yoga denver – Latest yoga denver news – Yoga practitioners should get out their hymnals and Vedas | yoga …
I hope you’ve been enjoying my posts lately. I thought I might do something different today and rustle up a few bits of info from around the WWW. These are some of the news items and blog posts that have been popular over the last few weeks. Leave me your thoughts.
Yoga practitioners should get out their hymnals and Vedas | yoga …
According to Bresee Sullivan, the analysis is more complicated, with yoga's teachings allowing for either secular or religious observances. As Sullivan, a 24-year-old married Denver mother, celebrates two milestones this month …
Photo: Pant Warmer, Kitty Yoga
Better than a water bottle.
Real Vail | Boyd’s Blog | Denver’s Yoga Rocks the Park concert …
Denver's Yoga Rocks the Park concert series will feature yoga and live music at Denver's City Park, Congress Park, and Washington Park. The series is one more highlight of the ties between Vail, Denver and the Front Range.
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Organizing home office spaces can be highly rewarding. Although a majority of homes nowadays keep electronic data, there are still some areas that require paper filing. A desk to work with and other items to aid in the paperwork are also a common find. Keeping this in good shape can make every task you have when dealing with paperwork all the more efficient.
To be able to begin organizing, you can opt to begin with the table in the office. If you do not have a table which is featured with drawers and shelves, you can still make things easy for you. With the use of desk top compartment organizers, you are able to organize items from paper clips to letter envelopes. By keeping your office supplies in order, every task you need to complete will be a breeze.
A good key to organizing home offices is to keep a place for everything. Office supplies near the table, documents such as bills and other files inside boxes. Be sure to keep folders together and to label each one accordingly. Envelopes and boxes should also be labeled so that you would not need to fumble through each one when you are searching for specific items.
Books and other reading materials may also be found within an office in the home. You can keep these on a small table or on your desk if you do not have a book shelf. These can make great accents to the office while it is still accessible to use for reference.
Organizing home office items driving you crazy?
Get practical, usable, free help for your home office at http://www.yourhomeisorganized.com/HomeOfficeOrganization.htm
Mazomanie, Wis.: Art, history, nature, nudes – Yahoo! News
MAZOMANIE, Wis. – It’s a step back in time when walking through downtown’s Brodhead Street — with its brick and stone storefronts, pillars and railings still intact from the mid-1800s.
Nearby are the railroad tracks that spurred the founding of this village in 1855, and the flour mill and railroad depot built two years later.
But inside many doors of the two-block strip are attractions that make Mazomanie a happening place for the 21st century: art galleries, the Wall Street Gallery & Bistro, a bike shop and a resale shop. The mill is now a restaurant and the depot a library, although freight trains still pass through.
The village — with 33 buildings on the National Register of Historic Places and a population of just 1,500 — has been rejuvenated after decades of empty and deteriorating storefronts. Tourists are starting to notice, and so is the travel industry. The September issue of Budget Travel named Mazomanie one of the “10 Coolest Small Towns,” noting that the village is saturated with artists.
Mazomanie’s comeback is partly due to historical society members who saw the potential of their hamlet nestled amid rolling hills, the Wisconsin River, Black Earth Creek (a Class A trout stream) and farm fields.
Its location is a tourism promoter’s dream: on the road between the popular Taliesin — the home of Frank Lloyd Wright — and the state capital of Madison. It’s also within an hour’s drive of waterpark-filled Wisconsin Dells.
“It’s really been an awakening in the last year or so,” said David Friske. He and his wife Karisa own the Walking Iron Bed and Breakfast, a brick Victorian Italianate house built in 1865 just outside of downtown.
The area is also known for its one-time controversial nude beach on the Wisconsin River in the nearby Town of Mazomanie. It attracts naturists from other states and is the only public nude beach in Wisconsin, though not officially designated as such.
Business booms at the B&B from May through October with visitors from Chicago, Milwaukee and Madison, Friske said.
That can be attributed partly to Bob Brumley, a sculptor and Chamber of Commerce president who started Iron Horse Gallery Cooperative in July 2006. The original group of five artists has grown to 17, creating paintings, fused glasswork, photographs, jewelry and scarves, among other things.
Across the street is the Mazomanie Movement Arts Center. Its owner runs a circus arts camp for children, classes in low-flying trapeze, yoga and improvisational movement. Business at Brumley’s gallery has more than doubled since last year, he said.
“Even with an economy that everybody says is not very good and the price of gas and even this 100 inches of snow that we had this last winter, we saw a tremendous increase in business,” he said.
Visitors may have a hard time pronouncing Mazomanie — may-zoh-MAY-nee — but that makes no difference to Village President Scott Stokes.
“We’re not too picky: Mazo, Mazo-maniacs, MAY-zah-may-nee,” Stokes said with a laugh. “They will all do just fine.”
The name was given by a Milwaukee and Mississippi Railroad engineer. It comes from a Minnesota Wahpeton Sioux Indian chief whose name translates to “Walking Iron” or “Iron Horse,” said historical society president Robert Dodsworth.
By 1855, the railroad designed the village and later built the mill partly to create a service center for its operations. Over the next two decades, money poured into the village and most of its buildings were erected.
In 1882, the Ringling Brothers Classic and Comic Concert Company from nearby Baraboo had its first public performance there. It later became the Ringling Brothers Circus. It was the same decade the rapid growth slowed, resulting in residents largely leaving many of the buildings alone for a century.
But in the early 1990s, the historical society raised funds to redevelop the depot into a library and obtained the historic distinction for the other buildings, Dodsworth said.
Dodsworth also credits Dan Viste, a hydrogeologist by training, and his wife Nancy. They started buying property in 1992 and have since bought and restored 11 more historic buildings. They sold some and now own eight.
They started with The Old Feed Mill — cleaning it up and turning it into the biggest restaurant in the village. Its pot roast recipe has been requested by Bon Appetit magazine, according to Nancy Viste.
History buff Dan Viste said nearly everyone doubted his vision.
“It’s hard to get people to understand it because it takes a leap of faith and it takes a mobility to position yourself in the future, but if you have a depth in the past … you are in a better position to say, ‘If, we do this, this and this — that should happen, the thing that you would like to have happen.’”
He and others are also working to get a biking and hiking trail from Devil’s Lake State Park, about 27 miles north, to Prairie du Sac, through Mazomanie east to Cross Plains. There is also an effort to get a scrap metal park moved nearby. The park, now in North Freedom, features the massive body of work of Tom Every, a prominent outsider artist.
Cheap housing and rent attract artists, Brumley said. Houses in the area are, on average, cheaper than elsewhere in Dane County, according to South Central Multiple Listing Service’s Web site. The average price for a three-bedroom house in 2007 in the county was $236,000, compared to $160,000 to $200,000 for Mazomanie, said Bernie Harrop, who started Harrop Realty Inc. in 1979.
Kim Kinsley, 52, palliative medicine physician and hospice nurse Kim Condon, 40, live in Denver, but loved the area so much — with its farmland to ride horses — they may move there.
They had attended a conference in Chicago but made a stop at the Iron House Bed and Breakfast recently.
Condon, who went to college in Madison, said she’s seen Mazomanie go from being a ghost town — with beautiful houses but no shops — to a booming tourist area.
“This is perfect for me because it’s a half an hour from Madison yet doesn’t feel like it at all,” Condon said.
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If You Go…
MAZOMANIE, Wis.: http://www.mazomaniechamber.com/tourism.html or 608-795-9824. Featured in the September issue of Budget Travel magazine as one of “10 coolest small towns.” Located about 20 miles from Frank Lloyd Wright’s Taliesin, 25 miles from Madison, 40 miles from Wisconsin Dells and 170 miles from Chicago. The downtown historic district is on the National Register of Historic Places; details at http://www.villageofmazomanie.com/History/History.htm. Places to visit include Old Feed Mill restaurant at 114 Cramer St., Iron Horse Gallery at 18 E. Hudson St., Wall Street Gallery & Restaurant at 14 Brodhead St., and Walking Iron Bed & Breakfast at 21 S. State St.
10 COOLEST SMALL TOWNS: The list from Budget Travel’s September issue was Port Jervis, N.Y.;
Manitou Springs, Colo.; Yellow Springs, Ohio; Mazomanie, Wis.; Point Reyes Station, Calif.; Belfast, Maine; Catskill, N.Y.; Truth or Consequences, N.M.; Livingston, Mont.; White River Junction, Vt.
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