http://www.flyingw.com/
I recall my first family trip back in the 60s. I'm talking all three of us piled into the car, along with a tiny porta-potty for yours truly, and ventured Westward across this great country. I remember stopping for a Dairy Queen in Kansas, visiting the Bug Museum, Cave of the Winds, Santa's North Pole Workshop near Pike's Peak, Pike's Peak itself (via the nifty tramway), and eventually Disneyland. I was three years old and still have fond memories of that long-ago trip (even the part when I accidentally left my crayons on the back window and they melted there, decorating my Dad's car with dots of rainbow - and giving my Skipper doll's hair some unwanted highlights and lowlights). In fact, I recall these places in vivid sense memory. And that's really saying something, especially since many trips made in more recent years don't have that hold on my heart - and aforementioned senses.
But if you asked me to recall one place we visited most clearly, in small details of sound, smell and (Ooh Lordy!) taste, it would be the Flying W Ranch Chuckwagon Show and Dinner. The musical cowboys took the stage under an outdoor, open air structure. They played songs like "Happy Trails" and the eerie "Ghost Riders in the Sky" (evocative both back then and now of whispy, transparent-gray cowpokes and their phantom horses). We sat at a long, wooden table with throngs of other happy vacationers and were treated to a tasty cowboy supper of a BBQ beef brisket sandwich, baked beans (best ever, ever), buttery corn bread and tangy-sweet lemonade. I can still remember plunking down my empty tin cup after draining it of the lemonade, wiping my mouth clean with the back of my sleeve, satisfied and full. What more do you need while listening to cowboy crooners while a gentle, evening breeze licked up against your shins?
It's with the deepest sadness that I must report this wonderful tourist attraction is no more. I visited Santa's North Pole Workshop's Facebook page this morning and learned that Flying W Ranch fell vicitm to the tremendously savage fires that are menacing Colorado as I write this. I'm constructing this blog post in order to inform my readers to please pray for the families affected by this tragedy, and the business owners who've lost their beloved Ranch, which charmed folks for the past 60 years. And, in addition, I'm urging everyone to keep prayers of protection going for Santa's North Pole Workshop, for nearby towns like Manitou Springs, for the glorious forests, and Garden of the Gods.
While writing this, I can't keep my eyes from tearing up for those ghostriders, now a sweet, disntant memory ...
A companion blog for my book, "The Cotton Candy Road Trip"

Showing posts with label Colorado. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colorado. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 27, 2012
Sunday, January 10, 2010
Sunday on the Blog with Photos!
Let's start the Sunday Photo Fun with a great example of the vintage neon signs found at Lakeside Park in Denver, Colorado. Many of them date back to the 40s through early 60s. The Spider ride is also known as the Octopus (or, as Kiddieland's version was called, the Polyp).
Labels:
Colorado,
Denver,
Kiddieland,
Lakeside Park,
Octopus,
Polyp,
Spider
Thursday, January 7, 2010
With visions of sugarplums...
Maybe it's the truckloads of snow that are being deposited all around our property that's making me think of this, but if I had one wish right now, it would be: to ride the world's highest Ferris wheel, swooping up among the tallest fir trees, taking in the snow-topped Rockies. What a rush. And bonus: the air is thinner up there, too. I overheard the woman who disembarked the ride before we hopped on. Her one-word summary: "majestic."
You have to visit it before the holidays, but it's worth keeping this in mind for the upcoming Christmas holiday in, yes, 11+ months. Santa's North Pole Workshop, at the foothills of Pike's Peak in Colorado, becomes a heavenly winter wonderland where the spirit of Christmas is quite palpable. When we were there back in September, many of the folks I interviewed touted the week leading up to Christmas, including Christmas Eve, as the most memorable time to visit (although I thoroughly enjoyed hearing "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer being played at the carousel in the late summertime).
Don't forget to say "hello" to the Jolly Old Elf himself while you're there (I asked for Colorforms...).
You have to visit it before the holidays, but it's worth keeping this in mind for the upcoming Christmas holiday in, yes, 11+ months. Santa's North Pole Workshop, at the foothills of Pike's Peak in Colorado, becomes a heavenly winter wonderland where the spirit of Christmas is quite palpable. When we were there back in September, many of the folks I interviewed touted the week leading up to Christmas, including Christmas Eve, as the most memorable time to visit (although I thoroughly enjoyed hearing "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer being played at the carousel in the late summertime).
Don't forget to say "hello" to the Jolly Old Elf himself while you're there (I asked for Colorforms...).
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