Daily Archives: January 9, 2016

GOLDEN HISTORY MUSEUM

09Jan

Golden History Center captures the colorful past of this unique community. Discovery place of Tyrannosaurus Rex, home to an American saint, location of the largest single-site brewery on Earth—Golden, Colorado is truly a one-of-a-kind city. Begin your Golden adventure at the Golden History Center, exploring their dynamic exhibits, engaging programs, and amazing collections. Get up close with the gruesome tools from one of the city’s first dentists, marvel at the beauty of the Coors porcelain collection, and listen to music played on one of the finest instrument collections on the Front Range.

Today’s Golden History Center is the starting place for exploring Golden’s unique history through exhibits, lectures, programs, and events. As is true with the best museums, it continues to evolve and mature. They are constantly on the lookout for Golden stories and Golden-related artifacts.

The Golden History Center features a variety of changing exhibits about Golden’s past. It also boasts one of the finest collections of Coors Porcelain in the country, fun Jolly Rancher memorabilia and a wealth of artifacts that tell the story of Golden from its founding to present day. The museum will now be open on most national holidays.

The Golden History Center is part of Golden History Museums, which also includes the Astor House Museum and the Clear Creek History Park.

FOOTHILLS ART CENTER

09Jan

Foothills Art Center in Golden is a private non-profit organization founded in 1968 by a group of Golden artists. The mission of Foothills Art Center is to engage and inspire diverse audiences through the exhibition and interpretation of local, regional, and national visual arts. The Foothills Art Center offers classes for all ages and abilities, lectures, seminars, and tours.

Foothills Art Center was created for, and is devoted to, the mission of leading and inspiring the community through art, education and cultural excellence. Dedicated to exhibiting both traditional and contemporary artworks in all mediums, they not only create a home for Colorado artists, but also feature artists from across the nation and globe. The Center is committed to delivering engaging exhibitions and diverse educational programs in their unique historic environment, creating a memorable visitor experience.

The center is housed in two architectural gems—an 1872 renovated Gothic church and a Victorian mansion—both works of art themselves and official members on the United States National Registry of Historic Buildings.

WAITANGI TREATY GROUNDS

09Jan

The Treaty House was originally known as ‘the Residency’. It is where James Busby conducted much of his official business as the British government’s representative in New Zealand from 1833 to 1840. It was also home for James and his wife Agnes and their six children.

The original house was pre-cut in Sydney of Australian hardwood and shipped to New Zealand for assembly on site in 1834. In 1840 it consisted of a parlour, or living room, one large bedroom, a central hall and a small dressing room. A separate building housed the kitchen, store room and servants’ room. Busby added three bedrooms at the back in 1841.

The house and its associated farm remained in the family’s possession until 1882, when the estate was sold. Over the next 50 years the house was neglected and became almost derelict. After the Bledisloe purchase in 1932 it underwent major restoration work, first in 1933, when it was named the Treaty House, and again in 1990.

Today you can see the original bedroom and parlour as they might have looked in 1840. In other rooms, an exhibition features everyday life in the Busby household, on the farm and around the Bay of Islands in the 1830s and 40s. Other displays tell the story of the gift of the Waitangi estate to the nation and the restoration of the house.

MILLERCOORS BREWERY

09Jan

MillerCoors LLC might keep the “Miller” portion of its name, but the company’s ownership ultimately will likely all fall under the “Coors” umbrella through a pending merger of the world’s two largest brewers.

London-based SABMiller PLC, which includes Miller High Life, Pilsner Urquell and Foster’s among its brands, has accepted the latest purchase offer from Leuven, Belgium-based Anheuser-Busch InBev NV, the maker of Budweiser, Corona, Beck’s and other beers. That pending sale, announced Tuesday, is valued at around $106 billion.

The transaction would be among the world’s largest corporate mergers. The two companies together have 224,000 employees in more than 100 countries, with that head count likely to be reduced as the merged company cuts costs.

The enlarged Anheuser-Busch InBev could control up to 31% of the global beer market — if antitrust regulators allow the sale to proceed without any changes.

However, it is expected that neither the U.S. Department of Justice nor the Federal Trade Commission would approve the merger without requiring SABMiller to sell its 58% share of Chicago-based MillerCoors, said Scott Hansen, an antitrust attorney at Reinhart Boerner Van Deuren, a Milwaukee law firm.

GOLDEN GATE CANYON STATE PARK

09Jan

More than 12,000 acres of dense forest, rocky peaks, and aspen-rimmed meadows laced with miles of trails awaiting the hiker, horseback rider, mountain biker and winter sports enthusiast at Golden Gate Canyon State Park.

Only 30 miles fro​m Denver, Golden Gate Canyon offers such amenities as a electrical hook-ups and tent-sites in two different campgrounds, stocked fishing ponds, picnic sites and the Panorama Point Scenic Overlook, where visitors can see 100 miles of the Continental Divide. The park’s numerous group facilities can host several types of events, from weddings to family reunions and company picnics.

Besides camping, overnight guests can also stay at one of the five cabins and two yurts at Golden Gate. In 2008, the park began renting out guest houses, a first for a Colorado State Park. Winter will find visitors cross-country skiing, snowshoeing, sledding, ice fishing and ice skating.

WAITANGI GOLF CLUB

09Jan
GETTING STARTED
Most golf clubs in New Zealand accept casual players for play during the week and at weekends.
Usually a booking system is operated by the club which will give you the option of several different times to book during the day, or select the Book a Tee Time from the main Play Golf menu of the website to book a tee time online.
For a full list of courses in your area, click on ‘Find a Club’ in the menu.
To find a coach to help get your game started, visit the Find A PGA Coach section.
PLAYING CASUAL GOLF
Casual golfers will be required to pay a fee (known as green fees) to play 9 or 18 holes. Rates vary from course to course and you should check with individual courses before confirming your booking as to the fee payable.
For a full list of courses in your area, click on ‘Find a Club’ in the main menu under the Play Golf tab.
Check out the Play Golf and About the Game sections for information that will assist you to become a better golfer and enable you to enjoy your round!

CLEAR CREEK HISTORY PARK

09Jan

Clear Creek History Park

is home to many of the original buildings from the old Pearce Ranch in Golden Gate Canyon. Thomas and Henrietta Pearce, pictured below, raised eight children on their ranch. It was one of the largest in the area by 1912.

Stroll through this park and imagine yourself growing potatoes or raising chickens as part of a homesteading family. Peek through the windows of real 1800s cabins and see other buildings from the ranch like the barn, chicken coop and two-seat outhouse.

You can also have a glimpse of the 1876 Guy Hill schoolhouse which was originally located in the canyon too, but on a different property. It served the needs of canyon locals until 1951.

It’s only a short walk from downtown Golden which features shopping, restaurants, and more. Admission is always free.

ASTOR HOUSE MUSEUM

09Jan

The Astor House was built in 1867 and stayed in continuous operation as a boarding and rooming house until 1971—that’s over 100 years! It rented rooms and served hot meals to lawmakers, laborers, miners, students and families, some of whom stayed for weeks or even months.

The July 31, 1867 Golden Transcript noted that “Brother Lake has adopted the modest name of ‘Astor House’ for his new stone hotel. It is a fine house, and is nearly ready for a grand opening. It is undoubtedly the Astor of Colorado, but is somewhat smaller than the house of that name in New York.”

Many boarding establishments were commonly called houses rather than hotels since they were smaller and advertised the comforts of home. By 1882, the Golden business directory proudly listed at least eight hotels or “houses.”

Although it may not appear grandiose by modern standards, the Astor House was considered quite fancy in 1867. The first stone building in Golden, it helped to establish a sense of prosperity and permanency in a growing city.

SWIM WITH THE DOLPHINS

09Jan

Throngs of Americans are heading south to the Caribbean right now, for the balmy sunshine, intoxicating evening breeze, turquoise waters … and the opportunity to swim with dolphins. But despite their popularity, swim-with-the-dolphin programs have a dark underbelly, and those on the inside are starting to speak out against them.

Swim-with-the-dolphin (SWTD) programs can be found all over the world, but they’ve become exceptionally popular in the Caribbean in the past decade or so. A former dolphin trainer, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, told The Dodo that these programs are inherently problematic — and cetaceans simply do not belong in captivity.

“Dolphins are beautiful and amazing creatures in their natural habitat,” says the former trainer, who requested anonymity because he still works in the Caribbean hotel industry. “But stick them in a cage, and you watch them change.”

One trainer’s story

Born and raised in the Bahamas, the trainer says he was employed at two swim-with-the-dolphin facilities in the Caribbean, and his concerns grew over his tenure. The dolphins’ holding pens were not only excessively shallow, but also far too small. At one facility, he says, more than 40 dolphins were caged in three compact cells.

In the open sea pens — as opposed to enclosed pools within a resort — debris like nails and fish hooks would float in from the ocean, he adds.

“Because they didn’t have a vet or any type of veterinary care at [this particular] facility, the dolphins would swallow things, and there would be nothing you could do about it,” he says. Though he witnessed the enclosed pens being cleaned, he claims the smell of the chlorine was so strong, it would “choke” the trainers — and that some of the animals eventually went blind because of its use.

Hole in the Rock Cruise

09Jan

A visit to New Zealand is not complete without a journey to the very top of the North Island – Cape Reinga (Te Rerenga Wairua). Uncover the wild beauty of this vast and untouched region that is rich in Māori culture and tradition. As you travel north, enjoy a taste of New Zealand’s varying and beautiful landscape: the rolling hills of Northland’s rural countryside, breath-taking coastal views and native forest.

Drive along the sand on Ninety Mile Beach as the waves crash beside the custom-built coach. Feel the sand between your toes as you help your driver guide dig for shellfish (conditions permitting). Your off-road journey continues up Te Paki Stream, stopping at the massive sand dunes where you can experience the thrills and spills of sand-boarding. Clambering up and surfing down the dunes (if you dare!) is sure to get your heart pumping.

Visit the Puketi Kauri Forest and get up close to ancient and majestic giant kauri trees and native bush. Stroll along an elevated walkway as these graceful giants surround you, and learn about conservation efforts to preserve the forest today.

Visit Cape Reinga and hear the stories of this significant site where, according to Māori legend, spirits depart on their journey home to Hawaiki. Enjoy spectacular panoramic views, visit the iconic lighthouse, and see the point where the Tasman Sea and the mighty Pacific Ocean come crashing together. Leave a living legacy by planting a native tree at Cape Reinga (additional cost – ask your driver guide for more information).

During your Cape Reinga tour you’ll also experience another Kiwi icon: a lunch of delicious fresh fish and chips at the historic Wagener Museum at Houhora. A vegetarian option is available and can be selected when booking.

Your journey home will be equally enjoyable as your tour guide’s combination of local insight, extensive historical knowledge and fantastic sense of humour create an unforgettable adventure.