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Articles from the July 29, 2020 edition


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  • Preschool should be almost as usual in the fall

    Emily Long|Jul 29, 2020

    The littlest children in the Left Hand Valley will get to have a relatively normal school experience this fall. Childcare was deemed as an essential service in March and some preschool facilities, especially those providing care to children of essential workers, never closed in the coronavirus pandemic. Others have started reopening under smaller classroom restrictions during the "safer-at-home" period. For schools that provide both K-12 education and also preschool, it has taken some time to...

  • One thing hasn't changed for the scaled-down Boulder County Fair

    Patricia Logan|Jul 29, 2020

    About now, Clarence Kneebone would be setting up the last metal corral panels, straw bales and exhibit tables at the Boulder County Fairgrounds. For more than 25 years, he's been the man behind the scenes, making sure the grounds are set up so the 4H kids, animals and fairgoers can have a great experience. But the 87-year-old volunteer got his work done a week early this year. There just wasn't much to it with the fair curtailed by the coronavirus pandemic. "It's going to be a whole different...

  • Schools rely on Boulder County Health for reopening decisions

    Patricia Logan|Jul 29, 2020

    St. Vrain Valley School District (SVVSD) is leaning heavily on science and medical experts as it finalizes back-to-school plans during the coronavirus pandemic. Health guidance and community input led the district to scale back in-person learning that was presented as a draft in June. The district’s initial plan had elementary school students, sixth graders and ninth graders going back full time, but guidance from Boulder County Public Health and other sources influenced the district’s decision to have all grades start the year with a hyb...

  • Story behind the place: Hagen Field

    Jack Carlough|Jul 29, 2020

    In last week's edition of the Left Hand Valley Courier, we covered the story behind Niwot's Ritz Field, named after Colorado Rockies pitcher Kevin Ritz. We now turn our attention towards its neighbor, Hagen Field, named after the late Greg Hagen. Hagen was a parent volunteer for Niwot Youth Sports. When NYS lost the use of borrowed fields in Niwot at 83rd and Neva Road, Hagen helped erect the backstops at three new fields on Left Hand Water District property off Nimbus Road. When Hagen died...

  • Community Pet Spotlight (Barley, July 29)

    Jul 29, 2020

    Meet Barley. This sweet and smart seven-year-old boy is looking for his perfect match. Barley is a bright and mature fellow who has excellent obedience skills that include excellent leash manners as well as the ability to sit down and "place" on cue. Barley loves his treats and will get very wiggly when he is especially excited about them. Barley is looking for a home where he can be the only beloved pet and would appreciate a family with high school age or older children, please. If Barley...

  • Niwot Children's Park clean-up

    Jul 29, 2020

    The Niwot Children's Park was "sparkly clean", and ready for fun, after an early morning clean- up by volunteers on Monday, July 27. Led by Elizabeth Wright, they were done and gone by 8:45 a.m. To help with the next park clean-up day on August 31st at 8:00 a.m., contact Elizabeth Wright at [email protected]....

  • A confusion of summer squash problems

    Carol OMeara, Colorado State University Extension Boulder County|Jul 29, 2020

    Despite my best laid plans, each year the garden brings its own ideas to what will, or won't, be a success. I love the touch of chaos and curve balls it throws my way. But every year there was always one thing that I could depend on, and that's a plethora of squash. Winter keepers and summer sautés, patty pans and pumpkins, the rambling vines have always been eager to produce. There was the Year of 27 Spaghetti Squashes, the Great Zucchini Inundation of 2007, and we won't forget the Bodacious Bo...

  • Gunbarrel Community Alliance group formed

    Jesse Murphy|Jul 29, 2020

    A new group has formed in Gunbarrel to go along with the decades-long conflicts between the City of Boulder and the inhabitants of the unincorporated areas to the north of the city itself. The Gunbarrel Community Alliance (GCA) started the process to become a non-profit organization earlier this year after some homeowners received a flyer notifying them about a proposed development on land that they believed was designated to be open space and a preserve for prairie dogs in 1999. The concept proposal, which at this point is only out for public...

  • Running for Office

    Kate Missett|Jul 29, 2020

    I'm a very political animal. The first thing I remember watching on TV was the 1952 Republican Convention, when I was three. My parents had just bought a new-fangled television set and anything and everything was exotic and watchable. And we probably only got one channel! You can ask my Facebook friends and they will assure you that I seem to live and breathe politics. And, I put my money where my mouth is, because, fortunately, I have a healthy enough bank account that I can afford to give...

  • Rock & Rails concert series cancelled

    Special to the Courier|Jul 29, 2020

    Organizers of Niwot's award-winning summer concert series, Rock & Rails, pulled the plug on the 2020 season after holding out hope that gathering restrictions would be relaxed. "We took it month by month," Niwot Cultural Arts Association (NCAA) president Biff Warren said. "We held out hope that restrictions would ease up as the number of COVID-19 cases declined in Boulder County, but after an early decrease, the rate of positive tests began to increase, especially after the Memorial Day...

  • Neowise over the Rockies

    Jul 29, 2020

    Gunbarrel Estates photographer Tim Benko captured Comet Neowise from the top of Rocky Mountain National Park on Trail Ridge Road Thursday, July 24. Discovered on March 24, Neowise, or C/2020 F3, stands for near-Earth Object Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer. With an orbital period of 6,766 years, this was a once in a lifetime photograph....

  • Race to benefit St. Vrain special needs students goes virtual

    Jocelyn Rowley|Jul 29, 2020

    The annual Sunrise Stampede 10K run-walk has served as the unofficial kick-off to the new school year in St. Vrain Valley for more than three decades, and brings together hundreds of runners, volunteers, and vendors for some exercise, camaraderie, and family-friendly competition in the waning days of summer. It also has raised more than $250,000 for special needs students in the district, so when the COVID-19 pandemic threatened to cancel the 2020 edition, organizers quickly shifted to a format...

  • 'Our journey together has had its highs and lows, but has also been a sweet dream'

    Jocelyn Rowley|Jul 29, 2020

    There wasn't anything normal about the way high school ended for the Niwot Class of 2020, but the belated graduation ceremony held on Saturday, July 25 was a lovely approximation of it. Perfect weather and a celebratory mood were the order of the day as more than 250 graduates finally crossed the stage to mark the official end of their high school journeys. Still, the ongoing health crisis loomed large over the proceedings, mostly in mundane practicalities such as social distancing and mask requ...

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