risks her chances of an Oxford education as a result.  It’s pretty fantastic.  Mulligan is excellent, as are Rosamund Pike as the Sarsgaard’s friend; Emma Thompson as a stern headmistress; Alfred Molina as Jenny’s oafish father; Cara Seymour as her mother; and Olivia Williams as Jenny’s idealistic teacher who says, in one particularly poignant line, that it would simply break her heart if Jenny doesn’t go to Oxford.  I will leave that question unanswered but suffice it to say that the movie is well worth seeing and that I am now excited to have seen at least one movie that has been nominated for an Oscar.  And to have sampled some excellent Denver pizza.  Now if only these places would deliver!

CultureHaus Saturday Night at DAM

Posted in bars, denver, design, fashion, food, gays, parties by Blake on February 8, 2010

On Saturday night the DOD boys (and a very good lady friend of ours) attended CultureHaus’s big event at the Denver Art Museum: a celebration of the current DAM exhibit, Embrace, a multi-media show in which 17 artists have taken over the Libeskind-designed Hamilton Wing with their installations.

CultureHaus bills itself as the DAM-affiliated educational and social organization for the “young at heart” to appreciate art.  They sponsor talks and social functions for their members, and for anyone else willing to buy a ticket.  This particular event was probably attended by between 200 and 300 people and it was a relatively young crowd.   It was also a badly dressed crowd.  Or, at the very least, it was a crowd that had taken this opportunity – oh so rare in Denver – to dress up!  Now in many ways we applaud this as there is far too little dressing up done in the relentlessly casual Mile High City, but sometimes people get a little carried away.  There were a number of young and not-so-young women who had worn skin-tight or skin-baring clothing that seemed more appropriate to wearing out to “the club.”  It was just a little too well lit at the DAM for this sort of attire: lots of strappy, slinky dresses and what one friend of mine calls “novelty tops”: minimalist blouses of somewhat complicated construction that do not really resemble blouses in the traditional sense.  The men tended toward a uniform of jeans, blazer, and button-down shirt, the DOD boys among them.  Some paired this with ties; most did not.  One intrepid fashion innovator even paired his with a small mink stole (more on this below).  One trend I have been noting of late is the blazer with deconstructed or unfinished edges that almost look fringe-like with threads hanging from every edge.  I’m not yet sure what I think about this.  On the other hand, I do know what I think about blazers with all kinds of graphics all over the back, including words and phrases and images (eagles and falcons tend to predominate).  I saw one last weekend in SF with the word “Arrogant” in huge letters across the shoulders.  Horrible.  Unsightly. Unfortunate.

I could go on about the art – and indeed we took a stroll through the exhibits, one of which, “The Bathers” by John McEnroe, is featured above – but I’m just not very good at talking about art.  That’s Alastair’s department but he seems to be silent of late.  Instead let me discuss the food.  The passed appetizers (how I love a passed appetizer!) were quite tasty: mini crabcakes, barely seared tuna with wasabi on salty chips, and mini cheeseburgers.  Very nice.  But the stationary appetizer stations were a disappointment: the customary vegetable and cheese plates, pita and hummus (really!?), and great big chafing dishes of meatballs in sauce.  Snore.  My great complaint of the evening, however, has to be the fact that while the event ended at 10, the bars closed at 9:30.  Employees were literally packing up even as the party continued on, and some of us wanted a refill!

Post party many headed over to the Living Room, a spacious bar on Broadway, for cocktails.  It was crowded and sometimes difficult to get the bartenders’ attention, but otherwise quite fun.  The highlight, however, occurred at the end of the evening.  Mink-stole boy (MSB) had also migrated to the Living Room and ‘round about midnight seemed to have gotten into something of a scuffle with another patron who had either made fun of – or actually interfered with; I wasn’t sure – the stole.  MSB was not going to take this lying down.  I had a front row seat as he got up in the face of the mink anti-fan: “You don’t mess with the mink stole!  This was my grandmother’s mink stole!  You want to take this outside?  Come on buddy, let’s take this outside.”   A puffy-haired, white-loafer-sporting, mink-stole-wearing aesthete screaming about his grandmother’s fur and threatening to take out another bar patron is not something I expect to see again soon.  In short, it was fantastic. Who knew this was possible in Denver?

Friday Night Lights

Posted in architecture, bars, design, parties by Alastair on January 17, 2010

Happy Sunday readers and greetings from Hi*Rise. I am happy to report that I have finally recovered from my Friday night out… which quickly became Saturday morning. And it was well worth the loss of my entire Saturday. 

Looking to escape our mid-winter blues, Blake and I started the evening off crashing a Denver Art Museum event at SPIRE—a recently completed forty-one-story condominium building at 14th and Champa streets in downtown Denver.  (If you have any interest in high-rise living stop by their sales room across the street at the Convention Center.) The event was an intimate gathering of just over two hundred well-heeled architects, designers, artists, and design enthusiasts of every age and background. The evening was a sort of pre-party celebration for the department of architecture and design’s annual fundraiser, Design After Dark. If you haven’t been to Design After Dark, I highly suggest dropping by RedLine Gallery this Friday, January 22. The event is a “a dynamic and diverse celebration of design.” Funds raised through ticket sales and a silent auction are used to support programming for the department. The centerpiece of the event is some “30 one-of-a-kind objects created by Colorado’s most recognized architects, artists, and designers.” Blake and I are attending for our third year in a row and the event never disappoints. It feels like something we’ve seen in New York, San Francisco, or Chicago and who can pass up the great food and an open bar! This year’s theme is SKIN.

Design After Dark 2010

 

After hob-nobbing with Denver’s design community and taking in the sights from SPIRE’s ninth floor: modern furnishings, rooftop terrace, pool, fire pit and most importantly, the open bar, Blake and I headed over to the legendary Cruise Room with some of our gal pals. Somewhat difficult to find, the Cruise Room is located just off the main lobby of The Oxford Hotel. It’s one of those places with an atmosphere that immediately transports you to another time and place. They are known for their martinis, but I often choose the Manhattan or Old Fashioned. The Art Deco décor and dim red lighting is a must-see. Original chrome and neon reflect onto the wall panels depicting “toasts” from around the world.

Here’s to a successful Friday night in Denver. Kompai!

The Cruise Room

New Year’s Eve in Tahoe!

Posted in bars, food, gays, parties, travel, wine by Blake on January 4, 2010

Greetings, readers.  First of all, as one half of Down and Out in Denver, I must acknowledge that the other half, a mere two days ago, celebrated a very-close-to-momentous birthday.  Happy Birthday Alastair!!!

I will allow Alastair to recount his birthday escapades as I was not present.  The DOD boys escaped Denver for the New Years festivities, both of us to San Francisco and environs but with slightly different agendas for the weekend.  I went to see the Gentleman Friend (as well as others) and Alastair hung out with his own pals and celebrated both NYE and the B’day.  But we met up on the eve of the eve for a cocktail celebration (like a little warm-up!) with all of our Bay Area peeps: drinks at the Blackbird on Market by Church.  I like this bar.  It’s gay, but not overly so.  Women welcome, even of the heterosexualist variety.  And while I’ve been there on crowded nights in the past, this time there was plenty of room to move and indeed to sit.  They also have a good and changing selection of wines by the glass, unusual not just for a gay bar, but for any bar.   Following cocktail hour(s) a few of us headed out to dinner at Starbelly (16th and Market, where Asqew used to be), the new sister restaurant of Beretta (23rd and Valencia).  Lots of good appetizers: the chicken liver pâté was excellent; tasty salty fries with three homemade dipping sauces.  The salads were also great, especially the apple and celery root.  Finally, pizzas: our table had a margherita, a mushroom, and the GF and I split a mixed salumi, cherry tomato, and fresh mozzarella.  Very good: a little crispy and, though fancy and thin-crusted, there was definitely enough cheese.  Following dinner we met back up with the crew at what we heard was to be the last night at the smoke-filled Amber (14th just above Market) before it was revamped into something swankier.  All flavored vodkas were on sale as they tried to rid themselves of extra alcohol.   The GF and I headed out around 11 because we had to get up the next day for a trip to Lake Tahoe with his friends.

Lovely Lake Tahoe

Tahoe.  That’s right.  This non-outdoorsy, non-skiing, non-snowboarding urban homo flew from Denver to California in order to go to a ski resort town.  Go figure.  Apparently that’s what a very fine Gentleman Friend can do to you.  I will not go into all the detail about the lovely meals that our group of nine had, or the very pretty views (see above), or the drunken card games (apparently I am very bad at Taboo after too much wine, and I’m not half bad without, though the GF is far better), all because I have a much better story to tell instead.  Here goes: The GF and I lost a coin toss and were allotted the futon in the second-floor loft.  All of this would have been inconsequential except that the loft was open to the staircase and the living room below, meaning that in the wee hours of the first day of the New Year, I heard increasing groans coming from below where one of our fellow Tahoers was sleeping on the couch.  At first I thought it was someone having sex, and when I realized it was someone alone downstairs I thought he was having a bad dream, or one in which he wrestled.  Then I heard him being very ill in the bathroom and assumed he’d had too much to drink.  As he moved about downstairs bumping into things and falling over, still groaning aloud, I thought he must be sleepwalking.  Finally the GF woke up and we consulted: he went downstairs and the friend (whom I’ll call Randy) indicated that he needed to go the hospital.  And pronto.

Dear reader, never again will I disparage the iPhone.  Without the GF’s iPhone we would have been in serious trouble.  That trusty little GPS app guided us from our condo to the Barton Memorial Hospital in South Lake Tahoe, all as Randy suffered the most excruciating pain to which I have ever personally borne witness.  Agony, I tell you.  Upon arrival we rushed in and, because his pain was pretty obvious to the receptionist, Randy was ushered into the inner sanctum with very little delay.  Thus began our odyssey at the Barton ER.  Picture it: New Year’s Eve at a resort town famous for its gambling and partying.  Who do you think might have been there?  My estimate, based on our three hours between 4:00 and 7:00, is that the clientele was pretty equally divided between the unbelievably intoxicated and those who had been injured in alcohol-fueled altercations (sometimes overlapping categories, to be sure).  Those were the ones being treated, of course, but the demographics of the patients and those waiting were actually pretty similar.  I could tell many, many stories but I think I’ll have to limit it to just 2 or 3 of my very favorites.

It was quickly apparent that our BFFs in the waiting room were going to be the three hipsters from San Jose who were waiting for their super-drunk friend, Angela.  They explained to us that she was small and had been drinking far too much – beer and shots – which resulted, not surprisingly, in a trip to the ER as they feared she might have alcohol poisoning.  The hipsters were themselves slightly drunk and very chatty.  At one point they were called to the desk to consult about Angela’s imminent release and when they asked, were told that her blood alcohol level was a point 2 (.2).  The boys’ knowledge of the law or medicine was not what it could have been and so they concluded that this meant, as they exclaimed, “She isn’t even drunk! Why are we even here?”  Of course the legal limit for driving is actually a .08, so Angela’s levels were more than twice that, but this was lost on the hipsters (and indeed on the GF and myself until we used that handy iPhone again to look up blood alcohol levels).  A “sober” Angela was released to the arms of her loving friends.

Some visitors to the ER that night, however, were not so lucky.  Consider the case of two young women whom I’ll call Courtney and Ashley (we never learned their actual names and indeed it’s unclear whether they would have remembered them at the time).   Ashley emerged from the inner sanctum after we’d been there for about an hour.  She looked dazed but had a slight grin on her face.  She walked outside into the snow and promptly turned around and came back in.  The cab that the ER staff had called for her had not yet arrived.  Somehow, across the waiting room, she started to talk to Courtney, whom she did not previously know but with whom, it turned out, she had much in common.  They had both awoken in the ER wearing hospital gowns and little else, their clothes having been removed by the ER personnel, presumably.  They had no idea how they’d gotten there, where their friends or phones were, or, in fact, where they were at all.  After treatment they were both released to wait for cabs.  Of course they also couldn’t remember where they were staying but this did not stop Courtney and Ashley, by this point fast friends, from linking arms and heading out to a cab destined for “the strip”; they’d find their way together!  A drunken New Year’s Eve friendship was born right there in the ER.  It was all rather heartwarming.

Finally, there was perhaps the most dramatic of waiting room pals: a group of three waiting for a man who had been injured in a bar fight.  One of them was his girlfriend and the other man might have been her brother.  Their friend had been knocked upside the head with a bottle of “Dom P,” as the man told us.  (One of our friends later noted that at least it was a decent brand and not something cheaper like Korbel.)  He was having stitches on his left ear, but not quickly enough for his girlfriend, whom I’ll call Mary.  Mary was, in a word, impatient.  She explained to us and all others present that the only way to get in to see a doctor was to fake unconsciousness – that’s what she’d had her man do, and it had worked! She encouraged others still waiting to adopt this tactic. (The GF and I were something of an anomaly in the waiting room in that Randy had not actually spent any time in it and his ailment seemed entirely unrelated to alcohol; we thus did not need her advice.)  In the meantime she tried to persuade the receptionist to let her into the back to see her boyfriend, whom she claimed she could see lying on a stretcher not being helped by anyone.  The receptionist was having none of it, even when Mary increased herself to the status of wife (“I need to get in there and see my husband!”).  The receptionist’s intransigence prompted Mary to go off on a tirade, and provided the two best lines of the night: “That bitch is out of control!  This is like being in a Mexico hospital!”  We had difficulty stifling our laughter because “that bitch” (the receptionist), far from being “out of control,” was actually preoccupied with a Janet Evanovich novel and should have ignored Mary far more than she actually did.

Oh, but I could go on.  The entire experience was actually so amusing that – combined with how much pain Randy had clearly been in – it was impossible to be resentful of the three hours we spent there when we should have been nestled snug in our bed.  There definitely could have been better reading material – Forbes and the ESPN magazine are not going to cut it for two liberal homos – but so long as someone else was actually present in the waiting room, it hardly mattered.  Finally, dear reader, you will be glad to know that Randy was released after he passed his kidney stone – not appendicitis, as I’d thought – and we headed back to the condo, and back to bed.   Certainly the most unforgettable New Years Eve I’ve had in the past 20 years.

Saturday Night: NoRTH, Charlie’s, CGRA

Posted in bars, food, gays, wine by Blake on December 7, 2009

So after a night in with Julianna Margulies on Friday, it was clearly time to hit the town on Saturday.  And indeed so much fun was had that I was in no position to report on it yesterday.

Saturday evening began with a trip to NoRTH, in Cherry Creek (and yes, they spell it that way; I have no idea why).  There my dining partner and I began with wine: he red, I white.  I like dry white wines and as NoRTH specializes in the food of northern Italy, it seemed like a good opportunity to take advantage of their selection. You can order wines by the glass, bottle, or terzo, a fancy way of saying a mini-carafe that is bigger than a regular sized-glass and only a couple bucks more expensive.  So that’s what we did.  For dinner I started with what was billed as a classic Caesar salad.  I was a little disappointed.  Lettuce, dressing, and croutons (very nice and chewy) were all just fine, but where were my anchovies?  A classic Caesar without anchovies, I ask you?  Not so classic.  We both had the wild mushroom risotto with seared scallops as a main course and it was delicious.  I’m a bit picky about risotto.  I learned how to make it in college while in the Veneto (from whence it comes) and I am firmly of the opinion that the rice should be congealed to the point that it’s kind of gloppy (to use a word my mother likes).  Each individual grain should not be separated out like regular rice.  This occurs because a good risotto can be stirred for hours — some all day! — before serving.  NoRTH’s risotto was prepared exactly that way and so I was pleased. No room for dessert – and frankly the dessert menu was a little boring, anyway.  Service was good as well.  All in all, a pleasant meal.

But on to the main event.  We went to Charlie’s and unbeknownst to us the Colorado Gay Rodeo Association (CGRA) was crowning its Miss and Mr. CGRA 2010, what the CGRA calls its “royalty.”  We had no idea.  A word first on Charlie’s, Denver’s country and western gay bar.  Alastair and I are not exactly C&W people – and nor is the friend with whom I went on Saturday – though I have an extreme weakness for ladies singing country music.  What I do love about Charlie’s, however, is the degree of seriousness with which everyone takes their dancing.  Watching the line-dancing and two-stepping is a lot of fun and there is something refreshing in the unabashed earnestness with which people approach it.  No pretending that one is “too cool for school” at Charlie’s.   It’s also just really friendly.  If many of the homos in Denver’s gay bars seem cliquish and full of themselves, people at Charlie’s are anything but, and that is also appreciated.  Finally, you can’t get much better than a pair of disco boots (as opposed to a ball) spinning over the dance floor.

But back to the CGRA.  There were only three contestants total for both positions: two for Miss and one for Mr.  So Mr.’s victory was a foregone conclusion and one had to feel especially sorry for the first runner up for Miss, the only person not to win that evening.  Here’s where things get confusing.  Miss CGRA seems to be a drag queen, female impersonator, man-in-a-dress-and-heels, whatever you want to call her, possibly even an MTF transsexual.  But Mr. appeared to be a man.  In men’s clothing.  I checked the CGRA’s website and they don’t give much explanation for how these contests are run or what indeed the criteria are (that said, last year’s Mr. CGRA was elected Mr. International Gay Rodeo Association in Toronto and Miss CGRA was second runner up, so they must be doing something right).  But why is Miss CGRA a drag queen if Mr. isn’t a drag king?  The website does make it clear that there are also categories for Ms. and MsTer CGRA and the past winners seem like a woman and drag king or transman.  That said, there were no contestants in these categories on Saturday.

But even if we were to sort out why both Miss and Mr. titles were awarded to what seemed to be anatomical men, it wouldn’t actually answer the question of what the criteria were.  It seems more clear with regard to the Miss contest.  These men do, after all, have to dress up to look like something they are not.  And they have to lip synch.  But what Mr. CGRA has to do in order to win remains an open question.  Perhaps compete in an actual rodeo?  If so, that was not going to happen at Charlie’s itself.  Maybe Miss CGRA also has to lasso a steer?  Unclear.  If not – and despite the fact that I am generally a fan of Charlie’s and certainly don’t want to be a snob about what the CGRA calls the “gay country and western lifestyle” – then both of these titles seem to be little more than beauty contests.  And honestly, gays, haven’t we learned anything from the women’s movement?  Beauty contests are dumb.  They objectify their participants and place a premium on appearance at the expense of talent and brains.  I really am curious about what the criteria are, so anyone out there who knows, feel free to chime in.  (The International GRA website briefly mentions five categories for competition – interview, western wear, horsemanship, public presentation, and entertainment –but it’s unclear whether the same criteria apply at the state level.)

After the festivities, as we headed for the door – and on to other bars – we passed by the first runner-up for Miss CGRA.  I paused to congratulate her and she thanked me demurely, leaning in for a congratulatory kiss on the cheek.  It was as if she had won.  Now that’s the kind of attitude I can reward with a crown!

Friday Night In?

Posted in bars, denver, gays by Blake on December 4, 2009

Denver By Night

When I lived back in my former urban home the prospect of a weekend night in filled me with dread.  Scratch that: I rarely even considered spending a weekend night in so there was actually very little dread.  This is not to say that going out on a Friday or Saturday was always a completely thrilling adventure — skipping from one fabulous party to the next, for instance — but it was certainly always a possibility.  I knew lots of people and even if no one had a line on an event or a party, at the very least we could go to a bar, or two or three.  Because there were lots of bars for those of a homosexualist inclination.  And even if every single one of my friends was either out of town or otherwise occupied I could always go to a bar, gasp, by myself.  Because in many big cities gay bars feel like a very welcoming place for people on their own, feel as if, in fact, they were designed for people out on their own.  It’s one of the best things about gay bars and, in many places, about the gays themselves.

But now I live in Denver.  And as Alastair is out of town this weekend and I wasn’t organized enough to make other plans in advance, it looks like I may well be staying in.  Perhaps it’s because Denver sucks (more on this below) or perhaps it’s because I’m older and wiser (well, definitely the former), but this no longer makes me as antsy as it once would have.  While I certainly don’t relish the prospect of a Friday night in alone (movie? TV? too much wine? work?), it does not make me feel like a social failure as it once would have.  There are a couple reasons for this.  The first is that I feel confident that it wouldn’t happen to me (except by choice) if I were still living where I used to live, because I have friends there.  The second is that I’ve become more accustomed to the idea that maybe one of the reasons I don’t have more friends in the Mile High City is not because I am objectionable, but rather because I just haven’t found all that many other people that I actually like.  These are not my people, in other words.  (This one may be totally about me consoling and/or tricking myself, but it seems to be working.)

So, you might ask, why don’t you just go out by yourself to one of these bars for homosexualists?  Oh, dear reader, but I have tried.  When I first moved to Denver lo those years ago I did go to bars on my own — as I have done in other cities — and I left bored and drunk.  Some nights I wouldn’t talk to a soul, save the bartender, all night.  I’m sure I could have been much better about approaching others and trying to talk to them, but Denver gay bars seem relentlessly cliquey.  One does not feel encouraged to approach others.  And on the few occasions when I did end up talking to other people, they were often shocked — shocked, I tell you! — that I was there on my own.  It became the topic  of conversation, to the point that it wasn’t really all that much fun.  So I’ve given up.  And my disdain for Denver’s gay scene will probably keep me warm when, in all likelihood, I stay in tonight.

Three years ago, however, not only would I have been surprised at my lack of discomfort at staying in (clearly not all gone; I am writing this post, after all), but what would have surprised me even more is the notion of living in a purported city where I would actually prefer to stay at home in the first place.  It feels a bit more like playing hooky than not being invited to the party.  Oh, Denver.

Post-Thanksgiving Ruminations…

Posted in bars, denver, food, outdoors by Blake on December 1, 2009

We have returned from the Thanksgiving festivities and must immediately commence a regimen of starvation and exercise if the entirety of the period of late November through early January (usually known as “the holidays”) does not leave us resembling beached whales due to all the celebratory noshing and imbibing.  Regaining a pre-Thanksgiving weight should put us in good stead to gain it all back again over Christmas and New Years.  But at least we’ll only have half as much to lose in early January as we’d have had if we just keep eating from here on out…

Speaking of exercising: the DaOiD boys do not participate in winter sports (though we do exercise regularly) but we are constantly asked if we do.  This tends to happen in two distinct contexts: 

1. When meeting other Coloradans who take it as a given that we either ski or snowboard or hike or take flimsy boats down frothy rivers.  We do none of these things.

2.  When outside Colorado and meeting new people who are trying to put a positive spin on our response to their inquiry about where it is that we reside: “Denver,” said with either a sneer or a sigh.

Because the DaOiD boys do none of the Colorado activities that everyone assumes we do, we have made a number of strange observations about Denver’s culture of athleticism.  In very little logical order, they are: 

1. This one has been oft-observed by others: Coloradans are always excited by snow, in that it means they can ski and do the other aforementioned activities, but they seem to be completely unable to cope with it on roads and sidewalks.  Because the DaOiD boys are originally from very snowy climes – before we relocated to our previous urban homes of more recent vintage – we find this disjuncture particularly surprising.  Suck it up, Coloradans!  I’m not saying that we like it any better than you do (we don’t) but at least we know how to deal with it.

2. Coloradans seem to be a particularly athletic bunch, but they don’t walk anywhere.  They will get in cars and enormous gas-guzzling SUVs to go to the park for a run, when they could actually run to the very same park.  For a state that prides itself on its athleticism, Coloradans are remarkably lazy

3. This means that when they go out at night many of them drive drunk.  We have been sort of stunned to observe the degree to which, because everyone is so dependent on automobile travel, Coloradans – gays and straights alike –seem perfectly comfortable drinking copious amounts of alcohol at bars and parties (and we are certainly not opposed to this) and then getting behind the wheels of their cars (we are not in favor of this).   We are well aware that there is no subway or metro here – don’t get us started! – but what about the bus, people?  Or a taxi cab? Or – gasp – one’s very own two feet?  

4. Since 1990 Colorado has captured the title of skinniest state in the nation.  (Mississippi is currently the most overweight with 32% of its adults obese).  But even Colorado has an obesity rate of about 19.1% and, if anything, its rate has been on the increase (as it has for all other states in the nation).  So given that even Colorado could stand to do better, it’s clearly still more petite than every other state.  How?  Clearly not everyone is skiing – which, when you think about it, is still just sitting on an electric chair to go uphill and sliding on sticks going down – and most people are certainly not walking in their everyday lives, at least not in Denver.  So how do we do it, Colorado?  Is it just that a lot of athletic people moved here and they go (read: drive) to the gym all the time? Or – as I suspected when I first moved here and lost some of my regular appetite –does it have something to do with the altitude?  What makes Colorado so skinny (by which I mean 80.9% non-obese)?