It's only the second official day of fall, but we are 100 percent ready for leaf peeping鈥攚hile squeezing in as much time for summer sports as possible before ski season hits. That's why we're excited about next week's culture gathering, the Crested Butte Film Festival: art house films聽补苍诲听shorts from our favorite adventure filmmakers, the charm and singletrack of Crested Butte,听plus neighbor and 2016 Best Town Gunnison…聽聽it's like we formulated the perfect early-autumn weekend. Thank us later.
Film
Crested Butte Film Festival (September 29-October 2)
You love Crested Butte for the mountain biking and skiing,听and now you have one more excuse to plan聽a quick escape to聽the mountain town. Next weekend marks聽the sixth annual Crested Butte Film Festival, which features about 100 documentaries 补苍诲听narrative films, both feature-length and short, right as the aspens begin to change color.
When we聽called up Michael Brody, who聽co-founded the event with his wife聽Jennifer Brody in 2011, he was grilling on the porch in the midst of聽a freak snow flurry. Don't worry, next weekend Crested Butte will be back to fine fall weather鈥攁nd Brody gave us several other reasons to put the fest on your calendar.
The adventure films. 鈥淚t's a really outdoors-based crowd in Crested Butte鈥攅veryone's hiking, biking, camping, traveling鈥攕o the town would be happy if we were showing all outdoor adventure films, and we do have those.鈥 Ben Knight's聽120 Days, Joey Schusler's聽The Trail to Kazbegi, and Ben Moon's聽翱蹿蹿蝉别补蝉辞苍.听
The other 蹿颈濒尘蝉.听There's a lot more on the schedule that goes way beyond outdoor adventure, and Brody guarantees they're all great. 鈥淲e鈥檙e very lucky in that we鈥檙e not beholden to anyone to show anything,鈥澛爃e says.聽鈥淲henever people ask me,听What鈥檚 you鈥檙e favorite film from the last few years?聽I say,听Look at our website. That鈥檚 it. We get to show exactly what we want and love.鈥 Two of Brody's favorites:聽,听a documentary in three parts (鈥淚've never seen anything like it鈥), 补苍诲听,听a dystopian sci-fi聽movie聽starring Kristen Stewart.
The filmmakers.聽One highlight: A homecoming for Crested Butte native Sara Murphy, who built up a career in film starting as an assistant to Philip Seymour Hoffman, and who last year won a Sundance Institute Producer's Award for her film,听.
The experience outside the theater.聽New for this year, organizers created for different kinds of festival-goers,听from 鈥淭he 国产吃瓜黑料r鈥 to 鈥淭he Cinephile.鈥 Brody's tips for everyone visiting the fest for the first time: 鈥淕et lodging in town. We have something聽like聽138 beds in town and then 3,000 up on the ski mountain. Secure that and then come to town, park your car, unload it, and you don鈥檛 need your car for the next four days. Bring a bike, certainly鈥攁聽mountain bike or a聽townie. See a lot of films but also see the town.聽Really allow yourself to feel at home in this very small town and connect with the people that live here, make your coffee, pour your beer.鈥
And, of course, Crested Butte. 鈥淭he town聽is only about聽eight-by-eight blocks long. Everything is so small and centralized that you always see聽filmmakers and friends coming and going. It鈥檚 very intimate. The speed limit in town is 15 miles per聽hour鈥攁nd it鈥檚 really hard to drive a car 15 miles per聽hour. I think it just resonates with people's hearts and well-being. It feels good to live at this speed and this pace.鈥
Podcasts
Andy Maher on the Sponsored Podcast
Mysterious happenings are afoot behind聽the聽scenes at K2, 补苍诲听Powder聽has been getting the scoop since the ski company last week. This week, the magazine's podcast stays on the聽K2 beat with a conversation between host Mike Powell 补苍诲听pro skier Andy Mahre, who parted ways with the company recently.
Longread from Elsewhere
Surely someone who's read this piece from聽The Walrus聽has already made a joke about seeing the forest for the trees. Or rather,听seeing the forest thanks聽to the story of one tree, as presented in the saga of logger Dennis Cronin and one giant Douglas fir. We came for the charming humanization of , as promised in the headline, and stayed for the worthwhile lessons on old-growth conservation.
As he waded through the thigh-high undergrowth, something caught his attention: a Douglas fir, poking up through the forest鈥檚 canopy and with a trunk wider than his truck. It was one of the tallest trees he had ever come across in his four decades in the logging industry鈥攏early the height of a twenty-storey building.
While it could take 500 years for a fir to reach fifty metres tall and two metres wide, it can take a skilled faller with a chainsaw five minutes to bring it down.
He didn鈥檛 know it then, but Cronin was standing under the second-largest Douglas fir in the country鈥攍ater confirmed to be sixty-six metres tall, nearly four metres wide, and almost twelve metres in circumference. The tree鈥檚 deeply crevassed trunk was limbless until well above the forest canopy, and its grain looked straight, too: a wonderful specimen of timber. Encased within the foot-thick corky bark was enough wood to fill four logging trucks or to frame five 2,000-square-foot houses. As it could also be turned into higher-priced beams and posts for houses in Victoria and Vancouver, or shipped across the Pacific Ocean to Japan, this single tree would fetch tens of thousands of dollars.
Cronin reached into his vest pocket for a ribbon he rarely used, tore off a strip, and tied it to a thin root protruding from the base of the trunk. The tape wasn鈥檛 pink or orange but green, and along its length were the words 鈥淟eave Tree.鈥
Longread聽from 国产吃瓜黑料
An Ig Nobel Winner Gets Hunted by a Bloodhound
Charles Foster has really made a name for himself by doing as the animals do, very literally. His very good book,听Being a Beast, elevates what could just be stunt journalism (I lived like a badger and ate worms!). Foster聽is both funny and thoughtful, and seems to earnestly want to understand the thought processes of wildlife鈥攂ut, yeah, his commitment to full immersion definitely sells the book. And this week, it earned him an Ig Nobel prize in biology. The program rewards those who (that hopefully makes you think as well).聽In this excerpt from Foster's book, he lets a friend's bloodhound chase him down as if he's a deer.聽
Matt, a plasterer from Dunster, met me outside the White Horse in Stogumber. His family had chased foxes and hares across Exmoor and the Quantocks for generations, and in the back of his van were some of the country鈥檚 best-nosed bloodhounds. One of them, Monty, was going to hunt me.
鈥淟et him have a sniff of your boot,鈥 said Matt. 鈥淚 bet we鈥檒l have you before you break a sweat.鈥
I set off running along the side of a field of young maize. It had been raining, and there was now a hot fog rising from my footprints. It was bad weather for being a hunted deer.
I wasn鈥檛 going to be killed, but still the chase seemed to matter very much. That鈥檚 the neurotic temperament for you.