Showing posts with label Colorado. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colorado. Show all posts

Thursday, March 25, 2021

The end of My 30 adventures

My 30 adventures to celebrate my 30th birthday have come to an end.  It might have taken 3 years instead of 1 but I finished it.  I started out with big plans, but before I even got started, I ended up in the ER for An unexpected adventure.

After this setback I had to re plan my adventures, but still had some fun adventures in Arizona and Utah.  

This included The 30th Annual Chandler Chamber Ostrich Festival



and Birdwatching in Gilbert, Arizona and Chandler, Arizona.  


In Utah the Red Butte Gardens Lego display in Salt Lake City, Utah,



“The Sandlot” movie tour in Salt Lake City and Ogden, Utah 



and Ogden's George S. Eccles Dinosaur Park in Ogden, Utah.


After more unforeseen circumstances I had to plan and do more things closer to home. 


Like having Peruvian food and seeing the Ansel Adams early works display both in Longmont, CO 



and the Benson Sculpture Garden in Loveland, CO.

However, before I got all of these done Covid hit, and I had to go virtual and do the rest from home.  This included watching 30 movies I hadn’t seen, 


building a Lego Christmas tree  and seeing Keukenhof garden in the Netherlands.  



Then I finished with my Virtual Road trip.

 

My adventures never went as planned but I was able to see and do things I didn’t expect. I’m glad I didn’t give up and made it all the way to the end.  Thank you so much for reading and following along, I hope you enjoyed the ride as much as I did! 

If you want to continue reading my posts, I have another blog Ryan’s Good Eats that you can check out.  I don’t know what my next big adventure might be but I’m looking forward to seeing what life brings next!

Wednesday, March 10, 2021

#30 Virtual Road trip Day 1

 For my final adventure #30 We’re taking a virtual trip through Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona.  We’ll be taking virtual tours of different national parks and monuments as well as other attractions, watching baseball games on tv and trying to recreate some of our favorite restaurants and foods. Make sure to follow along for my daily post with pictures, links and videos.

Day 1

We started out Day 1 of our road trip by heading south from Home to Albuquerque.

 



We stopped for lunch at Wendy’s. I had a Dave’s single with fries.   Also, we stopped at Fort Union National Monument.  I looked through their photo galleries.


https://www.nps.gov/foun/learn/photosmultimedia/photogallery.htm


Once in Albuquerque we stopped for dinner. 

 

This was a few different products from New Mexico including The Authentic New Mexican beef with red chile sauce and chicken with green chile sauce enchiladas.  


We also had salsa from Sadie’s, a restaurant in Albuquerque, we got the not so hot salsa.  We found these products at Safeway.  Then we made it to our hotel in Grants, NM and finished Day 1.         

Tuesday, March 2, 2021

# 29 Denver Bears


I’ve always loved baseball and know quite a bit about it, but one thing I never knew about was the Denver Bears baseball team.  I thought I’d do a little bit of a research project, then I happened to receive a Denver Bears shirt as a gift, so I knew for sure I needed to do this.

I found out that Denver had various teams over the years back to 1885.  In 1955, Denver upgraded to a Triple-A team as the Denver Bears and started out as an affiliate of the New York Yankees.   This happened because the Kansas City Blues were forced to relocate after the American League's Philadelphia Athletics moved to Kansas City, Missouri, to become the Kansas City Athletics.  Denver had no connection to the original Blues, so because of the new location in the Rockies, the team became known as Bears

 The Bears played at what became known later as Mile High Stadium the home of the NFL Denver Broncos, but it was originally known as Bears Stadium, after the team. When Bears Stadium opened it held 16,000 and it was enlarged to 25,000 in 1963 and expanded through the years until it reached a capacity of 76,000 in 1977. This ballpark was one of the largest venues in history to host minor league baseball on a routine basis. The biggest crowds were on 4th of July fireworks nights typically Crowds of 45,000 and more watched the fireworks games. On July 4, 1982, the Bears drew 65,666 for the annual Fireworks Game, a minor league record for a single game. Mile High Stadium remained the home of Denver baseball until the opening of Coors Field in 1995.

The Bears won the American Association championship multiple times in 1971, 1976, 1977, 1981, 1983.and 1991 as the Zephers They also won the 1991 Triple-A Classic

In 1957, the Bears were affiliated with the New York Yankees and under manager Ralph Houk won the American Association championship and the Junior World Series. Many players would later reach the majors and play in the World Series.  In 1960, then as a Detroit farm club, they finished first, but lost in the playoff finals. They had two League MVPs early on including Marv Throneberry in 1956 and Steve Boros in 1960

The Denver Bears had some good teams from the 1970s to the mid-1980s, producing such players as Andre Dawson, Tim Wallach, Tim Raines, Graig Nettles, Terry Francona, Wallace Johnson, Danny Morris, and Bill Gullickson. Denver players Richie Scheinblum (1971), Cliff Johnson (1973), Roger Freed (1976), Frank Ortenzio (1977), and Randy Bass (1980) were league MVPs. The managing careers of both Billy Martin and Felipe Alou began with the Bears.

In 1984, the team name was changed to the Denver Zephyrs, after the famous passenger train. Barry Larkin was league MVP in 1986 along with Greg Vaughn in 1989, Jim Olander in 1991 and Jim Tatum in 1992.  Their only championship under the new nickname was the 1991 American Association title They went on to win the 1991 Triple-A Classic against the International League's Columbus Clippers, 4–1.

The team remained in the American Association through the 1992 season.  In 1993, After 39 seasons of play, the Zephyrs relocated to New Orleans, Louisiana where they continued as the New Orleans Zephyrs. The team made way for the National League Colorado Rockies expansion team.

Over the years The Bears were affiliates of many teams including

Milwaukee Brewers (1987–1992)

Cincinnati Reds (1985–1986)

Chicago White Sox (1983–1984)

Texas Rangers (1982)

Montreal Expos (1976–1981)

Chicago White Sox (1975)

Houston Astros (1973–1974)

Texas Rangers (1972)

Washington Senators (1970–1971)

Minnesota Twins (1965–1969)

Milwaukee Braves (1963–1964)

Detroit Tigers (1960–1962)

Unaffiliated (1959)

New York Yankees (1955–1958)

 

Some famous baseball people that played or managed for the bears were

Andre Dawson

Bob Uecker

Johnny Pesky

Ralph Houk

Sam Suplizio

Terry Francona

Tim Raines

Tim Wallach

Tom Lasorda

Tony La Russa

Whitey Herzog

Billy Martin

Felipe Alou

 

I learned a lot about the Bears, but what I found most interesting was the 1980 Denver Bears team that was picked as number 37 of the Top 100 Teams in minor league history. The 1980 Bears were a member of the Montreal Expos family. They were part of the American Association and they won the West Division crown and finished with a Record of 92-44, .676, 21.5 games better than Oklahoma City

 On April 19, eight days after the season opened, they took over first place and remained there until they clinched the title two weeks before the end of the season. The Bears were really good at Mile High Stadium, winning 21 consecutive home games in mid-season. In May, in one 19-game stretch, Denver pitchers had a 1.99 ERA and hurled 31 consecutive scoreless innings.  Denver led the American Association in batting by a 17-point margin over Oklahoma City, .296 to .279. They also led in runs (865), hits (1,383), total bases (2,146), doubles (231), home runs (146), RBI (806) and walks (567). The pitching staff ERA was edged out by Springfield, 3.86 to 3.87, but led the league in shutouts with 14. In the playoff, Denver met East Division winner Springfield.  The Bears were upended, four games to one.

Some of the important people that season were

Billy Gardner The Bears were managed by 53-year-old former major league infielder.  He played for ten years in the majors (1954-63) with the Giants, Orioles, Senators, Twins, Yankees and Red Sox, batting .237. Gardner managed Minnesota and Kansas City later on in his career.

 20-year-old second baseman Tim Raines, beat out Oklahoma City’s Orlando Gonzalez by .0002, .3543 to .3541. for The American Association batting title.  He also set a league record by stealing 77 bases. which would have been higher, but he spent 18 days with Montreal in July-August.   He was chosen as The Sporting News Minor League Player of the Year. In 1981 he moved up to the majors where he stayed for 19 years, the first ten with Montreal.

Designated Hitter Randy Bass (.333) completed the Triple Crown for the Bears, leading the league in home runs (37) and RBI (143), as well as in runs scored (106) and slugging percentage (.644). His home run total topped the minors.  He was voted the American Associations Most Valuable Player and was the National Associations Minor League player of the Year. He then went to Japan where he starred for 5 seasons for the Hanshin Tigers of the Central League. He won the Triple Crown in 1985 and 1986

Shortstop Jerry Manuel (.277) didn’t make much of a mark as a major league player, but he was a very successful manager.  He was appointed manager of the Chicago White Sox on December 4, 1997 and managed them for 6 seasons followed by 3 seasons with the New York Mets

Third baseman Tim Wallach hit .281-36-124, led the American Association in total bases (295) and was second to Bass in homers, RBI and slugging percentage (.576).  He was Montreal’s first round selection in the June 1979 free agent draft after a stellar collegiate career at Cal State Fullerton.  He was the Expos third baseman for 12 years.   In 17 major league seasons he batted .257 in 2,212 games.

There were nine .300 hitters in the American Association and Denver had four of them. In addition to Raines and Bass were center fielder Art Gardner (.317) and right fielder Dan Briggs (.316). Both later made it to the major leagues.

Denver’s leading pitcher was 26-year-old right-hander Steve Ratzer (15-4, 3.59) who led the league in wins and win percentage (.789). He started the season in the bullpen and was a perfect 6-0 with two saves before moving into the starting rotation where he went 9-4. He was chosen as the American Association Pitcher of the Year, He made only a brief appearance in the majors for Montreal in 1980-81.

Right-hander Bill Gullickson.  He started the season going 6-2, 1.91 with five complete games and two shutouts in nine starts, striking out 64 and walking 29 in 66 innings. On May 30 he was promoted to Montreal and finished the season with a 10-5, 3.00 record, winning nine of his last eleven starts.  He finished his major league career with a record of 162-136, 3.93.

The Bears top reliever was 27-year-old, 5’8’’ left-hander Jamie Easterly who had a 9-8, 3.63 record with 15 saves. He pitched 13 years in the majors with a 23-33, 4.62 record and 14 saves.

Jim Burris was the executive Vice President-General Manager. He was named The Sporting News Minor League Executive of the Year. He had been president of the American Association in 1961-62 before it suspended operation and had been the Bears GM since 1965.

Denver placed seven players on the 14-man American Associations All-Star team: Raines, Manuel, Wallach, Bass, Art Gardner, Briggs and Ratzer. The Bears swept the Topps American Association Player of the Month awards: pitcher Hal Dues in May, Wallach in June, Raines in July and Bass in August.

Tim Raines and Randy Bass helped the 1980 Denver Bears win the regular season championship with ease. and helped the team compile the American Association’s best record in the last 60 years.

 

If you want to read more about the Denver Bears and the 1980 team Here’s a link

 Top 100 Teams | MiLB.com History | The Official Site of Minor League Baseball

Tuesday, October 27, 2020

# 23 Benson Sculpture Garden

 




On a Tuesday afternoon my parents and I headed to Loveland CO to check out the Benson Sculpture Garden.  When we arrived we set my camera up and started our walk.  I really liked this garden and all the sculptures including a lion, red and blue horses, a big horn sheep, a guitar, and a fox and waterfall. 

 


 


I really enjoyed this quiet garden and had fun getting out of the house and taking pictures.

Monday, July 8, 2019

#13 Peruvian food - Longmont CO

 

Rosario's Peruvian Restaurant May 15, 2019 

I have never had Peruvian food but I had a tip that this place was good and thought since we were in Longmont it was the perfect time to try Peruvian food for the first time.

 I didn’t really know what I was getting myself into or even what to order, but luckily they have different Peruvian Tour plates with two or three different items on them. So I ordered tour plate number six and mom and dad both got plate number five. Plate number six had a Papa Rellena which was a potato stuffed and fried, Aji de Gallina which was a chicken dish and Tallarin Saltado which was a beef noodle dish. Tour plate number five had Lomo Saltado which was a beef dish. This plate also had the same Tallarin Saltado beef and noodle dish I had. Each plate was 16.99. 



The Papa Rellena was really good. It was basically a really good baked potato stuffed with a meat mixture that included a few peas, carrots and hardboiled egg pieces. Then was battered and fried making it a little crispy around the outside. 

The Aji de Gallina was a chicken dish with a creamy Aji yellow pepper sauce and topped with a hardboiled egg slice and an olive. I thought this was excellent

The Tallarin Saltado was a stir fried beef noodle dish that resembled and tasted kind a like lo mein but also had tomatoes. 

The Lomo Saltado was stirfried beef with onions and french fries.

Also included on the plate was some sort of green sauce that was spicy but very tasty and went well with everything.

The food here was great and I couldn’t tell if the Aji de Gallina or the Papa Rellena was my favorite but my whole meal was excellent. 

This was a fun and tasty adventure. I’m really glad I was able to try out Peruvian food and can’t wait for more!

Thursday, June 13, 2019

#12 Ansel Adams early works display Longmont CO


May 15, 2019



The Longmont museum had an Ansel Adams early works display that I thought would be interesting to see so my parents and I took a trip to Longmont for the day. We went to mostly see the Ansel Adams display but we figured we could see the rest of what they had. When we arrived we paid our admission fees eight dollars for me and five dollars for my parents.

This was a display of his early works I thought these black-and-white pictures were very interesting. Most of them were nature pictures mountains, lakes, trees and what not. I especially liked his pictures of the trees one of aspens, one of trees with snow and various others and also a plain basic road picture. There was quite a few pieces of old photo equipment in the exhibit as well. 

Once we were done with that exhibit we went to see the rest of the museum. Their next display had Longmont history and was an all right exhibit but just not very big. After this we went out in the courtyard which had a nice place to sit and rest. After a while we went back in to see what else they had. We took the elevator up to the second floor where they had a small display about an Astronaut from Longmont and then to the third-floor which just had a kid’s play area. After that we looked at a few pictures they had in the classrooms and that was about it. 

I thought the Ansel Adams exhibit display was rather interesting and was glad I was able to see it but I was rather disappointed in the rest of the museum.