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Want to move to Boulder, CO...???

N8 v2.0

Not the sharpest tool in the shed
Oct 18, 2002
11,003
149
The Cleft of Venus
Sent to me by a friend who lives in CO... he says it's even worse than this....



The Gore-Tex Vortex
Think life in America's favorite outdoor mecca would be dreamy? Careful what you wish for.
By Marc Peruzzi

So you want to move to Boulder, Colorado, the perennial best town in America for (circle one or all depending upon your level of outsideness) roadies, rock jocks, organic consumers, backcountry skiers, mountain bikers, trail runners, ultrarunners, whitewater boaters, alpinists, credit-card environmentalists, New Agers, sellers of waterproof-breathable canine accessories, and those who support prairie dog emancipation at the expense of baseball fields. It's a great place to live, because everyone looks and thinks exactly like you.*

Except they're better than you. Get that straight and you'll fit in. But you'll matriculate quicker if you come with some attitude. Pose if you must. It's the best town in America, for Christ's/Buddha's/Ganesh's/Chris Carmichael's sake. Step up.

But what's it like to live here? Well, Boulder exudes a unique blend of over-the-top liberalism and extreme fitness. How to describe it . . . If Lance Armstrong and Amy Goodman had a love child, the prodigy would drive his Audi A4 to Boulder, buy a Maverick to decorate the roof rack, and then not ride the $5,000 bike because he didn't want to encroach upon mountain lion habitat. Are you feeling the zeitgeist? Some more Boulder color might help:

A Buddhist monk moved into our condo complex. Shaved head, full regalia, real deal. He drives a 30-cylinder pickup truck named after a subarctic ecosystem where trees don't grow and frost lingers.

Two strangers have said the word excelente to me in the past four months.

My barista (Oh, dear Lord, what's happening to me?) to a fellow barista:

"Cuba is, like, this paradise. Nothing has changed since, like, the fifties. They drive these old cars and play this great music." Me: "Cuba? They put AIDS patients in concentration camps and throw journalists in jail for printing the truth." Barista: "Uh, yeah, but the people are so happy down there. Who had the tall rice-milk latte?"

Need more telling details? The Dunkin' Donuts went out of business, but the oxygen bar next door to the gay-and-lesbian bookstore seems to be doing well. The panhandlers on the Pearl Street Mall sport $70 sandals and pull in upwards of 25 bucks an hour. Did anybody mention that the median sale price of a home here is $525,000? That's $302,000 more than the national figure. The best don't come cheap. If that's too pricey for you, maybe you should check out Burlington or Santa Fe. Oh, right: bad sushi.

OK, that's all lifestyle stuff that comes with living in a town that has a large contingent of soft-palmed check- of-the-month-clubbers. Could just as easily be Marin County. Buy a meditation table, slap a GO VEGAN! sticker on your roof box, and you'll blend. You're here for the fitness pursuits anyway.

Except that's where Boulder gets weird. In most American towns, outdoor-sports aficionados are part of an elite counterculture minority.

Mountain bikers and climbers have cachet. Not so in Boulder. Recreating outdoors is the norm here, and it's in your face. There's always some horse-toothed mountain-town equivalent of Laird Hamilton ready to kick your athletic pride through the dirt. Remember the 2005 Tour, when T-Mobile kept attacking Discovery, trying to break Lance? That's what a casual bike ride is like in Boulder. Strangers attack. Old guys with gray beards and steel bikes attack. Reach for a shot of Gu and even your friends attack. And women: Women always attack-they're the worst.

Even slow guys like me attack. The other day I was reeling in a pro cyclist on a brutal local climb. My heart rate was near its max, but I was feeling good. I was in the zone. Maybe four years of living in Boulder have paid some fitness dividends, I thought.

Then I figured it out: He's between intervals, and once his heart rate drops below 65 bpm, he's gone. At least he said "No offense" before he accelerated.

It doesn't matter what sport you do; you will suffer similar humiliation. Go nordic skiing in North Boulder Park and two Olympians shout "Track!" from a meter back. Climb the Flatirons only to learn that someone once ascended in Rollerblades. Get Maytagged in a hole while paddling Boulder Creek and a World Cup champion slalom kayaker will toss you a rope bag. Running? Not me, not in Boulder. Boulderites run like gazelles. Fancy yourself a mountaineer? The waiters at Sherpa's have summited Everest. But at least those guys are nice. If Reinhold Messner himself walked into south Boulder's mountaineering shop to buy a carabiner, the sales staff would give him attitude. It's enough to make you revolt against the blue sky (300 sunny days a year), pull down the blinds, and watch NASCAR.

I know what you're thinking. If you don't like it, why don't you get the hell out? I'll tell you why: It's pretty damn nice here, actually. I just bought a German automobile-gonna chip it. My four-year-old has attended two birthday parties in climbing gyms-little dude will be free-soloing soon.

Maybe it's the endorphin equivalent of a contact high, but I've never been in better shape. The sun is shining. The prairie dogs in the infield arechirping. One more round of whitening strips and my choppers will be gleaming. Everything's, like, most excelente.

* If your teeth are pearly white and your resting heart rate is below 45 bpm.
 

Transcend

My Nuts Are Flat
Apr 18, 2002
18,040
3
Towing the party line.
I lived there for 4 years. Only a metro republican like N8 would dislike it.

edit: Of course when you DO live in Boulder, all sense of reality is gone. 5 square miles, surrounded by reality. Even the hippies drive escalades and the Chinese Olympic marathon team runs by your condo, in step, every morning at 6am sharp.
 

Transcend

My Nuts Are Flat
Apr 18, 2002
18,040
3
Towing the party line.
Get me a nice place to live there and I will renounce my right wing leanings...
Unfortunately, you need to knock off fort knox to afford a "nice place" in Boulder. I hear the trailer park on 30th is nice this time of year though...if you don'd mind a $250 000 single wide. Oh, and before they sell to you, you have to prove you are a left wing card carrying liberal. The hippies will firebomb your house if you aren't.
 

N8 v2.0

Not the sharpest tool in the shed
Oct 18, 2002
11,003
149
The Cleft of Venus
Unfortunately, you need to knock off fort knox to afford a "nice place" in Boulder. I hear the trailer park on 30th is nice this time of year though...if you don'd mind a $250 000 single wide. Oh, and before they sell to you, you have to prove you are a left wing card carrying liberal. The hippies will firebomb your house if you aren't.
LOL!!! Liberals don't have guns tho...

;)
 

ktmsx

Monkey
Nov 28, 2005
527
0
CT.
Unfortunately, you need to knock off fort knox to afford a "nice place" in Boulder. I hear the trailer park on 30th is nice this time of year though...if you don'd mind a $250 000 single wide. Oh, and before they sell to you, you have to prove you are a left wing card carrying liberal. The hippies will firebomb your house if you aren't.
something tells me N8 could afford to live where ever he wanted..:bonk:
 

Jeronimo

Monkey
Jul 11, 2006
241
0
behind that boulder
They forgot to mention that the panhandlers on the Pearl Street Mall are herion addicts.

If there was one place I would not live in Colorado, it's The Republic of Boulder. The hypocrisy there is out of control and there is no good singletrack "in town", unlike most of Colorado.
 

N8 v2.0

Not the sharpest tool in the shed
Oct 18, 2002
11,003
149
The Cleft of Venus
I'd much rather live in Denver or Co Springs.. or Pagosa Springs for that matter...

:)

I love NM but I will never ever live in SFe either... same reason.
 

chuffer

Turbo Monkey
Sep 2, 2004
1,747
1,085
McMinnville, OR
There are so many places in CO soooo soooo sooo much better than Boulder. Ned, Evergreen, Conifer, CSprings, ISprings, (I hate Leadville), Grand Junction, Salida...

Boulder is nothing more than an over glorified strip mall.
 

scrublover

Turbo Monkey
Sep 1, 2004
3,159
6,874
It ain't that bad. (i'm 15 minutes north, in longmont. cheaper, still close to the good eateries, less traffic, and much closer to kick ass trails with less traffic than the normal front range open space stuff)

Some of that is true, but there are plenty of us non-hippie, non-trustafarian, non-uber-rich types around as well.

Dave out. (who just had a kick ass ride up on sourdough and south st. vrain this morning. didn't see another person other than the guy i rode with.)
 

DirtyDog

Gang probed by the Golden Banana
Aug 2, 2005
6,598
0
They forgot to mention that the panhandlers on the Pearl Street Mall are herion addicts.

If there was one place I would not live in Colorado, it's The Republic of Boulder. The hypocrisy there is out of control and there is no good singletrack "in town", unlike most of Colorado.
I bet you 10 dollars you can't back up what you just said. And as far as the trails go - name a town of a 100k that DOES have in town trails.
 

DirtyDog

Gang probed by the Golden Banana
Aug 2, 2005
6,598
0
We have Palmer Park and Ute Valley here in CSprings. :D

But you should know that since you used to live in Colorado right? ;)
How long does it take you to drive there? And no, I never lived in Colorado Springs.
 

DirtyDog

Gang probed by the Golden Banana
Aug 2, 2005
6,598
0
You just said "a town".
Original statement was "in town singletrack like most of Colorado. Keep up now.

Anywho, how many people in Salt Lick actually can ride to a trail head? Driving through a city like that to get to a trail would probably take longer than getting to the trails outside of Boulder anyway.
 

blue

boob hater
Jan 24, 2004
10,160
2
california
You shouldn't have a problem getting to Shoreline or the MCP/Big Water trailhead from anywhere in the city proper.

Shoreline is about 1000 yards away from my front door.
 

Jeronimo

Monkey
Jul 11, 2006
241
0
behind that boulder
I bet you 10 dollars you can't back up what you just said. And as far as the trails go - name a town of a 100k that DOES have in town trails.
Bet me about what, the herion addicts at the Pearl Street Mall?

I was talking about Colorado towns, not metrosexual metropolitan centers.

Every town in Colorado I like has good trails, GJ, CB, Durango, Telluride, Gunnison, Steamboat, Palisade, Glenwood Springs, Asspen, Vail, Frisco, Breckenridge, and the list goes on. The Front Range is not "real" Colorado, it's just an urban/suburban sprawl like LA , but at the base of the Rockies.
 

SkaredShtles

Michael Bolton
Sep 21, 2003
67,420
13,959
In a van.... down by the river
<snip>
Every town in Colorado I like has good trails, GJ, CB, Durango, Telluride, Gunnison, Steamboat, Palisade, Glenwood Springs, Asspen, Vail, Frisco, Breckenridge, and the list goes on. The Front Range is not "real" Colorado, it's just an urban/suburban sprawl like LA , but at the base of the Rockies.
But Telluride, Aspen, Vail, Frisco, and Breck *are* "real" Colorado? :clue:
 

DirtyDog

Gang probed by the Golden Banana
Aug 2, 2005
6,598
0
Bet me about what, the herion addicts at the Pearl Street Mall?

I was talking about Colorado towns, not metrosexual metropolitan centers.

Every town in Colorado I like has good trails, GJ, CB, Durango, Telluride, Gunnison, Steamboat, Palisade, Glenwood Springs, Asspen, Vail, Frisco, Breckenridge, and the list goes on. The Front Range is not "real" Colorado, it's just an urban/suburban sprawl like LA , but at the base of the Rockies.
Little resorts like telluride have lots of trails nearby. You're ****ting me!