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Favored with a vast store of infallible opinions and skin of purest alabaster, I don’t get out of the hermitage that often.  But if my prudent seclusion helps ensure a creamier complexion and more temperate foothills social climate, it tends to leave me in the dark about many of my neighbors’ diverse and interesting activities.

Facebook helps.

the-three-stooges-three-stooges-29303345-451-600I count Mountain Area Land Trust among my bosom e-friends and look forward to reading the occasional notice of its latest timbered triumph. Mount Evans Home Health and Hospice sends me a heads-up whenever it’s about to do something fun, and I am flattered to believe myself among the first informed of Jefferson County Historical Society plans to screen The Three Stooges al fresco in Heritage Grove.

Nyuk, and so forth.

I’m cyber-tight with Evergreen’s business community, too. Shadow Mountain Gallery likes to give me sneak-peeks at impending sublimities, and I can always rely on Tequila’s to keep me apprised of all Cuervo-related developments.  Receiving up-to-the-minute reports from Hearthfire Books on the progress of its madcap “Where’s Waldo?” promotion, I was tempted to start seeking the skulking sprout myself, then remembered that Waldo has made a career out of being diffident and unapproachable, and figured that finding him would only subject us both to pained small-talk and awkward silences. wheres-waldo-missing-posterAnd what if he really doesn’t want to be found?

Makes you think.

The Evergreen Area Chamber of Commerce was kind enough to post a selection of ribbon-cutting photographs on my “news feed”. (Few items posted on my “news feed” correctly qualify as “news”, but as there is no fee associated with the service it would be petty to quibble over labels). They included that picture taken to formally welcome Suzie’s Café into Evergreen’s commercial fold, which was of particular interest to me because I take great pleasure in having a sandwich there.

But perhaps you misunderstand.

Yes, I thoroughly enjoy most everything on Suzie’s menu, but I actually have a sandwich there. It’s called “Steve’s Special”, and it features prodigious portions of two kinds of meat and cheese piled high on a two-fisted roll and topped with thick slices of PADAGWOODS24 AJ 8bacon. Okay, that’s technically three kinds of meat, but I’ve always considered bacon a food apart, like ambrosia, or Space Food Sticks. Funny thing is, I didn’t know Suzie from Guy Savoy when she dreamed up that heavenly hoagie, but there can be no mistake – it’s all me.

Do I have a point?

More like a tenuous connection followed by a questionable conclusion. Looking at Suzie’s ribbon-cutting photo caused me to slip into a drooling stupor of sweet reverie, and the first thing I saw when I came to was Lisa Delia’s “food diary” post. Most folks hereabouts know Lisa as a top-flight personal trainer and a singer/songwriter of lustrous food-journal-diaryrepute, whereas I, who perceive the world only as flickering images on the wall of my cave, know her principally as that gal who keeps track of everything she eats. Here, I believed, was a kindred soul who treasures a fulsome carte du jour as much as I. Was our shared passion be writ large upon the pages of her diary? Yes and no.

Mostly no.

BacchusJainLike me, Lisa clearly applies great thought and energy to the perfection of her personal menu. Our culinary paths diverge, however, at a philosophical fork. Where I worship at the self-indulgent temple of Bacchus, she seems more in tune with a relatively austere Jainist liturgy. Flipping through her dietary directory, we see that on July 1of this year Lisa breakfasted on a three-egg spinach-and-feta omelet, 14 Rainier cherries and one slice of pineapple – 309 total calories. For lunch, two tablespoons of almond butter, a pinch of unsweetened cocoa powder, one tablespoon of raw coconut nectar, and 14 more cherries – 321 total calories. And dinner? A single 210-calorie slice of homemade veggie lasagna. From these figures we learn that in an rainiercherriesentire day Lisa consumes approximately the same freight of calories as contained in my typical salad-course, my typical salad-course being a steaming mound of sliced mushrooms fried in an equal volume of fresh, creamery butter and garnished with bacon. It’s a hearty starter that leaves plenty of room for a 14-ounce butter-fried pork chop.

It’s what’s for dinner.

But I’m no food fascist, and if I prefer a more robust alternative to Lisa’s impoverished table, and worry that she’s not getting the essential fats and cholesterols that are the foundations of a satisfying diet, I know that I must persuade not by censure, but by good example.

And butter’s good for the complexion.

baconPyramid

Old News

MrZipNeither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds – Herodotus

 

 

 

A couple of weeks ago, longtime Evergreen resident Mary Noyes found a curious letter in her mailbox.

It was of the factory-ornamented variety – heavy, lilac-tinted paper thickly sprinkled with soft pastel flowers, folded to become its own envelope and carefully sealed in back with a bright red sticker. It was the kind of letter a young girl might send to another young girl, which didn’t surprise Mary, who, with her husband, David, raised three of them in their Hiwan Village home. The letter was also crisp, clean, and, apparently, undeliverable.

“Return to sender,” commanded the computer-generated label on the front. “No such number.”

noyes 006

Having a letter returned by the post office isn’t, by itself, especially curious. A bum address, inadequate postage, even lousy handwriting can bring a dead-end dispatch back for another try. In this case, however, her oldest daughter, Julie Matern – 1979 EHS grad, University of Northern Colorado Alumnus, wife, mother, and Berthoud, Colo., kindergarten teacher – had written the New Jersey mailing address of childhood friend Lisa Burgher legibly enough. The return address, on the other hand…

“I couldn’t understand why Julie used her maiden name,” she explains. “And I wondered why she used the Evergreen address instead of her own.”

Pondering those puzzles, Mary took a closer look at the postage.

noyes 002“It was a 13-cent stamp with a Colorado Centennial postmark.”

Hmmm…curiouser and curiouser…

Noting that the sticker holding the letter closed appeared to be losing interest in the job, Mary released it from that commitment and started searching for clues in her daughter’s neat script. She didn’t have far to look.

“Loveland had a flash flood last night that killed 40 campers,” Julie wrote her friend, describing what sounded to Mary a lot like the Big Thompson flood of 1976. Turns out, that’s exactly what it was.

TO-Archives-sorting-room-c“Today is Colorado’s Centennial celebration,” Julie continued. “Whoopee! It seems like just another day to me.”

Realization swiftly dawning, Mary flipped back to the letter’s face. Sure enough, Julie’s mislaid missive had been cancelled on Aug. 4, 1976.

 

“She sent that letter 35 years ago,” smiles Mary, shaking her head in wonder. “Where has it been all this time?”

drunkMail1USPS spokesman Al DeSarro couldn’t say, but he’s willing to hazard a guess. “When these things happen, it’s often because somebody died and the letter was found unopened among their effects,” DeSarro says. “In this case, it may have fallen behind some equipment that was recently moved.”

In other words, while bobbing along atop a river of correspondence, Julie’s chatty dispatch likely jumped its banks and spent the next five and a half presidential administrations tucked between some colossal sorting machine and the wall. Given that USPS’s Colorado region processes up to 10 million pieces of mail daily, perhaps the real mystery is why that doesn’t happen more often.

cliff“In my experience with 15 years in the Colorado region, I’ve only seen three cases like this,” DeSarro says. “As a matter of fact, three months ago we sent back a letter that was mailed in the 60s. It was mailed from Dallas to a service member at Lowry Air Force Base, and Lowry closed in 1994. But, the fact is, situations like this are very, very rare.”

Wherever Julie’s wayward communiqué has been during the last 35 years, by Easter Sunday it had only one more arm’s-length to go.

newman-348“When mom told me about it on the phone, I didn’t know what she was talking about,” laughs Julie, who brought her clan to celebrate the holiday at the old homestead and got a serving of memories to go with her ham and yams. Not surprisingly, Julie doesn’t recall mailing the curiosity in the first place. “I haven’t had any contact with Lisa for probably 25 years,” she says, tracing a finger over the postmark. “I remember the stationary, though. I was just about to start my sophomore year. It’s fun to see what was on my mind back then.”

“We had a lot of different families come stay with us this summer,” 15-year-old Julie wrote. “My favorites were the Edmonds. Of course, they have two sons, ages 16 and 18.”

But of all the interesting, amusing and surprising revelations contained in the youthful correspondence, the most curious – to Julie’s eye, at least – was not what she said so much as how she said it.

“I have to say,” she says, with modest satisfaction, “I had pretty nice penmanship.”

noyes 004

 

Holiday Habits

TwainXmas

For lo’, he hath said it

“Often, the less there is to justify a traditional custom, the harder it is to get rid of it.”  ~ Mark Twain

 

 

 

Please understand that Mr. Twain wasn’t talking about your traditional Christmas customs, but those of unnamed others who lack your refined taste, deep perception and admirable sense of decorum.

This is an important distinction, because the Holidays are largely the sum of their traditions and it wouldn’t do to think you’re going to spend the next two-score and 10 days engaged in absurdity and foolishness. Not like Rosie O’Donnell, who attires her entire tribe in brand-new matching jam-jams every Christmas morning, or like Martha Stewart, who tricks out her dogs in velvet and cubic zirconia. Pop-singer and holiday heretic Lance Bass deep-fries a turkey, if you can believe it, which of course you can’t, being naturally above such vulgarities.

Um...okay...

Um…okay.

But that’s not to say you don’t know somebody who falls into the traditionally-challenged class. Somebody with mistletoe headgear, for instance, or an otherwise sober-minded and upstanding neighbor who invites you over every year for the sole and only purpose of bringing you within pestering distance of a dusty plastic trout that sings “Run, Run, Rudolph”. Somebody, in short, who could use a few Yule-timely pointers on keeping Christmas well. For those unfortunates, we are pleased to offer the following examples of Proper Holiday Comportment as described by persons of recognized gravity and discernment.

 

Like quiche you can eat with a straw

Like quiche you can eat with a straw

“There is a remarkable breakdown of taste and intelligence at Christmastime.  Mature, responsible grown men wear neckties made of holly leaves and drink alcoholic beverages with raw egg yolks and cottage cheese in them.” ~ P.J. O’Rourke

 

 

“One thing we always do is make cabbage rolls for Christmas dinner,” says Hiwan resident Barbara Melinkovich, without even a hint of shame or self-consciousness. “My husband’s parents are Croatian, and it’s a tradition over there.”

Well so is drinking beer seasoned with rosemary, but that doesn’t make it right. Would you like revise your statement?

Presents best left wrapped

Presents best left wrapped

“We make the cabbage rolls the day before, and on Christmas Day we all go ice-skating on a pond near our house, then come home and cook them for dinner.”

Much better. Pond-skating is an excellent Christmas tradition and worthy of general emulation. You should probably lead with that next time.

Encouraged by Malinkovich’s success, her sister, Sally Kennedy, steps up to the hearth.

“I know it sounds silly,” offers Kennedy, “but when we were kids we always had a Christmas parade.”

I think you mean you attended a Christmas parade.

“No, we had one. Before the kids could open their presents, we would have our own little Christmas parade around the house. We didn’t dress up or anything, just in our pajamas, or whatever. I told you it was kind of silly.”

Kind of genius, more like – all the fun of Macys without all the product placement and inane color-commentary. Kennedy’s delightful tradition earns four candy canes out of a possible five.

At first unclear on the concept, 10-year-old Hailey Brown eventually tumbles on a near-universal tradition that is at once festive and illuminating.

“Me and my sister wake up first, and then we have to wait until grandma and grandpa wake up,” explains Hailey, keeping track of the precise sequence of Christmas-morning events on the fingers of her left hand. “Then they say ‘wait until we get ready’, and we wait, and then, when they’re ready, we go downstairs and open presents.”

Yes, Hailey, frustration is a holiday tradition. Deal with it.

 

Battle noelle

Battle Noel

“Once again we find ourselves enmeshed in the Holiday Season, that very special time of year when we join with our loved ones in sharing centuries-old traditions such as trying to find a parking space at the mall”.Dave Barry

 

 

“We bake cookies,” says Theresa Howell, getting ready to launch a rare November fishing expedition on Evergreen Lake. Her husband, Brian, sees to the tackle while daughters Ella, 5, and Sylvia, 2, perform ballast duties in the family canoe. “I buy pounds of butter,” Theresa laughs.

Since one pound of butter yields approximately four times its weight in pure merriness, the Howell place must be pretty cheery by mid-December.

“We also celebrate Saint Nicholas Day in our house, so the girls kind of get two Christmases.”

You have my undivided attention. Please continue.

Christmas1.0

Christmas1.0

“It’s a German holiday on Dec. 6. We all put out our shoes at night and Saint Nicholas leaves something in them. It’s usually nothing big – a little craft-book, or something.”

“It tides them over till Christmas,” grins Brian.

Glad tidings, indeed. For extending the magic of Christmas back almost three full weeks, the Howell’s are hereby awarded a silver Star of Bethlehem with holly-leaf cluster. Across the way, Diane Pieper and her granddaughters are wrapping up a pleasant morning’s lake-walk.

“We always take food and toys down to some poor kids in Denver,” says 9-year-old Taylor. “It’s nice because otherwise they wouldn’t get anything. I also get to see some friends I don’t get to see any other time.”

It’s the perfect Holiday tradition, really. Does good and feels good. You’re to be commended, Taylor, for…

“And guess what?” bursts out her sister, 6-year-old Jordan. “One time she had all these stuffed animals – they were Beanie Babies – and that’s all – but there were a whole lot of them – and she gave them all away!”

My, that’s certainly a selfless…

Celebrity sighting

Celebrity sighting

“And guess what else? One time it was nighttime, and we saw a red light and a green light, and I think the red light was Rudolph’s red nose!”

How truly wondrous to witness…

“And guess what else? Every year we pet the reindeer. We pet Rudolph and Dancer. I like Dancer, but Rudolph is the best one!”

If Denver could harness Jordan’s holiday spirit, the City and County Building would be visible from Neptune.

Brook Forest resident Greg Konigsbauer and his two young’uns are enjoying the unseasonably fine weather at the Stagecoach Park playground. Technically, the Konigsbauer clan begins its Christmas observances on Dec. 21.

“That’s Charlotte’s birthday, so we have all the kids in the neighborhood over for cinnamon buns,” says Greg. “Since her birthday is so close to Christmas, it’s our way of making sure she gets something special.”

Traditionalists might argue that Charlotte’s cinnamon social is more correctly a birthday tradition, but we won’t. And just so there won’t be any hurt feelings, we should point out that not all Konigsbauer Christmas activities are traditionally ambiguous.

“We always watch ‘How the Grinch Stole Christmas’.”

Okay, so lots of families do that, but not every family has 3-year-old Charlotte, a giggling little sprite who could be Cindy Lou Who’s stunt double. And if that’s not enough reason to stick with a fine tradition, Charlotte’s energetic 6-year-old brother, Jack, offers his own deeply personal and logically unassailable reason for making the Grinch a regular holiday visitor.

“Green is my favorite color,” Jack says, earnestly. “And blue. Green and blue.”

 

That's the stuff...

That’s the stuff…

“Then the Grinch thought of something he hadn’t before.  What if Christmas, he thought, doesn’t come from a store? What if Christmas, perhaps, means a little bit more?” ~ Dr. Seuss

A Ghastly Gallery of Holiday Horrors

 

ghastlyGallery

WEST WALKER DRIVE – Drucilla’s gala Halloween party was a frightful success until a swarm of sinister strangers showed up, all of whom A.) forgot their costumes at home in their other pants, and B.) forgot they were neither invited nor welcome. Madame Dru’s efforts to exorcize the infernal interlopers sparked a brawl that spilled out onto the lawn, and the spirit of JCSO was invoked to smother the macabre melee. Before deputies arrived, however, the creepy crashers leapt into a silver SUV and fled into the night. Although thankful that the forces of good had prevailed, Drucilla wasn’t looking forward to explaining the fight’s fearsome flotsam to her dad.

WAVERLY MOUNTAIN – Arising with the dawn, Lana Chaney was horrified to discover mysterious footprints marching across the thin dusting of snow in her fenced back yard. It was horrifying, she told deputies, because her husband hadn’t been outside. Before serious investigation could begin, however, the mysterious tracks mysteriously disappeared – along with the snow – as if banished by the sun’s wholesome and cleansing light. Deputies thought about issuing a BOLO for an invisible man, then thought better.

SOUTH BENTON WAY – Never one to ignore his neighbors when he can as easily terrorize them, Mr. N. Bates installed a pair of ghoulish inflatables in his front yard – one a black carriage of the cadaver-hauling variety, the other a maniacally grinning ghost – and bade them automatically awaken at 6 o’clock each evening and vanish into cold earth at 10:30. Wondering why the diabolical duo was performing its fearful function in an unaccountably feeble fashion, Mr. Bates discovered that a ripper unknown had perforated the bloodcurdling balloons with a 6-inch blade and malice aforethought. The ripper is still at large, and the punctured props are feeling much better now, thanks.

A-maized and Confused

leavesWhen poets go on about autumn, it’s usually pretty depressing, lots of tears and bagpipes and lamenting over the “waning” and “dying” and the “swift-falling darkness.”

But we mustn’t be too hard on poets. They’re paid – sort of – to be gloomy, and autumn can be an emotionally confusing time for deep thinkers who expend great energy finding ways to take yearly climate patterns personally. And they’re right about one thing – no other season can hold a candle to autumn for sheer mystery and pathos. Lengthening shadows, the rustle and crunch of dry leaves and the smell of wood smoke can turn the mind down dim avenues of introspection. And just in case they don’t, you can always visit a corn maze.

Maze5The front range is lousy with corn mazes this time of year. Between Greeley and Pueblo, nearly a hundred acres of productive cropland have been transformed into nightmarish fields of bewilderment and horror. They all bill themselves as great places to test one’s memory and special acuity, but that’s pure tripe. If corn mazes test anything, it’s your mental stability and bladder control.

For adventurous souls who prefer their corn still on the cob with a side of menace, the question becomes one of scale. The Crazed Cornfield Maze in Thornton, for example, features a whopping 14 acres in which to become hopelessly lost while, over Platteville way, Miller Farms will drive you to despair on a mere five. For those in the southern metropolitan area in whom the twin spirits of compromise and convenience burn brightly, the 8-and-a-half-acre Denver Botanic Gardens at Chatfield corn maze offers all the frustration of its larger cousin plus the chance to spend hours recreating in a beautiful, pastoral setting without seeing any of it.

Hildebrand2For most of the year, DBG’s 750-acre Chatfield spread on the working 19th-century Hildenbrand Ranch near C-470 and Wadsworth Boulevard is a lovely district where smooth trails wander among grassy meadows, sapphire ponds and lush groves. From now until Halloween, however, penitents will come here from near and far to wander frantically among the rows wishing they’d thought to put a machete in their fanny pack.

The diabolical genius behind the Chatfield maze is its welcoming public aspect. Strolling up from the parking lot a short drive off West Deer Creek Canyon Road, one is immediately reassured by the quaint, 130-year-old white clapboard Deer Creek yurtschoolhouse, a picturesque wooden bridge and the shady splendor of magnificent cottonwoods.  On open ground just beyond a pebbled watercourse, a yurt with a sign that says “EDUCATION INSIDE” gives the first hint of trouble. It’s not the idea of unstructured EDUCATION that disturbs, nor is the fact that somebody makes a living providing Mongolian teepees to a yurt-starved public cause for alarm. It’s that, “INSIDE,” the yurt is crawling with spiders.

Well, not real ones. More like pictures of spiders, accompanied by lots of information that’s supposed to allay fears about the eight-legged terrors but does nothing of the kind. Simply calling a jumping spider “salticidae” doesn’t make it more loveable, and no amount of dry anatomical explanations will make the allegedly peace-loving funnel spider welcome at an arachnophobe’s supper table. There’s also an aerial photograph of the maze. Sharply carved into a green square of tall corn is a colossal – visibly hungry – spider clinging to an 8-and-a-half-acre web. What diseased mind conceived this leafy outrage?

“Every year we do something to promote Denver Botanic Gardens,” explains DBG event coordinator Sara Buys. “Last year it was the Scientific and Cultural Facilities bear, this year we’re promoting the big bug exhibit that’s opening in March.”  Strange. Coming from her, the notion of a giant, corny deathtrap doesn’t seem so creepy and insane. To create a precise image within that imperfect medium, she says, paths are plowed under in late spring while the corn is about three feet high. When the remainder matures, adventure ensues. “We’re open until Oct. 31, but we’ll be busiest during the Pumpkin Festival in mid-October, and on the weekend right before Halloween.”

Fleeing the yurt, breathe deeply until the willies subside and continue along the northern verge of the cornfield until you come to what looks like a bit of carnival midway that lost it’s Tilt-a-Whirl but found the biggest funhouse this side of Coney Island. At mid-afternoon on a Saturday, the place is doing fair business – families, mostly, along with a heavy sprinkling of hapless couples and small knots of seniors who’ve tired of taking their corn cream-style.

Maze6The Chatfield maze is actually two mazes – the big one where the hungry spider lives, and a little one that’s impossible to get lost in. While intended for kids, the small one costs nothing to try and gives skittish grownups a chance to adjust to life between the rows. Volunteer Lee McDonnell is manning the entrance to the main attraction this afternoon, taking tickets and offering shots of insect repellent to the fearful – a terrible irony, that.

“It’s a good maze,” Lee says, obviously enjoying the sunshine and freedom of her post well outside of it. “A lot of people come during the day, but most people – kids especially – like to come later in the evening. I guess it’s really spooky after dark.”

Maze1Well, Lee, we could sit here chatting all day or we could get this show on the road. To the left, an “ENTER” sign stands before a neat passage into green oblivion. Maybe 20 feet away on the right, a pair of laughing, teenaged girls emerges from another marked “EXIT.” Is it that easy? Outta’ my way.

It takes two, three turns, tops, to realize you’re in way over your head, literally and figuratively. Dense walls of corn standing seven to eight feet high afford no glimpse of anything beyond the few yards of passage ahead and behind, and the constantly moving shadows make trying to identify a cardinal compass point a futile exercise. Worse, because one unyielding bank of thick, leafy green corn stalks looks remarkably like another, even carefully noted intersections fail to register on the second, third and fourth times around. Panic is an ugly word, so we’ll call that lump forming in your gut nascent hysteria, instead. As your frustration mounts, Lakewood residents Lindsay Knoftsger and Kyle Ecton suddenly materialize out of a side channel, smiling and relaxed.

Maze7“This is my first corn maze and I love it,” says Lindsay. “What a great way to spend an afternoon.” The two have been wandering around lost for about half an hour but display no obvious signs of madness. Kyle is a corn maze veteran, of sorts. “I did one a long time ago, when I was growing up in Iowa.” And you’re still not tired of corn? Sheesh! “We’re not making much headway,” he laughs, “but I think we’ve got this section pretty well covered.” Unreasoning good spirits are a symptom of madness, aren’t they?

After about 20 more minutes of blind alleys, false leads and uncertain backtracks, it dawns on you that the corn is evil. What at first seemed merely the rustling of broad, healthy leaves suddenly reveals itself as the sinister mocking of malevolent produce. The corn, you realize, is plotting against you, whispering terrible secrets to itself, cursing you in a secret language and deliberately hindering your progress. Less perceptive comrades may try to convince you that you’re being foolish, but you’ll know better. The once-silly maze rule against picking and throwing the corn assumes dreadful significance.

Maze2Just when you’ve reached the edge of reason, you suddenly wander into the maze’s halfway point. This is fortunate for two reasons. First, you can spend a few moments chatting with volunteer Bill Atkinson, who’s handing out snacks, water and encouragement from a little booth about 10 feet from where your nightmare began. So Bill, you ask, how many good, capable, not-stupid people require rescuing from the maze in a day’s time?

“Some young kids can zip through the whole thing in about 45 minutes, but anybody can finish in two hours,” Bill says, completely unmindful of your feelings. “If somebody just gets tired, those orange flags you can see from anywhere in the maze mark emergency exits. The only people who don’t come out on their own are people who don’t want to come out.”

After being harassed by vegetables and lied to by Bill, you are perfectly justified in bailing out then and there. And besides, Joelle Klein and Lauren Banks did the same thing and you wouldn’t call them whimps. Okay, so the Denverites were shepherding a flock of impatient children through the maze and Lauren had 30 pounds of ready-for-naptime draped around her neck.

Maze4“This was a really nice thing to do,” Joelle says, putting a positive spin on it. “I think the kids are getting tired, so we’re going to get them something to eat out front.” Whatever helps you look in the mirror, Jo. Even 9-year-old Dezirae, Noelle’s “Little Sister,” leaves with her dignity intact.

“It’s confusing, and harder than I thought,” Dezirae admits, “but it’s fun to find your own way.”

Walking back to the parking lot, even the close woods seem like Julie Andrews’ infinite meadow in The Sound of Music, not that young Jimmy and Michael would notice. Apparently unaffected by their ordeal among the rows, the Littleton boys scamper and chatter like insensitive monkeys.

“The kids one was real easy,” says Jimmy, 10, a boastful towhead wearing an orange tie-dyed T-shirt and an insufferable smirk. “I could run right through it!”

Oh yeah? Well, so could I. But I’ll bet the big one gave you a good scare.

“No, it wasn’t scary,” says 8-year-old Michael. “Now if a frog had jumped out at me, that would have been pretty scary.”

frog