Emily Ratajkowski's Red-Hot Cheeky Bikini Just Cured Our Winter Blues Emily Ratajkowski is beating the January blues with a red-hot bikini moment. On Sunday, January 19, the model showed she’s not letting winter weather get in the way of donning a barely-there swimsuit ... 01/20/2025 - 6:58 am | View Link
Five ELLE Editors' Tips For Beating The Winter Blues Here are the game-changing tools and tricks ELLE UK Editors use to manage those pesky winter blues... I have never been athletic. In school, my chosen sport was ‘chess club’ (code for spending the ... 01/20/2025 - 3:35 am | View Link
Millions across the US brace for plummeting temperatures and winter storms Residents across the country from the Northern Plains to the tip of Maine are bracing for dangerously low temperatures as residents along the East Coast contend with a thick blanket of snow — and more ... 01/19/2025 - 9:31 pm | View Link
Over 75% of the US expected to face freezing temperatures this week as rare winter storm barrels toward the South Most of the United States is being assailed with extreme winter weather this week as Arctic air blasts south from Canada, snow tracks up the Northeast coast and a potentially crippling winter storm ... 01/19/2025 - 9:03 am | View Link
Significant Winter Storm Moves Into the Mid-Atlantic and the Northeast Snow was falling in the Mid-Atlantic and New York City on Sunday. The coldest air in several years will descend across much of the country starting Monday, forecasters said. 01/19/2025 - 2:57 am | View Link
If the Telluride Bluegrass Festival has been on your bucket list, there’s still time to cross it off in 2025.
Zach Tucker, vice president of the fest’s production company Planet Bluegrass, tells The Denver Post there are “a fair amount” of tickets still available for this year’s event at shop.bluegrass.com. That includes passes to two campgrounds outside of downtown Telluride.
The fest (June 19-22) is one of the town’s most popular summer gatherings, welcoming about 12,000 people per day to enjoy live music in the scenic box canyon.
Each month in Colorado, and every season, offers a chance to experience something that is definitively of this place. Sometimes this means a local festival or annual event, but often it’s just planning to take advantage of the season and be wowed.
Here’s an adventure agenda for you — with a few suggested alternates and fun add-ons:
January: Ice climbing in Ouray
There’s no better place to fully embrace winter than in Ouray, especially during the annual Ouray Ice Festival.
By Akiya Dillon, Las Vegas Review-Journal (TNS)
LAS VEGAS — Some budget airlines charge extra fees when you book a flight online. However, when you book in person, these charges are waived.
So, if you want to save money, go to the airline’s ticket counter at the airport and speak with an associate who can waive these fees when you book your trip in person.
If you can pull yourself away from skiing or snowboarding, consider taking a few hours to visit a museum on your next ski adventure to restore your body and fuel your mind.
Colorado is home to 28 ski areas and resorts, each with a fascinating backstory.
These places have a rich history, from being the homelands and hunting grounds of the Ute, Arapahoe, and Cheyenne Native American Tribal Nations to the influx of silver and gold miners to the settlement of homesteading ranchers and cowboys and the development of ski areas by post-war veterans of the 10th Mountain Division soldiers of World War II.
Organizers campaigning to unionize ski patrollers are touting their momentum following the settlement of a strike at Utah’s Park City Mountain Resort and a vote last week in favor of forming a union at Arapahoe Basin.
A-Basin patrollers voted to become part of the CWA 7781 United Mountain Workers, which will negotiate a contract with Denver-based Alterra Mountain Company and A-Basin officials.
Despite evacuations of a gondola at Winter Park and a lift at Telluride last month, along with several recent incidents of people falling from chairlifts, accidents related to mechanical failures are exceedingly rare, according to the state agency that regulates and inspects ski resort lifts.
More than 180 people were evacuated from the Winter Park gondola on Dec.