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Colorado's most visited natural attractions include Rocky Mountain National Park, which recorded more than 4.4 million visits in 2023 and offers alpine ecosystems, abundant wildlife including elk and bighorn sheep, and an extensive trail network.<ref>{{cite web |title=Rocky Mountain National Park Visitor Statistics |url=https://www.nps.gov/romo/planyourvisit/visitation-statistics.htm |work=National Park Service |access-date=2024-11-01}}</ref> Mesa Verde National Park preserves the cliff dwellings of the Ancestral Puebloans, who built elaborate stone structures into canyon walls beginning around 1190 CE; the park was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1978. Great Sand Dunes National Park and Preserve in the San Luis Valley contains the tallest sand dunes in North America, rising up to 750 feet above
Colorado's most visited natural attractions include Rocky Mountain National Park, which recorded more than 4.4 million visits in 2023 and offers alpine ecosystems, abundant wildlife including elk and bighorn sheep, and an extensive trail network.<ref>{{cite web |title=Rocky Mountain National Park Visitor Statistics |url=https://www.nps.gov/romo/planyourvisit/visitation-statistics.htm |work=National Park Service |access-date=2024-11-01}}</ref> Mesa Verde National Park preserves the cliff dwellings of the Ancestral Puebloans, who built elaborate stone structures into canyon walls beginning around 1190 CE; the park was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1978. Great Sand Dunes National Park and Preserve in the San Luis Valley contains the tallest sand dunes in North America, rising up to 750 feet above
== References ==
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Latest revision as of 07:41, 12 May 2026

A Taste of Colorado is an annual outdoor festival held each Labor Day weekend in Denver, Colorado. One of the largest free public events in the Rocky Mountain region, it draws hundreds of thousands of attendees over four days and features food vendors, live music across multiple stages, artisan craft exhibitors, and cultural programming. The festival showcases Colorado's culinary range—from green chile and tamales to internationally influenced street food—alongside locally produced beer, wine, and spirits. Grand Valley Bank serves as a title sponsor of the event, reflecting deep roots in the local business community.[1]

The festival was long held at Civic Center Park in downtown Denver's heart, placing it adjacent to the Colorado State Capitol and within walking distance of the city's cultural institutions. In recent years the event moved to Lawrence Street in downtown Denver, a shift that's let organizers expand the event's footprint and handle growing attendance. That move stands as one of the more visible changes in the festival's operational history, and if you're planning to attend, you should confirm the current venue through Denver Arts & Venues before heading out.[2]

Admission is free. That's made it a staple of Denver's summer and early-fall community calendar. Families, longtime residents, and first-time visitors attend, drawn by no entry cost and the breadth of programming on offer. Individual food and drink purchases are made separately from vendors on-site. The festival is produced in coordination with the City and County of Denver and has run continuously for several decades, establishing itself as one of the defining civic events on the Front Range.

The event offers a broader introduction to the state it celebrates. Its food traditions. Its craft beverage industry. Its music and mix of cultures. What follows is an examination of the history, geography, culture, and economy that give Colorado, and by extension this festival, its particular character.

History

Colorado's history spans thousands of years, beginning with the indigenous peoples who inhabited the region long before European contact. Archaeological evidence indicates that the Ute, Arapaho, and Cheyenne tribes thrived in the area for millennia, relying on the land's resources for sustenance and spiritual practice. Spanish explorers arrived in the 16th century, marking the beginning of European influence, though significant colonization didn't occur until the 19th century. Gold was discovered in 1858 during the Pike's Peak Gold Rush, triggering a massive influx of settlers, mining towns, and eventually a push for statehood. Colorado became the 38th state on August 1, 1876, admitted a year after its initial petition due to congressional deliberations over regional representation.[3]

Settlement came at a devastating cost to indigenous peoples. In November 1864, Colorado militia forces attacked a peaceful encampment of Cheyenne and Arapaho people at Sand Creek, killing an estimated 150 to 200 individuals, the majority women, children, and elderly. The attack followed the Treaty of Fort Wise in 1861, under which Cheyenne and Arapaho leaders had ceded most of their territory and accepted a reservation along Sand Creek. Those lands provided little sustenance. The Sand Creek Massacre remains one of the most documented atrocities in the state's history, and the National Park Service now maintains the Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Site at the location.[4] The Treaty of Medicine Lodge in 1867 subsequently displaced the Cheyenne and Arapaho further south into Indian Territory, effectively ending their presence in Colorado. The Ute people, who had inhabited the mountains and western plateau for centuries, were progressively confined to a series of reservations through the 1870s and 1880s, culminating in the forced removal of most Ute bands to Utah following the Meeker Incident of 1879.[5]

Late 19th and early 20th century expansion brought rapid industrialization. Railroads connected Colorado to national markets and transformed its economy. Silver strikes in Leadville and Aspen in the 1870s and 1880s rivaled the earlier gold rush in scale, and Colorado's mining output made it one of the wealthier territories in the West. The 20th century brought different pressures. The Great Depression hit Colorado's agricultural communities hard, particularly on the eastern plains, where drought overlapped with the broader Dust Bowl crisis of the 1930s. During World War II, the federal government established the Amache internment camp in Granada, Colorado, where approximately 7,000 Japanese Americans were confined between 1942 and 1945; Amache was designated a National Historic Site in 2022.[6] The Cold War brought major federal investment in military installations along the Front Range, including Lowry Air Force Base, Peterson Air Force Base, and the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) facility carved into Cheyenne Mountain outside Colorado Springs, which became operational in 1966.

Postwar decades saw deliberate development of the Rocky Mountains as a tourism and recreation destination. Ski resorts at Aspen, Vail, and Breckenridge attracted national and eventually international visitors, and the outdoor recreation economy that now defines much of the state's identity was built largely during this period. Today, Colorado's history is preserved through museums, historical sites, and cultural institutions that document both its struggles and economic transformations. The legacy of that history—from mining booms to indigenous displacement to Cold War militarization—continues to shape the state's politics, land use disputes, and relationship with the federal government.

Geography

Colorado's geography is defined by dramatic contrasts. Alpine peaks, arid desert, high-altitude plateaus, fertile valleys. The state is divided into three primary regions: the Rocky Mountains to the west, the Great Plains to the east, and the Colorado Plateau in the southwest. Each creates a distinct ecosystem supporting different flora and fauna. The Rocky Mountains dominate the western third of the state and are home to iconic landmarks such as Pikes Peak and the Continental Divide. Colorado contains 54 peaks exceeding 14,000 feet in elevation, commonly referred to as "fourteeners," making it a destination for mountaineers and hikers from around the world. These mountains shape Colorado's climate and serve as a critical water source for the broader region, feeding rivers such as the Colorado, the Arkansas, and the South Platte.[7]

The eastern plains are characterized by flat terrain and a semi-arid climate, and they've historically been the center of Colorado's agricultural industry. Vast fields of wheat, corn, and sorghum stretch across the landscape, supported by irrigation systems drawing on the state's river systems and the High Plains Aquifer. The transition from plains to mountains along the Front Range is abrupt by geological standards. Drive west on Interstate 70 from the Kansas border and you'll cross more than 300 miles of flat grassland before the Rockies appear on the horizon as an unbroken wall. That corridor, known as the Front Range Urban Corridor, is home to roughly 85 percent of Colorado's population and includes Denver, Boulder, Fort Collins, Colorado Springs, and Pueblo.

The Colorado Plateau in the southwest offers a starkly different environment shaped by millions of years of erosion and geological uplift. Red rock formations, canyon systems, and desert mesas characterize the region. Mesa Verde National Park, located in the far southwestern corner of the state, preserves the cliff dwellings of the Ancestral Puebloans, who inhabited the region from roughly 600 CE until around 1300 CE. The plateau also encompasses the Gunnison Gorge and parts of the canyon country that extends into Utah, Arizona, and New Mexico. Geography is a direct driver of Colorado's water rights law, land use policy, and conservation debates—the state sits at the headwaters of river systems that supply water to seven states and Mexico under the terms of the Colorado River Compact of 1922.

Culture

Colorado's culture reflects its indigenous heritage, its Spanish colonial history, the ranching traditions of the 19th century, and a more recent wave of migration that's made Denver one of the faster-growing metropolitan areas in the United States. Indigenous communities, particularly the Ute, and the Southern Arapaho and Cheyenne peoples whose ancestral lands cover much of eastern Colorado, continue to maintain cultural traditions through language preservation, art, and ceremony. The Southern Ute Indian Tribe and the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe, both based in the southwestern corner of the state, operate as sovereign nations with their own governmental structures and economic enterprises. Their contributions are documented in the state's museums and cultural centers, including the Ute Indian Museum in Montrose.[8]

Hispanic culture shaped Colorado in ways that predate American statehood. Spanish colonizers moved north from New Mexico in the 17th and 18th centuries, and Mexican settlers established communities in the San Luis Valley well before the U.S. acquired the territory following the Mexican-American War in 1848. San Luis, founded in 1851 in the San Luis Valley, is Colorado's oldest continuously occupied town, and the surrounding region retains a strong Hispano cultural identity distinct from later Mexican-American immigration. This is evident in the state's cuisine, where green chile—particularly the Pueblo variety of Hatch-style green chile—is treated almost as an official state ingredient, appearing in everything from breakfast burritos to cheeseburgers. The cowboy tradition, rooted in the ranching and cattle industries of the 19th century, remains a defining aspect of the state's identity, celebrated through rodeos and the state's official motto, "Nil sine labore" (Latin for "Nothing without labor").

Colorado has built a nationally recognized craft beverage industry over the past three decades. Breckenridge Brewery, founded in 1990, helped establish the state's reputation as a center of American craft beer, and the industry has expanded to include hundreds of breweries throughout the state.[9] The craft spirits sector has earned comparable recognition. Stranahan's Colorado Whiskey, distilled in Denver, is among the more prominent American single malt whiskeys produced anywhere in the country, and Downslope Distilling, also based in the Denver area, has received national honors for its rum program.[10] Colorado's wine industry, centered largely in the Grand Valley appellation along the Western Slope near Grand Junction, has attracted attention at national and international competitions; producers such as Sauvage Spectrum have received top honors in recent competition cycles.[11] Wine-focused events including sustainability-oriented tastings highlighting Colorado producers have become a regular part of the Denver events calendar, reflecting the industry's growing profile among consumers.[12]

A Taste of Colorado is among the most prominent expressions of this food and drink culture. Held each Labor Day weekend, the event draws hundreds of thousands of attendees and features dozens of food vendors representing the breadth of the state's culinary traditions alongside craft beverage producers, live music on multiple stages, and artisan exhibitors. Admission is free, making it one of the more accessible large-scale events on the Denver calendar. The festival relocated from its longtime home at Civic Center Park to Lawrence Street in downtown Denver, a move that updated its configuration while preserving its downtown character.[13]

Economy

Colorado's economy has shifted substantially from its 19th-century foundation in agriculture, mining, and energy extraction to a more diversified model built around technology, aerospace, tourism, and health care. That doesn't mean the traditional sectors have disappeared. Oil and natural gas extraction from the Denver-Julesburg Basin and the Piceance Basin continues to generate significant revenue and employment, and Colorado remains one of the leading energy-producing states in the country. Agriculture, particularly on the eastern plains, contributes cattle, wheat, dairy, and corn to both domestic and export markets. The tension between energy extraction, agricultural water use, and conservation has defined much of the state's policy debate over the past two decades.[14]

The technology sector is now one of the state's primary economic drivers. Denver and Boulder function as significant hubs for software development, cybersecurity, and biotech, and the stretch of Interstate 25 between the two cities—sometimes called the Colorado Technology Corridor—houses major corporate campuses and a dense concentration of startups. The aerospace and defense industry is anchored by installations including Buckley Space Force Base in Aurora and Schriever Space Force Base near Colorado Springs, along with major contractors such as Lockheed Martin and Raytheon, which maintain significant Front Range operations. According to the Colorado Office of Economic Development and International Trade, aerospace is one of the state's largest export industries by revenue.[15]

Tourism generates billions of dollars annually. Skiing at Aspen, Vail, and Breckenridge. Hiking in Rocky Mountain National Park. Visiting Mesa Verde. The state's outdoor attractions draw visitors throughout the year. Colorado was also the first state to legalize recreational cannabis through a voter-approved measure in 2012, and the regulated industry has since generated billions of dollars in retail sales and hundreds of millions in state tax revenue, funding public school construction and other priorities.[16] The state's commitment to renewable energy development, particularly wind power on the eastern plains and solar installations across the region, has positioned Colorado as one of the more active states in the transition away from fossil fuel dependency, even as it continues to produce substantial oil and gas.

Attractions

Colorado's most visited natural attractions include Rocky Mountain National Park, which recorded more than 4.4 million visits in 2023 and offers alpine ecosystems, abundant wildlife including elk and bighorn sheep, and an extensive trail network.[17] Mesa Verde National Park preserves the cliff dwellings of the Ancestral Puebloans, who built elaborate stone structures into canyon walls beginning around 1190 CE; the park was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1978. Great Sand Dunes National Park and Preserve in the San Luis Valley contains the tallest sand dunes in North America, rising up to 750 feet above

References