Stones Rewarded For Yard Work

landscaping.gif”>The yard of Rick and Terry Stone, 1803 E. Howard St., has been named the June 2008 Yard of the Month by the Beautification Committee of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce.

The Stones have resided in the house they built 14 years ago and every year has led to a little more of their landscaping touches.

While not too much of the front yard can be seen because of a privacy hedge along Illinois 116, the open areas at both ends of the curved driveway give a glimpse of the beauty within.

“While the hedge does shut off a lot of view it also has its advantages in that it cuts down a lot of traffic noise from the roadway,” said Terry Stone.

One thing that cannot be overlooked is the unique driveway paving material chosen by the Stones. The off-red gravel-looking material is named “rotten granite” and gives the large curving driveway its own special soft color very different from routine run-of-the-mill white or gray gravel.

Knock-out roses in a deep red are repeated throughout the yard along the front, back and side.

“The roses have done so well and bloomed so profusely this year. I have lots of daffodils which did not bloom that well this year and I was afraid other perennials might follow the same course,” she said. “Instead what a pleasant surprise it has been with the roses and a few others, including the purple perennial salvia.”

“I have also been a little disappointed that more perennials like black-eyed Susans and purple coneflowers are so much later this year. I’m guessing the cold and wet spring has put everything a little behind,” she said.

Rick Stone’s project this spring has been starting some maple trees from maple “helicopter” seeds that blew into the yard.

“While the seedlings look good, they are still small, it’s too early to tell how they will do once set into the landscape as trees,” she said.

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Monday, June 16th, 2008

Downtown Design Plans For Edmond Up For Discussion

The board will meet at 5:30 p.m. at the Planning and Public Works Building #104 at 10 S Littler.

said the city’s plans for the way building exteriors, landscaping and streetscaping should look in the future needs to be obvious to potential developers of the downtown district.

That’s why the board plans to discuss how to make the downtown design guidelines more, as Forrest said, “user-friendly.”

To achieve this, Forrest said the board will discuss adding some diagrams to the guidelines to “more fully detail streetscape requirements.”

The board also plans to discuss two board suggestions made during an workshop with the city council and report whether the council chose to adopt the suggestions.

Forrest said the first was that a be asked to make more specific recommendations for the redevelopment of an area on S Broadway between Second and .

The other was for a to review recommendations made in the 1998 master plan regarding plans to develop a number of “sub areas” around downtown. A sub area, for example, would be similar to ’s Gasoline Ally, Forrest said.

One such sub area that the group should consider, Forrest said, would be plans for an arts district around the Rodkey Mill south of Second Street, west of Broadway.

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Friday, May 9th, 2008

Planning Commission Seeking Further Revisions To Berendos Home Proposal

The is seeking as small a as possible for a home on Berendos Avenue in .

Nestled between a hillside and and at the mouth of Modoc Place and Avenue, the one-acre lot has a very small with natural restrictions and city regulations already in place. The owner, Dave Colt, reduced the scale of a former version of his plans to present to the April 21. Nevertheless, the commissioners unanimously requested Colt return June 2 with a revision that puts less of a on the lot Landscaping Idea. The commissioners also requested Colt return with a plan that calls for no parking on the street in the front of the lot, which will require a variance on the front setback that is normally required.

The commissioners were pleased with some aspects of the scaled-down , but were intrigued that the coverage on the lot could get even smaller.

The version of the plans they reviewed called for a two-story home containing four bedrooms, three baths with a limited, uninhabitable attic space that will not be higher than . The total living area was reduced from 3,500 square feet to 2,700 . The overall height of the home would be 26 feet, reduced from 35 feet. A two-car attached garage with two adjacent on the developed part of the lot was proposed. The commissioners were concerned those must be placed well clear of the street and will not present a traffic or pedestrian . The curb will be painted red to prevent people from parking along that portion of the street.

A sidewalk on the portion of the lot facing the street will be created out of . Addressing concerns from the neighbors about safety on that part of the road, the sidewalk will be open to the public. During construction, trucks will not be permitted to block the as it is narrow and would severely restrict .

The home was relocated on the lot 25 feet away from the creek to increase the habitat of the San Francisco garter snake and California red-legged frog, as recommended by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. It is now at the base of the hill and 15 feet from the closest dwelling on Modoc Place. Some eucalyptus trees will have to be removed, which raised objections from several neighbors who objected to a potential loss of wildlife.

Planning staff prepared a mitigated negative declaration and asserts it is all that is necessary to fulfill CEQA requirements. However, many members of the public who addressed the commissioners at past meetings and at this last meeting wanted the commissioners to require the owner to prepare a full environmental impact report. They were concerned about , storm water drainage, potential loss of wildlife, the removal of dirt and a sense that the home did not blend in well among the smaller homes of the neighborhood.

Commissioner Rich Campbell, who addressed his colleagues as a member of the public because he lives close to the building site, brought up concerns about protecting wildlife. He also said the unique configuration of pedestrians and vehicles created a potential hazard.

“I appreciate that he tuned it down, but he did not scale it down adequately, 3,000 is not reasonable,” Campbell said. “These safety issues must be addressed. Prohibit parking along that site. There’s still a fair argument for an EIR.”

In response, planning staff added additional requirements to which the owner must now comply, if his project is approved. To address issues about biology, the owner must comply with recommendations from the GGNRA. In addition, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service required the owner apply for an incidental take permit for the California red-legged frog and the San Francisco garter snake. A condition was added that requires an exclusionary fence and escape funnel designed as recommended by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to ensure the endangered species are protected. The habitat area shall not be used for construction purposes. After construction, a permanent barrier - buried at least six inches and rising 24 inches above ground - will replace the . If wildlife is discovered during construction, construction will stop.

Addressing concern about preserving the upland habitat and movement corridors, Landscaping Idea an additional condition was added that prohibits structures, the use of pesticides and other actions that would harm the habitat area.

Addressing culvert and drainage impacts, the city will now require the owner to allow city staff to walk onto the property and maintain the culvert and creek channel. Staff will review and approve a drainage plan the owner will submit. No run-off will be directed into the creek.

The home plans will require a variance for exceeding the allowable lot disturbance and to allow a side yard setback. Planning staff recommended the commissioners approve this and allow a 15.6 percent lot disturbance, with 7.5 percent of that in .

“The may prefer the applicant further reduce the of the building thereby reducing the disturbed area and the amount of the variance needed for the maximum allowable lot coverage,” the staff report reads. In staff’s opinion, it would be possible to design a dwelling of 2,700 or less living area with a smaller that the proposed dwelling. The has expressed concerns about not exceeding the maximum allowable lot coverage for other projects but in this case, the maximum allowable lot coverage is a negative number, which raises practical issues. Also, the dwelling does not exceed the proposed living area threshold for the proposed Mega Home Ordinance.”

The commissioners did not approve the variance at this meeting and instead held out for a plan that decreases the total lot disturbance.

A neighbor asked for story poles to give the community a sense of how they will be impacted by the new residence. A couple of neighbors spoke in favor of the development saying that the owner did a good and thoughtful job developing plans and that it would make a nice addition to the neighborhood.

But one neighbor, Steve Candido, the one whose property is now closest to where the new home will be, said he didn’t appreciate the new setback from the creek.

“It’s right on top of me. But you should let him go forward to the next step,” he said.

The commissioners expressed their pleasure with the progress the owner made on scaling down the project.

“This has been a genuine improvement,” said Commissioner Harold Cicerone, noting there will be a peer review of the plans once the approves them. “A lot of things have been addressed. The actual being disturbed is very small. Idea I don’t need an EIR to tell me there are species on this site. I’m comfortable with that part of it. We are being sensitive to the creek.”

Chair Leo Leon pushed for a smaller .

“This project can be designed with a smaller . I’m concerned about retaining walls, especially if they are unnecessary and I believe they are unnecessary, he said.

Commissioner Celeste Langille said the home is too big for the lot. She asked for a covenant to restrict any future owners of the property from changing the conditions that the planning staff is putting in place. Director of Planning Michael Crabtree responded that those covenants could be put in place.

“This is an environmentally sensitive lot close to a hill and a creek and he will have to get an incidental take permit. The size is out of character with the neighborhood. This is more variance of the Hillside Preservation District than I’d like to see. I would like to see a redesign with a smaller house. Safety is another issue. Parking is not resolved,” she said.

“The applicant has done a fine job,” said Commissioner B. J. Nathanson, noting the elements that will be taken care of by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the peer review. “At what point are we micromanaging what people can do? But I like the idea of a smaller .”

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Thursday, May 1st, 2008

State Lays Out Plans For State Road A1A Improvements

Residents reviewing plans for about $3.7 million in improvements to a 3.08-mile stretch of State Road A1A from the St. Lucie-Martin County line northward Tuesday expressed concern about accessing their properties during construction, how long parts of the project will take and how local traffic will be disrupted.

They also questioned if the price tag for the 2010 project was adequate to cover the cost. But Fernando Morales, Florida Department of Transportation project manager, said the preliminary estimate is likely to increase after the engineering phase.

About 18 residents attended the informal meeting co-hosted by Morales and project engineers Bowyer-Singleton &; Associate Inc.

Dana Chester of Bowyer-Singleton assured residents there will be no driveway closures and the eventual contractor will be directed to provide 24-hour access to all affected properties.

Morales said improvements include milling and repairing the existing , paving unpaved shoulders, widening right turn lanes for undesignated bicycle lanes and upgrading intersections with handicap compliant ramps.

“This is all being done with gas tax money,” said Morales. “It is an ongoing state to keep our roads repaired and safe.”

He said the state analyzes paved road surfaces and repairs or replaces those that fall below their standards. He also said this section of is especially important to maintain because it is a disaster evacuation route.

“This is mainly resurfacing,” said Morales. “We take an inch off the top and put it back. The project will not involve any serious intersection work or traffic lights.

“We will do this in short sections of about 1,000 to 1,500 feet at a time and it should cause very little, if any, traffic disruption in the area,” he said. “It is difficult to predict how long each section will take to complete because of factors including weather, but it should go very quickly.”

The engineers are to submit their final plans to FDOT by Feb. 9, 2009, with construction starting in August 2010 and completion scheduled for February 2012.

Morales also said landscaping along the project route that will end at Island Dunes Country Club will not be replaced by the state because the county has declined to maintain it.

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Thursday, April 3rd, 2008

Wildlife Spring will be upon us when we see the signals

To most of us, spring means flowers blooming, birds singing and gardens growing. The calendar definition of spring, however, is simply the mid point between winter and summer, one of two days of the year when day and night are equal in length. (The first day of autumn is the other.)

Scott Shalaway is a biologist and author and can be reached at

scottshalaway.googlepages and RD 5, Cameron, W.Va., 26033.

It makes more sense to define seasons in terms of what’s happening in nature than to simply accept a calendar definition. The appearance of robins is among the most popular signs of spring; it’s also among the least reliable.

If all robins disappeared each winter and returned in March, I could buy the association. But they don’t. I see robins all winter long. Some may be residents that chose not to migrate. Others are birds from farther north that winter here.

The reason more people don’t see robins in the winter is that robins gather in flocks and move away from open yards and parks and into deeper woodlands where food is abundant. Robins eat fruits during the winter, so they head for heavily wooded areas where dogwood berries, rose hips, crab apples and grapes abound.

In March, winter flocks break up and robins move back into . Once again they hunt earthworms on lawns and build nests in shade trees. Robins nest early; sometimes their first clutch of eggs freezes. But I digress, the natural history of robins is another column.

Here are some of the more reliable signs of spring I’ll be watching for in the weeks ahead.

%26#149; Longer days, shorter nights. Gentle rains. Gelatinous egg masses deposited by frogs, toads and salamanders in almost every vernal pond. Streams lined with eager anglers on the first day of trout season. Kingfishers and great blue herons fishing every day, without a license and with no limits.

%26#149; Blooming crocuses, , forsythias, and coltsfoot (it’s the bright yellow flower that’s easily confused with dandelion, which will soon follow). Morels under dead elm and .

%26#149; Turkey vultures kiting on rising thermals. Six-foot rat snakes basking on sun-baked country roads. Goldfinches molting from their drab winter plumage into brilliant lemon drops. Tent caterpillars.

%26#149; Turkeys gobbling. Grouse drumming. Squirrels barking. Screech-owls whistling. Coyotes yipping.

%26#149; The shocking brilliance of Baltimore orioles, scarlet tanagers, indigo buntings and red efts. The incredible camouflage of gray tree frogs, woodcock, copperheads and hen mallards.

%26#149; Ground hogs munching roadside . A phoebe building a nest on the porch light fixture. Killdeer scurrying about on , parking lots and cemeteries. Baby cottontails scampering across the yard.

%26#149; Butterflies in hay fields. Meadowlarks singing on fence posts. Box turtles crossing country roads. Barns swallows and kingbirds returning to local farms. Mourning doves cooing on power lines. Dragonflies, damselflies, tree swallows, yellowthroats and red-winged blackbirds patrolling territories in a cattail marsh.

%26#149; At dusk, bats patrolling the yard, a chorus of spring peepers, and the sweet yodel of a wood thrush singing vespers. An evening serenade by a whip-poor-will, one of those considerate birds that calls its own name. Nighthawks sweeping insects from the sky over . Big fat toads hunting moths and beetles beneath the light. Frogs leaping across the warm roadways on a rainy night.

%26#149; Arms bloodied by multiflora rose thorns. The sound of lawn mowers and the sweet aroma of freshly cut grass. Working in the yard until the day is done. Dirt under my fingernails. Washing up with brisk, hand-pumped water. Sleeping with the windows open.

These are a few of my favorite things during my favorite season. But to many, spring is defined by the return of ruby-throated hummingbirds. They returned to the Gulf coast several weeks ago (you can check their progress at http://www.hummingbirds.net/map.html). I expect them here on the ridge between April 20 and May 3.

So I’ll soon be making nectar (mix one part table sugar with four parts boiling water, cool and refrigerate). And that’s one more sure sign of spring — a jug of nectar in the refrigerator.

The best way to monitor seasonal changes is to keep notes. A new citizen science project encourages you to submit seasonal observations as part of a national project. For more information, visit, www.budburst.org.

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Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

PreInca temple discovered in Peru

LIMA, Peru Archaeologists have discovered the ruins of an ancient temple, and irrigation systems at a famed fortress overlooking the Inca capital of Cuzco, according to officials involved with the dig.

The temple on the periphery of the Sacsayhuaman fortress casts added light on pre-Inca cultures of Peru, showing that the site had religious as well as military aims, according to researchers.

It includes 11 rooms thought to have held mummies and idols, lead archaeologist Oscar Rodriguez said. The team of archaeologists that made the discoveries believes the structures predated the Inca empire but were then significantly developed and expanded.

“It’s from both the Inca and pre-Inca cultures; it has a sequence,” said Washington Camacho, director of the Sacsayhuaman Archaeological Park, told the AP on Thursday Archaeologists are still waiting for carbon dating tests, but Camacho said their calculations about the facilities’ age are supported by historical references such as ceramics and construction style.

Previous carbon-14 dating of Sacsayhuaman revealed that the Killke culture constructed the fortress in the 1100s, said Peruvian archaeologist Luis Lumbreras, former director of Peru’s National Culture Institute and an expert on Cuzco’s pre-Incan cultures. The Inca empire, based in the ancient city of Cuzco, flourished along the western edge of South America during the 1400s, prior to the arrival of the Spanish.

Today, Cuzco is Peru’s main tourism hub and a launching point for visitors to the jungle-shrouded ruins of Machu Picchu, 40 miles northwest.

The temple lies a little under a mile from zigzagging walls of the Sacsayhuaman fortress, alongside an enormous rock formation believed to be one of the fortress’ burial mounds.

“The temple is one of the most important in the Sacsayhuaman site,” Camacho said.

The discovery of the temple reveals “the sacred ceremonial nature of the Killke,” Lumbreras said. “Previously we thought Sacsayhuaman was simply a military fortification, but we now see it was a very complex ceremonial center.

Part of the temple was destroyed by dynamite blasts in the early 20th century, when the site was used as a stone quarry.

The , buried for hundreds of years under about three feet of soil, is believed to have formed part of a network connecting Sacsayhuaman’s buildings, according to Camacho.

Archaeologists are also busy unearthing an advanced hydraulic system, which may have been used to supply water to Cuzco during the Inca empire.

The new excavations, directed by Cuzco’s National Culture Institute, began in June 2007 and will continue for another five years, Camacho said.

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Saturday, March 15th, 2008

New York’s finance museum pays homage to Wall Street

NEW YORK “Buy low, sell high” is easier said than done.

Consider the neatly written document on display at the recently reopened Museum of American Finance. For 6,000 English pounds, the investor bought into the red-hot South Sea Company, the 18th-century trading outfit that collapsed in one of history’s most spectacular speculative implosions. The investor’s name was Isaac Newton. The discoverer of gravity apparently did not realize that the elemental force often applies to business ventures as well as apples.

“Here’s one of the great enlightened men of the 18th century, and even he can make a damn fool investment,” said Lee Kjelleren, president of the museum which has reopened in a bigger location.

For a museum located a block from the New York Stock Exchange, such a gloomy reminder of the hazards of finance may seem odd, but it’s hardly the only one.

Displays recount the financial panic of 1907, which led to the birth of the Federal Reserve Bank, and the crash of 1929, which marked the beginning of the Great Depression.

And in a video presentation about the huge one-day stock market drop on Oct. 19, 1987, Leo Melamed, the former head of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, recalls how sell orders overwhelmed buy orders that day.

“I still get a knot in my stomach when I think about it,” Melamed says.

Far from being a Wall Street hall of fame, the museum aims to show the bear’s side of the American economic system as well as the bull’s.

“We wanted to be honest about it,” said Richard Sylla, a museum trustee and a professor of economic history at New York University’s Stern School of Business. “And especially now, when the financial system is in a bit of trouble.”

Founded in 1988 as the Museum of American Financial History by Wall Street broker John Herzog, the museum was formerly housed in a 2,000-square-foot space on Broadway. But a confluence of events including the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks has led to the museum’s rebirth and renaming.

The old museum had specialized in displays of old stock certificates and other securities, but museum leaders realized the much larger space required a rethinking of exhibits.

“You can’t just paste old securities on the wall and expect people to come in,” Sylla said. “If we want people to come in, we have to appeal to a broad audience and educate different types of people.”

In the new museum, free-standing displays use video monitors to explain the ins and outs of the stock market, options exchanges and the bond market. And interviews with a variety of entrepreneurs, including restaurateur Drew Nieporent, JetBlue airline founder David Neeleman and Muriel Siebert, a pioneering female broker, dramatize the highs and lows of starting your .

“The overall message is that if I knew then what I know now, I would never have started,” said Kjelleren. “Running your is not for the fainthearted.”

Nor is managing your own money. Kjelleren believes that an important part of the museum’s mission is to improve Americans’ financial knowledge. With the decline of traditional pensions and the rise of 401(k) retirement plans, average citizens have to understand the risks and rewards of investments.

” Ticker tape from Oct. 29, 1929 Black Tuesday, when stock prices plummeted reminds visitors that the nation has not always stayed on that firm footing.

Museum officials hope to attract 100,000 visitors a year with such artifacts as the ticker tape and Newton’s stock certificate in the South Sea Company, which saw its stock price increase tenfold in the early months of 1720 before a frenzy of selling led to a collapse in the price, bankrupting countless investors.

In the two months since it has been open at its new quarters, it already has scored one of the biggest names in the world of finance. During a visit to New York a few weeks ago, billionaire investor Warren Buffett stopped by and had his picture taken with staffers sitting on one of the museum’s oddest attractions a couch made of 7,000 nickels that’s for sale for $125,000. A museum devoted to finance needs a few crowd-pleasers like that, Kjelleren said.

“We’re not providing the kind of art experience that the Metropolitan does,” he said. “You have to work a little harder, perhaps. It’s not a gorgeous painting. It’s a bond that George Washington owned, with the first use of the dollar sign. It requires a little study.”

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Thursday, March 13th, 2008

PG ShowPlane heads back to Broadway

The Post-Gazette’s traditional spring ShowPlane, its 87th, is named “Stars on Broadway” and heads for New York April 30-May 4. The four-show package:

%26#149; “Boeing Boeing,” a 1960s farce given an all-star revival starring England’s Mark Rylance, with Christine Baranski, Bradley Whitford (”West Wing”) and Gina Gershon. Rylance plays a shy country fellow in awe of his sophisticated city friend’s trio of beautiful lovers, with Baranski’s housekeeper offering tart commentary.

%26#149; “South Pacific,” the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical classic, in its first Broadway revival, staged at Lincoln Center and starring Kelli O’Hara and Brazilian opera star Paulo Szot.

%26#149; “A Catered Affair,” a new musical written by and starring Harvey Fierstein, with Faith Prince and Tom Wopat, based on a teleplay by Paddy Chayefsky and the 1956 movie written by Gore Vidal.

%26#149; Mel Brooks’ “Young Frankenstein,” starring Roger Bart, Sutton Foster, Andrea Martin and Megan Mullally, with Shuler Hensley as the Monster.

The ShowPlane is based in Times Square at the Millennium Broadway Hotel.

In addition to theater tickets and hotel, the package includes a round-trip flight between Pittsburgh and New York, transfers between the New York airport and hotel, a welcoming dinner, a morning coffee discussion with PG theater critic Christopher Rawson, baggage handling in New York, dining and motor coach gratuities and taxes on included items.

Optional extras include a morning walking tour of an interesting corner of New York and a “Regards to Broadway” farewell dinner. Experienced guides from Gulliver’s Travels will offer ideas for dining, touring and an additional Broadway show.

The basic tour price is $2,142 per person based on two people sharing a double room. The single supplement is $721. A deposit of $500 per person is required to hold your reservation; status of your request will be sent upon receipt of deposit and completed reservation form.

Deposits are to be made payable and mailed to Gulliver’s Travels, 460 S. Graham St., Pittsburgh, 15232-1210.

For more information, call 412-441-3131 or, outside Pittsburgh, 1-800-848-4084.

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Monday, March 10th, 2008

Chaco and Mesa Verde Southwest parks are stark opposites

In the end, we went to both, and were glad we did. As we found out, both are clusters of authentic ruins, and we actually enjoyed the differences. We could also see, though, that some folks would be squarely in one camp or the other.

Do you like your ruins difficult to reach, over dirt washboard roads, with the only food around what you bring yourself and the only place to sleep a campground? Are you thrilled to see rattlesnakes slither by? Do you like the feeling of peering down into a grand kiva, imagining its long-ago religious ceremonies, with no other tourists in sight? Chaco’s your choice.

Prefer to take a twilight tour of ancient cliff dwellings led by a guide dressed up as an early archaeologist, then eat a gourmet dinner at your hotel restaurant? Would you enjoy scooting along a high mesa on a tram, chatting first with Bostonians and next with Louisianans, hopping off this time to see pit dwellings, next time to see a dramatic overlook? Mesa Verde’s your ticket. (Literally; you have to buy tickets to see the main sights.)

Or maybe, like us, you’d appreciate both on their own terms.

Here are more comparisons:

The settings: New Mexico valley vs. Colorado mesa

Chaco, in Northwestern New Mexico, is the more pristine, deliberately kept difficult to reach by the decision to leave the entrance road mostly unpaved which also leaves it sometimes impassable after rain. (At one point we ended up in the middle of a storm-created gully and the rental car nearly got stuck. Yes, the ranger we’d called ahead had advised an SUV would be “more comfortable,” but she’d also said “most of the time” the road is navigable, and with the cost of gas, well … )

You can view most of the ruins by walking the trails off a nine-mile loop road through the canyon. In late August, we saw a few small groups of tourists but much of the time we had the place nearly to ourselves.

While cliffs surround it, the flatness of this high-desert valley and closeness of the various ruins give you a sense of the larger ancient community.

With no towns and their distracting lights for many miles around, stargazing is ideal, lending itself to a ranger-led astronomy program several times a week during tourist season that our friend had called “almost a religious experience.”

Unfortunately for us, cloud cover put the kibosh on telescope viewing the evening we tried to attend. But later that night the clouds mostly parted, and lying on the campsite’s picnic table looking up at the star-filled sky against the backdrop of the cliffs and ruins was amazing.

Mesa Verde, in Southwest Colorado, has the more dramatic setting, atop a mesa reached by a winding mountain road 15 miles from the park entrance, with spectacular views of mountains beyond and valleys below. Its archaeological sites are tucked into canyons throughout the park, with one main area, Wetherill Mesa, a steep, 45-minute drive from the visitors’ center and lodge, and the other, Chapin Mesa, about in a different direction.

The archaeological sites: Great houses vs. cliff dwellings

Chaco’s main draw is Pueblo Bonito, one of the most extensively excavated and studied sites in North America. Center of the Chacoan world and occupied from the mid-800s to 1200s, it was a four-story masonry “great house” with more than 600 rooms and 40 kivas.

As we learned from our college-student ranger-in-training, at the height of its culture, about 1050 A.D., Chaco was probably the ceremonial, administrative and economic center for far-flung communities connected to it by 1,200 miles of roads.

We climbed through the now-deserted rooms, stooping to enter doorways, as he pointed out original wood-beam ceilings and explained how structures were often oriented to solar or lunar events and to cardinal directions. The only restoration has been shoring up a few parts damaged by a rockfall.

The tour was free (Pueblo Bonito is the only site at Chaco where such guided tours are available) and you can also wander on your own, picking up written guides at each of the sites.

Mesa Verde’s major ruins are in alcoves set into cliffs under natural overhangs, and that means more huffing and puffing to see them: Many require strenuous climbs on canyon trails and up ladders, through tunnels and down into below-ground kivas.

Mesa Verde’s classic period was between 1100 and 1300, later than Chaco’s. Cliff Palace is Mesa Verde’s largest and best-known site, and North America’s largest cliff dwelling, with 150 rooms (you climb five 8-10-foot ladders and can descend into one of its kivas). It was partially restored in an earlier era when people thought it would be nice to fix them up so visitors would get a sense of what they were once like.

Unlike at Chaco, we never had a moment alone at Mesa Verde. To protect the sites and regulate crowds, you must visit most of the sites with a ranger on a timed tour, for $3 per site.

A separate timed $3 ticket is also required for Wetherill Mesa’s main site, Long House, another spectacular cliff dwelling (with two features we thought were particularly cool: a perfectly preserved imprint of a tiny corn cob in the ground, and a small red handprint on the wall).

At Wetherill, you can catch a tram that stops at earlier-period pit-house settlements and the starting point of the Long House walking tour. Yes, a tram is a touch of Disneyland, but it makes sense not to have everybody in their own cars along the small mesa roads. Another option for touring Cliff Palace on certain days is a 1-%26#189;-hour twilight tour, at $10 per person worth the extra cost. These tours are restricted to 20 people (that’s small, for Mesa Verde) and are conducted when the weather is cooler, which is a real consideration if you go during the sizzling summers. Our guide was a ready-for-Broadway ranger who dresses and acts the part of Richard Wetherill, the amateur explorer who excavated and named Cliff Palace in 1888 (though it wasn’t really a palace), and later was murdered at Chaco, where he had a trading post.

Tickets for most tours are sold at the Far View Visitors’ Center, but the twilight tour tickets have to be purchased at the Chapin Mesa Archaeological Museum (five miles from the visitors’ center) and they fill up quickly. Half-day guided bus tours are another option.

Accommodations: campground vs. comfy bed

At Chaco you’ll want to stay overnight if you stay for the astronomy program, because your only other choice is to drive out on those dicey roads in the dark. Campsites are nestled below cliffs and by ruins, with grills and bathrooms but no showers. Drinking water is available only at the visitors’ center.

Mesa Verde offers a choice of a hotel, the Far View Lodge, located by the visitors’ center, restaurants, lounge and gift shops. Rooms range from about $118-$148, some with spectacular views. With a AAA discount we paid about $100 a night for a pleasant, retro-motel-like standard room with no TV or phone and fans rather than AC. (Open mid-April to mid-October.)

Adding to the international flavor at the park, most of the concession staff was Jamaican (one told us they hadn’t realized where they were being sent, and isolated Mesa Verde was hardly what they’d bargained for).

Having a nearby hotel allowed us to take a cooling siesta after a morning of hiking and ladder-climbing in 80-plus-degree heat, to rest before our twilight tour. In contrast, the full-service campground is far from the sights 14 miles from Chapin.

Food: Camp fare vs. Southwest fusion

At Chaco, you have to rustle up your own meals; if you forget to bring anything, the closest groceries and gas are at a convenience store 21 miles away (on a mostly dirt road). There’s a nice picnic shelter near the visitors’ center; a rattlesnake joined us for lunch.

Mesa Verde’s choices include several snack bars and a cafeteria at the visitors’ center whose buffets by afternoon looked mighty tired. But the lodge’s Metate Room Restaurant %26amp; La Mano Lounge serves excellent Southwest fusion meals at decent prices ($20 for a three-course, early-bird special). The menu, which features an extensive wine list, includes buffalo prime rib as one of its specialties; we can attest to the Navajo spiced pork tenderloin and tender Santa Fe steak.

We had to say, it beat our Chaco fare of smoky pancakes and salami sandwiches hands down. Although we had no rattlesnake to dine with us.

Carey Quan Gelernter: %26#99;%26#103;%26#101;%26#108;%26#101;%26#114;%26#110;%26#116;%26#101;%26#114;%26#64;%26#115;%26#101;%26#97;%26#116;%26#116;%26#108;%26#101;%26#116;%26#105;%26#109;%26#101;%26#115;%26#46;%26#99;%26#111;%26#109;;

Jerry Large: %26#106;%26#108;%26#97;%26#114;%26#103;%26#101;%26#64;%26#115;%26#101;%26#97;%26#116;%26#116;%26#108;%26#101;%26#116;%26#105;%26#109;%26#101;%26#115;%26#46;%26#99;%26#111;%26#109;

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Saturday, March 8th, 2008

A new lease on nightlife at 10th Ave and Pike

Welcome to 10th and Pike “the epicenter of Seattle rock ‘n’ roll,” as one local boasted.

That might be just a touch over the top … or is it? After all, live music is blasting on these adjacent blocks, from indie-rock heavyweight Neumo’s and metal-loving newcomer King Cobra to old-timers the Comet Tavern and Wildrose, both of which have pumped up their music offerings in recent months.

And there is more to this suddenly vibrant Capitol Hill neighborhood than rock bands and hard-partying fans. Several new establishments on or just off Pike have the two blocks between Broadway and 11th Avenue booming and transforming.

If you haven’t been over here in a few months, you just might sprain your neck with double-takes. Rowdy, raggedy ol’ 10th and Pike is in the midst of a makeover put it on TV, and it would be “Flip This ‘Hood.”

We’re moving on up!

While ripped jeans and band T-shirts used to be the school uniform around here, several new spots are pulling in a more fashionably attired crowd. Take Quinn’s Pub. This European-styled “gastropub” recently replaced an unpretentious Mexican restaurant that for years had been feeding slackers and local families.

At Quinn’s, generous windows offer passers-by a glimpse at the long, sleek bar and diners who, for the most part, look more First and Bell or 36th and Fremont than 10th and Pike. Then again, Capitol Hill is fast changing.

“Some of my friends were joking about that,” said Pete Capponi, a Capitol Hill resident and member of the band Coconut Coolouts. “They were saying that everyone buying the new condos [Quinn's] seems to be their bar.”

For the punk crowd, this upscale bar people are drinking Old Fashioned cocktails and wine on a busy Monday night with a fanciful menu (braised oxtails, wild boar sloppy Joes, rabbit p%26#226;t%26#233;) might seem, well, a little “There goes the neighborhood … “

On the other hand, why can’t trendy eateries and dive bars with rock music coexist?

“It seems great to have both on the same street,” said Brian Collins-Friedrichs, an architect who works in Belltown and lives in Ballard. He gave Quinn’s high grades for its design (”industrial, with elegance”) and its cuisine.

The architect was having dinner with friend and business associate Jerry Everard, who helped get this street rocking years ago, when he launched Moe’s Mo’ Rockin’ Cafe. Everard got off the corner for a while, but returned four years ago to reopen the club as Neumo’s, again pumping nightlife onto the block.

Now, Everard is in on this upscale-the-Hill thing, as he has transformed an old shoe repair shop into the chic Sole Repair. This annex of Quinn’s is normally set aside for private parties, sometimes open to the public.

The other night, a few actress/model types were smoking (figuratively and literally) and attracting whistles outside the club. Inside Sole Repair, there were lounge music, low black couches and seductive lighting.

A little of this, a little of that

There seems to be something for a variety of nightlife palates on these blocks, and tonight launches another long weekend of diverse decadence.

Everard is working both sides of 10th tonight, hosting “The Young Ones,” a collection of rising Seattle acts, including rap crew Dyme Def, indie-poppers Throw Me the Statue and old-school rockers the Moondoggies (who recently signed to Sub Pop offshoot Hardly Art). The acts will be split between Neumo’s and Sole Repair.

Over at The Comet tonight there should be a decent crowd, soaking up beer and the artsy jazz-rock band Dead Science and quirky Pwerful Power. Next door, King Cobra gets ready to rock into its second weekend of live music (the Valley, one of Seattle’s most potent young bands, plays there Friday night).

At Havana, an attractive, Cuban-inspired lounge that came here in the summer of ‘06, DJs will spin house music as enjoy mojitos and other rum drinks. Love lives will be compared over coffee and laptops at Caffe Vita.

The ladies will be shooting back beers and trading notes on “The L Word” on the big screen, Sunday nights at the Wildrose.

Bimbo’s Cantina/Cha Cha Lounge recently moved to this block from its longtime home down the hill, a relocation, according to its MySpace page, “due to the rampant condoization of Capitol Hill.” Kincora’s Pub was also booted by a condo project, which led the owner to start up King Cobra. Here at the Cha Cha, locals will leave their apartments (probably not condos) to dive into punk cuisine as one menuism.com reviewer put it, “OK burritos, cheap beer.”

Those with more refined taste buds will sample frutti di mare, quattro stagioni and other exotic offerings at high-class pizzeria Via Tribunali.

It’s almost like the table cliques of your high-school cafeteria turned into Capitol Hill nightspots … if you can imagine a cafeteria serving everything from nachos (Bimbo’s) to foie gras (Quinn’s), and Frank Sinatra singing in the background, the Ramones backing him up.

Tom Scanlon: %26#116;%26#115;%26#99;%26#97;%26#110;%26#108;%26#111;%26#110;%26#64;%26#115;%26#101;%26#97;%26#116;%26#116;%26#108;%26#101;%26#116;%26#105;%26#109;%26#101;%26#115;%26#46;%26#99;%26#111;%26#109;

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Saturday, March 8th, 2008