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Tag: city park

  • Things to do in Denver: ‘Santa’s Big Red Sack,’ Magical Winter Nights and more holiday fun

    “Santa’s Big Red Sack”

    Thursday-Dec. 24. ‘Tis the final season for the 23-year-old theatrical tradition known as “Santa’s Big Red Sack,” which is returning with “nonstop sketch comedy, music and technology bursting at the seams,” according to its creators. It’s celebrating its last year of offensive glee, so buy a shot and make sure to leave your propriety at the door. (Note: This bawdy production is not, as you may have guessed, for kids.)

    It takes place at various times and dates from Dec. 4 to Dec. 24 at The People’s Building, 9995 E. Colfax Ave. in Aurora. Tickets are $39.10 via thepeoplesbuilding.com/tickets.

    (Provided by Denver Museum of Nature & Science)

    Magical Winter Nights

    Through Jan 4. When it comes to holiday light displays in City Park, Denver Zoo Lights tends to have it covered. But don’t count out the Denver Museum of Nature & Science, also located in City Park. The institution this year has launched Magical Winter Nights, its very own holiday celebration running through Jan. 4, 2026. The “dazzling winter wonderland” has “glowing savannah skies, shimmering northern lights and cozy cocoa (to) create memories that will last a lifetime,” according to the museum.

    “This experience takes you on a journey through select areas of the museum, specifically the West Atrium and third-floor diorama halls,” organizers added. “These spaces have been transformed into a series of enchanting winter worlds just waiting to be explored. Under sparkling stars and through a series of immersive scenes, there’s something for everyone in this adventure designed to delight all ages.”

    The first entry is 4:15 p.m. daily, with 21-and-up nights on Dec. 4, 11 and 18. Tickets are $25 for adults, $20 for ages 3-18, and $22 for seniors. 2001 Colorado Blvd. in Denver. Call 303-370-6000 or visit dmns.org for more.

    The "Moonlight Elves" holiday show blends family-friendly variety acts such as aerial dancers, magicians and more. (Provided by Starry Night Productions)
    The “Moonlight Elves” holiday show blends family-friendly variety acts such as aerial dancers, magicians and more. (Provided by Starry Night Productions)

    Fly, Moonlight Elves!

    Through Dec. 7. Denver’s always-curious (in a good way) Starry Night Productions and Theatre Artibus this year are debuting “Moonlight Elves,” which they dub “a circus-immersive holiday extravaganza,” playing Nov. 26-30 and Dec. 3-7 at Savoy Denver.

    John Wenzel

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  • Denver-area dentists are upselling invasive cleanings, PDS Health patients allege

    When a dentist at Lakewood Modern Dentistry told Hailey Hernandez she needed a deep cleaning, a root canal and a crown to treat extensive gum disease and other problems, alarm bells went off in her head.

    “I knew that I was taking care of my teeth and there’s no way I have gum disease,” she said.

    Her old dentist in Arizona said she was right when she went back for a second opinion, the Golden resident said. Her suspicions rose further when two friends told her they also received gum disease diagnoses from Lakewood Modern Dentistry and were told they’d need deep cleanings, root canals and crowns.

    “There’s no way,” she said. “It just does not sound right at all.”

    One of those friends, Avery Huffer, said she, too, had been surprised to hear she needed such extensive treatment, but went forward with it. When she returned about a year later, the Englewood resident learned she’d need deep cleanings every three months, plus more root canals and crowns — on teeth that weren’t the ones giving her pain.

    Huffer said she decided not to undergo the additional treatment after speaking with coworkers who were told they needed the same procedure.

    “Is that just their baseline diagnosis?” Huffer said she wondered.

    Lakewood Modern Dentistry is one of more than 50 offices in the Denver area affiliated with PDS Health, a Nevada-based practice-management company working with dentists in 16 states. While each practice has independent ownership, they have nearly identical websites, with the same broad-smiling woman on the home page and the same pitch for financing up to $75,000 in dental work, subject to credit approval.

    The majority of the practices also share a perception among some former patients that dentists and staff exaggerated their oral health problems and recommended unnecessarily invasive treatments. Of the 53 affiliated practices in the Denver area, 40 had online reviews in the last three years alleging their dentists had told patients they needed extensive work, such as deep cleanings or root canals, when they believed a less-invasive alternative would suffice.

    The Denver Post spoke to six patients, including Hernandez and Huffer, who said PDS-affiliated practices pushed them to pay out-of-pocket for deep cleanings and other invasive work they believe they didn’t need. The five who sought second opinions said they were told their mouths were largely healthy.

    While the patients who spoke to The Post believed their dentists were upselling them to make more money, the lack of standardization in dentistry creates challenges in trying to parse why two providers might have dramatically different recommendations, experts said.

    With no clear professional standards and limited pushback from insurers on unnecessary procedures, patients are largely on their own to sort out if a practice is upselling them, said Beth Mertz, a professor at the University of California, San Francisco’s School of Dentistry. They should get a second opinion if a diagnosis and treatment plan seem off, she said.

    “Dentistry is still the Wild West,” she said. “The whole system is not set up to serve the public particularly well.”

    PDS Health spokeswoman Ellen Driscoll said the company provides non-clinical support services to independent dental offices, whose owners make treatment decisions based on their patients’ needs. Dentists have a long-standing debate about how best to treat gum disease, which is common and underdiagnosed, she said.

    Lakewood Modern Dentistry said it uses advanced technology to detect gum disease early, catching problems other dentists might miss.

    “Periodontal disease is both widespread and often missed in its early stages,” the practice said in a statement. “Our team follows national clinical standards and is committed to preventive care.”

    Dentists can have good-faith differences of opinion about how aggressively they should manage common conditions such as gum disease, which can cause inflammation that leads to other health problems, said Dr. Brett Kessler, former president of the American Dental Association. Patients need to find a provider whose views are a match for theirs, he said.

    “How the patient is treated depends on the patient’s goals and the provider’s philosophy, and how they weigh together,” he said.

    Differences in philosophy and training explain some of the gap in what dentists recommend, but the profit motive is a factor, too, Mertz said. “Secret shopper” studies have shown dentists give radically different recommendations if a person’s dress and demeanor signal they can afford expensive care, she said.

    “Because dental insurance pays more based on what you do, providers are incentivized to do more,” she said.

    Pricey deep-gum cleaning

    Most dental insurance covers two routine cleanings each year, though plans vary in how much they contribute toward deep cleaning and other treatment.

    Michael Gitomer, of Denver, said the finance person at Edgewater Modern Dentistry and Orthodontics told him he would have to pay $1,000 to $1,500 out-of-pocket for deep cleaning and a crown.

    Deep-gum cleaning, also known as scaling and root planing, involves removing plaque beneath the gum line in the same way that dental hygienists scrape it off the visible part of the tooth during a routine cleaning. In some cases, dentists also give antibiotics to help root out bacteria that cause gum disease.

    Gitomer had expected only a $30 co-pay that day, so he asked for a routine cleaning while he considered his options.

    “They were refusing to give me a regular cleaning unless I paid for all these other things,” he said, though they relented after he “gave them a pretty hard time about it.”

    His previous dentist didn’t see any need for invasive work, but recommended flossing more often.

    Edgewater Modern Dentistry said it strives to earn patients’ trust through “clear communication and honest assessments.”

    “Periodontal disease often advances without pain, which is why we focus on early identification and informed care. Our clinicians are here to listen, explain, and help patients make confident decisions about their oral health,” the practice said in a statement.

    Duke Harten, of Denver, said he had a similar experience at City Park Dental Group and Orthodontics: The dentist told him he had serious gum disease and needed deep cleanings every three months, which his insurance wouldn’t cover. He was suspicious because his previous dentist never identified any problems, and he looked up the office’s reviews, which seemed to suggest a pattern.

    A dentist he saw for a second opinion said his gums were healthy, Harten said, and even his records at City Park Dental seemed to contradict the idea that he needed extensive care, saying he had “good oral hygiene” and “no problems noted.”

    City Park Dental said in a statement that it is committed to clear communication with patients and adheres to best practices for treatment.

    “When it comes to conditions like periodontal disease, timing and technology can affect what a provider sees, and how they choose to respond. While care approaches may vary between dentists, our goal is always the same: to help patients stay ahead of disease and maintain their long-term health,” the practice’s statement said.

    ‘They said I needed all this work’

    Samantha Nuyen, of Denver, said Highlands Dentists didn’t identify any problems with her mouth on her first two visits, but told her she had multiple cracked teeth on the third. The dentist she saw for a second opinion didn’t find any cracks or other major concerns, she said.

    When she told her provider at Highlands Dentists about the second opinion, they didn’t offer any explanation for the discrepancy or defend their recommendation, Nuyen said.

    “They said I needed all this work that I didn’t need,” she said.

    Highlands Dentists said oral health is deeply connected to the rest of the body’s well-being and it is treated early to prevent bigger problems.

    Meg Wingerter

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  • Man killed by Fort Collins police in cemetery shooting suspected in cold-case homicide

    Man killed by Fort Collins police in cemetery shooting suspected in cold-case homicide

    A 42-year-old man fatally shot by Fort Collins police during an armed confrontation at Grandview Cemetery in July was a suspect in a 2019 cold-case homicide, police officials said Friday.

    Clayton Pierce was shot by Fort Collins police on July 21 after he crashed his vehicle near City Park and fled the scene armed with an “AR-style” rifle and handgun, according to a decision letter published by the 8th Judicial District Attorney’s Office on Friday.

    Pierce was involved in a single-vehicle rollover crash and left the scene armed with two “ghost guns,” or guns without serial numbers, which are illegal to own, sell or create.

    Pierce was also carrying a bottle of bourbon with the words “His last day” written on it, according to the district attorney’s letter.

    He pointed the rifle at responding police officers and shot one officer in the arm, according to the agency. He then walked into Grandview Cemetery, where he was fatally shot by police.

    Pierce had twice the legal driving limit of alcohol as well as methamphetamine, THC and gabapentin in his system at the time of his death, according to the letter.

    Katie Langford

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  • A flotilla of kayaks plans to enjoy City Park Jazz from a new perspective

    A flotilla of kayaks plans to enjoy City Park Jazz from a new perspective

    There’s an animal menacing City Park, and it’s not an irate goose.

    The giant swan boats, which are popular rentals for paddling around the 25-acre Ferril Lake, pose a threat to the otherwise peaceful Jazz in the Park series, jokes 30-year-old Lakewood resident Emerson Smith. They’re too big, scary-looking, and attention-hungry to ignore.

    “Systems calibrated. Pool noodles firing at 800 m/s,” reads a July 10 post on Emerson’s Denver Jazz Flotilla Instagram page. “We’re ready to protect the citizens.”

    “The whole flotilla thing is just my sense of humor,” admitted Emerson. “It’s fun to act tough while on a purple kayak listening to jazz. And let’s be real: not all jazz is created equal, and sometimes we need something else to entertain ourselves with.”

    The concept is a goof, but the gatherings are real. Attendees of City Park Jazz, which takes place on Sunday afternoons over 10 weeks every summer, may have noticed kayaks floating behind the City Park Pavilion stage last summer, when Emerson first got the idea. He invited more friends to join him this year and secured their commitment to doing it as often as possible. Last week he had 10 people join him, he said.

    Wheel Fun Rentals operates a flock of swan boats at City Park and Washington Park (seen here). (Eric Heiserman for Wheel Fun Rentals)

    “Their enthusiasm made me want to see how big we could make it,” said Emerson, who picked up 50 followers on a Reddit post — most of whom he doesn’t know.

    Emerson has not heard any concerns about his semi-organized gatherings from Denver Parks & Recreation, including limits on the number of watercraft on the lake. Hand-launched boats are allowed at nearly all Denver park lakes, no permits required, according to their website.

    “A sound-producing device and at least one life jacket per person aboard is required to be on all vessels,” officials wrote.

    “(The) only research I did was just to confirm personal kayaks and stuff are actually allowed on that lake,” Emerson said. “I asked ChatGPT and apparently we could fit about 11,000 12-foot kayaks comfortably on Ferril Lake. So that’s the goal.”

    It’s not all a joke: on his Instagram bio, Emerson not only mentions defending people from giant swans but adds “Sometimes we pick up trash.” The next meet-up is on Aug. 4, and gloves, trash bags, and “two extra grabby thingys will be provided (first come first serve),” Emerson wrote online. Most of the trash is caught up in plants and is hard to reach while floating, so he plans on walking the shoreline a bit too.

    Swan-boat and bike rentals are available at the park from California-based company Wheel Fun Rentals, which sits just a few dozen feet from the jazz bandstand. People can also rent kayaks from Wheel Fun to confront the company’s own swan-boat army, along with sporty and cruiser bikes, four-wheel Surrey cycles, canoes, and stand-up paddleboards. They offer nighttime rentals with LED-decked swan boats that can circle the lake’s giant, lit-up fountain.

    Emerson gathers his own fleet in the southeast corner of the 330-acre park starting at 5:30 p.m. on Sundays. He recommends people who want to join him to meet up behind the stage if the show has already started. There’s no boat ramp, but most of the shore is accessible. And despite the lake’s natural beauty, be sure not to get any water in your mouth, he said.

    “Like in most bodies of water there are some potentially harmful organisms,” he said. “As far as I understand this presents a relatively low risk but it’s best to avoid contact with the water, especially with your eyes, nose, mouth, open wounds, et cetera, and practice good hygiene.”

    The cheeky front will continue even as Emerson works to grow the gatherings. The giant, evil swans are just too big a menace to ignore.

    “They threaten to collide with the birds nests under the stage and they scare the native swans,” he said. “In general, they’re just a bad vibe and aren’t happy unless they’re stealing the show with their synchronized dance moves.”

    Performances of the free, nonprofit Jazz in the Park series, which began in June, continue through next month with Denver Jazz Orchestra (July 21), Nelson Rangell (July 28), and Jakarta (Aug. 4). See cityparkjazz.org for more.

    John Wenzel

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  • West entrances, roads closed in Denver’s City Park for repaving

    West entrances, roads closed in Denver’s City Park for repaving

    West entrances and roads in Denver’s City Park are closed this week for repaving, city officials said in a news release Monday.

    Katie Langford

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  • City Park Day celebrates the ‘People’s Park’

    City Park Day celebrates the ‘People’s Park’

    If you ask Georgia Garnsey where her favorite place is in Denver, with no hesitation, she’d say City Park.

    Of course, she’s not alone. City Park isn’t dubbed the “People’s Park” for no reason.

    On Friday, May 31, you can join Garnsey and the neighborhood in honoring the 142-year-old treasure. City Park Day will celebrate the park and the community with a free evening event featuring music, a sweet treat and some Victorian-era fair.

    “City Park is a wonder,” Garnsey said. “Every year I learn more and more about the park and it continues to open its wonders to me.”

    But why is the park so important in the fabric of Denver’s history?

    It all started in 1882, Garnsey said.

    (By the way, her City Park fan credentials: She’s lived a few blocks from the park for over 50 years and is the president of the neighborhood group, City Park Friends and Neighbors.).

    Nearly 25 years after Denver was founded, and as immigrants began to settle in the dry, dusted desert area permanently, city leaders said some beautification was needed.

    Georgia Garnsey, part of the In The Weeds adopt-a-flowerbed crew, eradicates unwanted species from Ida’s Rock Garden in City Park. May 24, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    “These people who had founded a city that was just sort of a way station for prospectors had fallen in love with their city and decided it was gonna be the Paris of the West and that it had to have a park,” Garnsey said.

    City leaders were also inspired by the ideas of Frederick Law Olmsted, a landscape architect and designer of New York’s Central Park, who believed that parks and greenspaces were a democratic right for all Americans. Parks should be free, accessible to all and used as a space for connection.

    So, Denver’s first park, Curtis Park, was built in 1868, establishing Denver’s parkway system.

    City Park Lake, October 29, 2021.
    Kyle Harris/Denverite

    But leaders wanted something bigger

    Richard Sopris, Denver’s 15th mayor and its first parks commissioner, and other civic leaders tossed around the idea of creating two large parks on the east and west sides of Denver connected by a “connected by a grand tree-lined boulevard,” according to History Colorado.

    As originally planned, that boulevard would’ve been Colfax Avenue and the parks would’ve been City Park in the east and Sloan’s Lake in the west.

    But when City Council approved the purchase of the 320-acre plot that would become City Park in 1882, they also nixed the development of the westside park.

    The In The Weeds adopt-a-flowerbed crew eradicates unwanted species from Ida’s Rock Garden in City Park. May 24, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Henry Meryweather and Walter Graves designed after Central Park, with “looping carriageways and walking lanes, a lake, and a preference for picturesque vistas across meadows or water,” according to History Colorado.

    “They wanted it to be pastoral, meadow-like for people to feel they were lost in the country,” Garnsey said. “City Park was the first park that the city invested in and decided that they had to have this … The whole city got behind developing this park. Schoolchildren would [eventually] take the trolleys at 17th and York and plant trees on Arbor Day. There were terrible weeds, so Sopris hired a sheep herder to come and let his sheep eat the weeds. It was quite a project and they loved it”

    From there, City Park has only improved

    Reinhard Schuetze, the city’s first landscape architect, was especially a help.

    Ferril Lake — along with the promenade, pavilion and bandstand — was built in the late 1890s.

    The prismatic electric fountain, one of the country’s first electric fountains, was installed nearby to flow in tune with the local bands.

    Schuetze also designed the Esplanade, creating a pathway from the city to the park.

    Cultural institutions also arrived. The Denver Zoo, the Denver Museum of Nature & Science (previously the Colorado Museum of Natural History) and the Denver Botanic Gardens were built in 1896, 1908 and 1953, respectively.

    Armenian poppies in Ida’s City Park Rock Garden.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
    Leslie Chomic eradicates unwanted species from the Rock Garden.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    In recent years, the park has received a new playground and expansions to all the cultural institutions. (Still no basketball courts, though.)

    “I love the diversity. I love that you meet people from all walks of life and you really meet them because people stop and talk,” Garnsey said. “I love how big it is. People have complained about that, that they get lost in the park. But I love that it’s a big meadow with different groves and different sections and different flower beds and nooks and crannies that you discover.”

    Hence, City Park Day

    Garnsey said the nearby neighborhood groups are reviving a tradition started by former Councilmember Carla Madison. She used to host ice cream socials and was founder of the City Park Festival of the Arts.

    City Park Day is Friday, May 31, from 5-8 p.m. at the Pavilion. Free ice cream will be served by Sweet Cooie’s and live music by the Denver Municipal Band.

    Sunset over Ferril Lake in City Park. Sept. 25, 2020.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Face painters will be on-site for the kids, as well as exhibits from the museum and the zoo. And a ton of neighborhood groups will host informational tables for folks interested in learning more about the nearby communities, Garnsey said.

    But the real fun will be with the Victorian Society of Colorado. A few of their participants will be roaming around in full Victorian-era garb, and they’ll want you to join in on the fun.

    “It’ll be the height of Victorian fashion,” Garnsey said.

    Canada geese float on Ferril Lake at City Park before dawn, July 1, 2019. (Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite)

    More than just history

    While the park’s history is important, Garnsey said the day is more about celebrating the park itself and what it means, or could mean, to Denverites.

    City Park is a community waiting to be explored and joined, from the weddings to quinceaneras, the random eagle sightings to the musicians who show up to play,

    City Park Friends hosts tours of the park, Garnsey said, as well as volunteering opportunities to keep the park amazing, such as the adopt-a-flowerbed.

    But really, just head to the park and take in the views. Those are free, and made for just that.

    “It’s the Crown Jewel, truly,” Garnsey said. “We see something different every time we’re in City Park. We’re always entertained. But the democratic value of parks is what’s most important to me. That it’s free and everyone is welcome there to be who they are and to experience it the way they want to.”

    The In The Weeds adopt-a-flowerbed crew in Ida’s City Park Rock Garden. May 24, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

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  • City Park Jazz returns! Here’s the full lineup for 2024 | Denverite

    City Park Jazz returns! Here’s the full lineup for 2024 | Denverite

    Jazz at City Park, June 5, 2016.

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite)

    Summer at City Park means it’s time to scat along to the sounds of smooth jazz on the green lawns of Denver’s largest municipal park (you can also check out some very cute doggos).

    City Park Jazz is returning for its 38th annual summer series, with the first performance scheduled for June 2.

    The season will span 10 Sunday evenings from 6-8 p.m. at the City Park Pavilion.

    “In our continuing tradition of exploring the incredible diversity of jazz as an art form, we’ve put together a great lineup for 2024,” said Andy Bercaw, president of the City Park Jazz Board of Directors. “We’ve got everything from soul to big band to blues to Latin and more.”

    The free, family-friendly event brings a festival atmosphere to the park, featuring select vendors and 24 food truck options.

    Drawing a crowd of thousands every Sunday, the City Park tradition has carried on since it began in 1986.

    This year’s lineup will feature some of Denver’s beloved performers, including Hazel Miller, Stafford Hunter and Nelson Rangell.

    The Denver Jazz Orchestra will play June 21 in a special tribute to Bob Nelson and Tom Quinn, two of City Park Jazz’s founding Board members, and Denver piano legend Neil Bridge who died in 2023.

    The volunteer-led event is always looking for helping hands to aid in setting up, taking down, assisting in parking, answering questions and more. Volunteers receive a CPJ volunteer t-shirt and a food truck voucher for a free meal that week.

    Here’s the full 2024 City Park Jazz series lineup:

    June 2

    Roka Hueka

    June 9

    Stafford Hunter & Jazz Explorations

    June 16 

    Mistura Fina

    June 23 

    ZiMBiRA

    June 30 

    Hazel Miller and the Collective

    July 7 

    JoFoKe & Same Cloth

    July 14

    Delta Sonics Blues Revue

    July 21

    Denver Jazz Orchestra

    July 28

    Nelson Rangell

    Aug. 4

    Jakarta

    Click here for more info on each performing act.

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