Posts Tagged ‘tips’

Steamboat Gets 10 Inches Of Snow Plus Snowmaking Has Begun

Monday, November 10th, 2008


CHAMPAGNE POWDERTM SNOW ALERT!
Mother Nature tallied her own election night results Tuesday & Wednesday nights blanketing the Yampa Valley with 10 inches of snow at mid-mountain from our first storm of the season–and it’s still snowing! Cold temperatures and low humidity in the air created the perfect recipe for Steamboat’s snowmaking crews to fire up the guns and begin laying the foundation for this season’s base.

Last season was one for the record books with more than 40 feet of Champagne PowderTM snow. With airfares dropping as fast as temperatures, don’t miss out on what is shaping up to be a fantastic season by taking advantage of the great values and special deals at Steamboat-Ski Town, U.S.A.®

In less than 17 days, Steamboat is scheduled to open Wednesday, November 26th with its traditional opening day benefit, Scholarship Day.

Ripple Creek Lodge – For Sale Asking Price $1,100,000.00

Tuesday, October 21st, 2008

The lodge is surrounded by eight modernized rustic, but comfortable, log cabins. All are complete with furnished kitchens, bathrooms with showers and free standing fireplaces. Propane is used for lighting, cooking and heating. We have a large generator for occasional early and late use and other necessities. We serve great meals at the lodge but it’s your choice to eat with us or do your own cooking.

rIPPLE cREEK lODGE

Well, this is where it all happens! With mountains rising above 12,000’, covered with evergreens, aspen and lush open parks, the White River Area is considered as the most beautiful as well as the best of all hunting. We have twice as many elk as any other area in Colorado, and Colorado has more elk than any other state or country in the world.

The White River National Forest is one of the largest national forests in America with hundreds of miles of trails for horseback riding, hiking, fishing and hunting. We truly have it all.

Several years ago I bought Ripple Creek. It is deep in the heart of the White River National Forest of Northwest Colorado, adjacent to the famous Flat Tops Wilderness. It is 40 miles east of Meeker and 200 miles west of Denver. For hunters, it is in Area 24.

cABIN 3Cabin 3Flat Tops

All cabins, large or small, rent at the same price. It is $70. for the first person and $10. for each additional person, per night. Four cabins have one bedroom with a double bed and a set of bunk beds, one cabin, the “honeymoom suite” is two story with a queen sized bed upstairs and a full balcony, the other three cabins have two bedrooms, one with a double bed and the other with two sets of bunkbeds. Reservations are made firm with cash, Visa, MasterCard or guaranteed check for the first nights lodging. Cancellations are honored 15 days or more in advance of reservations.

Meals are $7. for breakfast, $7. for lunch and $20. for dinner. This is family-style meals, eat as much as you please and it is good food. It includes coffee, tea, milk, lemonade and dessert.

Recreation includes horseback riding, hiking, photography, nature study, fishing and hunting. Wild flowers blanket the mountain sides and early risers will have the opportunity to see deer and elk along with many species of birds and smaller animals. In all ways, this forest is beautiful, bountiful and productive.

You can do as much or as little as you please in an unregimented form of vacation. It’s here for you and I hope you will join us.

Yours for a great outdoors experience.

Ripple Creek Lodge

For Sale Asking Price $1,100,000.00

Spectacular location in the White River National Forest. Several improvements include lodge, 8 cabins, cold storage, laundry house, tool house, corrals,generator house, tack/feed shed. Great opportunity to build on a well established hunting/fishing business or a personal retreat for the outdoors man lookingfor solitude. Ripple Creek runs directly in front of the Lodge. There is no real estate for sale. The sale is business and improvements only. Buyer must apply for a special use permit with the White River National Forest Service.

Friday, September 19th, 2008

Barriers to Net-Zero Energy Housing

Existing houses can be retrofitted so they will produce as much energy as they use every year — the technology is available and doing the work would save owners thousands of dollars in energy bills. But most homeowners won’t bother because there are too many barriers in place, a report by Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. (CMHC) concludes.

The CMHC report, Approaching Net Zero Energy in Existing Housing, says that current energy-efficiency programs aim for overall energy reductions of 20 to 30 per cent, but that in order to achieve a net-zero retrofit, energy use would have to be reduced by 70 to 90 per cent in existing homes.

Among the methods that can be used to reduce energy consumption:

  • create a high-performance building envelope using insulation and air barriers and high-performance doors and windows;
  • use energy-efficient appliances and lighting;
  • use high-efficiency mechanical systems;
  • use passive-solar cooling and heating techniques;
  • use solar thermal systems and heat pumps;
  • offset electrical use with grid-connected photovoltaic (PV) systems.

Last week in Toronto, a demonstration home called the Now House was unveiled to the public. It’s one of 12 demonstration homes in CMHC’s EQuilibrium project, and the only one that is aiming for a net-zero renovation.

It’s a 60-year-old “wartime” house with 1.5 storeys and 1,200 square feet of living space, located in a subdivision of about 200 similar homes. It’s estimated that there are about one million houses in Canada with similar footprints and structure, according to the Now House team. It says if the Now House retrofit design was implemented at a national level, “We could achieve an annual green house gas reduction between 5.4 million and 26.3 million tons, contributing up to 14 per cent of Canada’s Kyoto Protocol emissions-reduction targets.”

The team says if the program was implemented in the U.S., “nearly 4.5 million homes built in the wartime period and up to 70 million single detached homes would benefit, accomplishing an annual reduction of 423 million tons of greenhouse gas emissions. This would equal a seven per cent reduction of the total greenhouse gas emissions produced in the U.S. annually.”

To retrofit the Now House, insulation was upgraded on the flat and sloped roof, exterior walls and basement. A south-facing window was enlarged with high-performance glass. A solar PV system was installed. New appliances and lighting were added, and ultra low-flow showerheads and faucets were installed, along with a grey water heat recovery system.

The CMHC research simulated what would have to be done to retrofit houses of various ages and style across the country to net-zero. “As could be expected, there were differences between climatic regions that influenced the challenge,” says the report. “The region where retrofits were most likely to come close to net-zero energy, mainly through building envelope improvements, was Vancouver.”

Comparing two bungalows built in 1969 – one in Vancouver and one in Whitehorse – the study found that with improvements to the building envelope and a rooftop PV system, the Vancouver house was able to reach net-zero. But the Whitehorse home still fell far short with the same improvements, and the only way to achieve net-zero would be to install a high-efficiency, ground-source heat pump. This would be unlikely to happen because of the cost.

Houses that have larger roof areas, and are thus able to accommodate more PV panels, have an advantage when attempting to reach net-zero energy. The easiest house retrofit is a bungalow, because it’s the most straightforward when upgrading the insulation and air sealing.

“Barriers to actually getting to net-zero energy in existing homes include the challenge of coordinating the timing of a retrofit,” says the report. “Making a project cost-effective depends on some planning – for example, if the siding is to be replaced on a home, that is the time to insulate the exterior and upgrade windows. Mechanical equipment is usually replaced under emergency situations, so a change-out to a higher-efficiency, smaller output unit that coordinates with an envelope upgrade requires a clear plan and timely financing.

Other barriers are the logistics of finding contractors willing and able to do the work required.” But the biggest barrier of all is financial. The report says, “Energy conservation retrofits in the $30,000 to $50,000 range were cost effective when refinancing a mortgage. In many cases, the monthly energy savings outweighed the incremental increase in a mortgage payment. However, a full net-zero retrofit would cost more than this.”

While Canadians have shown they are not shy about spending money on renovations that include flashy kitchens and materials, the report says, “Recent studies show comfort and esthetic benefits far outweigh energy concerns, and very few homeowners assess the economic benefits of their investments by monitoring energy bills or calculating payback times.”

The report concludes that because PV systems are expensive and have long payback periods for small systems, “Unless there are reasonable incentives to purchase and operate these systems (tax rebates, purchase incentives, ‘green power’ premiums for grid-connected systems), most homeowners will not opt to retrofit their house to a net-zero energy home.”

by Jim Adair                               Published: September 16, 2008