Delta coaches Luis Meza, center, and Clayton Curtis congratulate 152-pound senior Hunter Brasfield after an upset win sent him into the 4A Region 4 semifinals.
Hotchkiss senior Joe Boyle controls Ruben Chagoya of Basalt to win a 3A Region 1 title. He is one of 7 Hotchkiss state qualifiers.
Hotchkiss and Paonia boys will square off this week on the basketball courts. Both are 6-4 in league play.
Delta senior Brooke Taylor scores two of her 12 points against Summit after grabbing an offensive rebound.
Paonia 195-pounder Tyler “TK” Kendall sets Rangely’s Drew Collins up for a pin.
Paonia freshman Bo Pipher sets TJ Richard of North Park up for a pin in Saturday’s regional semifinal round. He is one of 13 Paonia wrestlers headed to state!
Surrounded by coaches and his dad, Conner Beard signs Letter of Intent to play football for the University of Nebraska Kearney.
Hotchkiss' Jacobe Galley signed a Letter of Intent to play football and study engineering at Colorado Mesa University.
Hotchkiss senior Cody Bartlett signed his National Letter of Intent to run cross-country for Hawaii Pacific University.
Last week's regular-season baseball finale in Gypsum was a victory for the Panthers as they rolled past Eagle Valley 12-1. The win left Delta with a league record of 12-2 and an overall mark of 16-3.
It was a tale of two games for Cedaredge's baseball team last week. The Bruins were on the road in Bayfield to face Peak to Peak's Pumas in game one of elimination play.
Photo by Tamie Meck Kylie Hodges releases the discus at the Bruin Invitational. Hodges will compete in both the discus and shot put at this week’s state 2A track meet in Lakewood. Teammate Daryl Batt had her best throw of the season and is going to state in…
Photo by Tamie Meck Senior Josiah Spano, of Paonia, was an All-Conference first team selecton in the 2A WSL for the 2012-13 hoop year.This year's Class 2A All-Conference and All-State honors in the 2013 Photo by Tamie Meck Paonia High School senior Annavah…
I wonder if it will ever be warm again — this cold has lasted for weeks. But the winter solstice has come and gone, so I know that spring will return. Can I last that long? I have no choice but to return to my memory file to find a warm day and a beautiful flower.
Allen and I were driving along Land's End Road. We had just passed through an open park-like area and were entering the somber spruce-fir forest. We saw a small area of deep green growth and realized that there must be water. Of course we stopped to investigate. Deep green leaves and bright white flowers!
They were marsh marigolds . . . robust, ground-hugging plants. The foot-long leaf stalks supported heart-shaped, glossy leaves up to eight inches long and a couple of inches across. Inch-wide white blossoms came singly atop long flower stalks and at the center of each blossom was a dense mass of bright stamens laden with yellow pollen.
Often flower parts come in four segments: the green outer sepals, the colorful petals, the pollen-bearing stamens, and pistil with the ovary which will mature into half-inch seed pods. I knelt down for a closer look and found that there were only three segments: many pistils nestled among the many stamens but no green sepals — only petals that were white on the top side and darker bluish on the underside. In the past, I'd seen this plant with closed buds that were blue, but the broad leaves indicated that the plants were marsh marigold. Then, as the flower opened, the white upper side color is what we would see. Since botanists try to be consistent, such a situation, with only three segments, is defined as "tepals."
Marsh marigold always seemed a poor name to me: They grow in wet places (like a marsh) but they sure don't look like "marigolds." Apparently many pretty yellow flowers were labeled marigold ("mari" in honor of the Virgin Mary). The yellow eastern specie was observed first and then the common name applied to its western counterpart even though it had white blossoms.
There are about 15 species in colder regions in both hemispheres. This member of the Buttercup Family has many common names: Meadow bright, King-cup, Meadow Buttercup and Capers. Others are obviously related to grazers: Horse blobs, Cow slip and Elk slip.
I remember the warmth of the sun on my back and the clear air. A lovely memory to warm me on this cold wintry day.