
Have a Happy and Safe Holiday, and to all your little ghosts and goblins, may their tricks be non existent and their treats be nothing but candy. (You parents get to deal with the resultant sugar highs! Talk about things that go bump in the night! …and all the next day!)
Check out our events calendar tab above for Halloween events and trick or treating around Truckee and Lake Tahoe’s north shore. The neighborhood across from Safeway in Truckee has also been known to put on quite a show for those looking for a more traditional Trick or Treating experience. (You can also donate candy at Safeway for this generous neighborhood that shoulders the brunt of the Trick or Treating for the entire area. Show them some love.)

THINK OF ME, LYNN RICHARDSON, FOR ALL OF YOUR LAKE TAHOE AND TRUCKEE REAL ESTATE NEEDS!
Share this: Lynn Richardson, Your Friend in High Places
by Tim Hauserman

October 24, 9am to 3pm, North Tahoe Ski Swap, North Tahoe High School, Tahoe City
Now in it’s 52nd year the North Tahoe Ski Swap is always a huge event with tons of new and used ski and snowboarding gear for the winter, as well as equipment for the rest of the year as well. The program supports North Tahoe School and North Tahoe High School. Drop off your gear to sell on Friday October 23rd between 3-9 pm. Come back to shop the next day between 9 am and 3 pm. If you volunteer you can get early entry and the coveted first dips on the good stuff. For more information go to the North Tahoe Ski/Sport Swap Facebook page www.facebook.com/NorthTahoeSkiSportSwap or email Jane at northtahoesportswap@gmail.com
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November 7, 11am to 4pm, Truckee Ski and Snowboard Swap, Community Recreation Center, Truckee. The 33rd annual Truckee Ski and Snowboard Swap supports Truckee Youth Sports, and is Truckee’s big ski swap event. It includes a merchant check in between 5-7 pm on November 6th, and public check in between 7-9 am on November 7th (the time to bring in your equipment to sell). Hours are 11 am to 4 pm.
tdrpd.org
November 14, 10am to 4pm. Tahoe Cross-Country Ski Education Association Ski Swap, Tahoe Cross-Country Ski area, Tahoe City
Here is your chance to get the latest and greatest in cross-country ski and snowshoe gear. Proceeds support Tahoe Cross Country Ski Area, which after the last few paltry winters, could really use your support. Bring in your used gear between 3-9pm on Friday November 13th. Not familiar with cross-country ski gear? Experts volunteers will be on hand to get you what you need. www.tahoexc.org

THINK OF ME, LYNN RICHARDSON, FOR ALL OF YOUR LAKE TAHOE AND TRUCKEE REAL ESTATE NEEDS!
Share this: Lynn Richardson, Your Friend in High Places
By Michelle Portesi
Situated off the main road at the south end of Fallen Leaf Lake is the trail to the old Glen Alpine Springs Resort. A vacation destination of a bygone era, still standing today are several buildings designed by the famous San Francisco Architect Bernard Maybeck (1862-1957) designer of the San Francisco Palace of Fine Art. While some buildings are already boarded up for the winter and therefor more difficult to appreciate their beauty, what is unusual about these buildings is their great expanses of glass windows supported by metal frames and stone buttresses.

One of the buildings at Glen Alpine Springs. This one is boarded up for winter, but you can still take a peak inside.

Building without the snow covers.
I was hoping to get some shots of fantastic fall color as the drive in has massive stands of aspen, but as our drought has taken its toll on our fall color display this year, I’m hoping for that massive El Nino to show up to remedy the situation for next year. Still, the drive in was lovely as the one lane road meandered past gorgeous high country horse pastures and the shores of Fallen Leaf Lake. This is a seasonal lake, as the road isn’t plowed once the snow flies, and the intimate, limited development of the area reminded my friend and me of the movie ‘On Golden Pond’. In fact, so much so, we both said it simultaneously!

Boat docks at Fallen Leaf Lake
Once you near the south end of the lake, the road splits, and the sign to Glen Alpine Springs is clearly marked. A ways up you will find a parking lot and the beginning of the trail head. While not a long trail, much of it is on an incline and the ‘road’ such as it is, is very rocky. Be warned. This is no trail for flip-flops. Hiking boots are strongly suggested.
The trail does flatten out in areas through heavily forested glens, passing streams, and even a waterfall that still has water this late in the season, and it’s all worth it. Once you stumble onto the remains of Glen Alpine Springs Resort, you’ll have plenty to explore. The resort, once the site of supposedly health inducing natural soda springs, the gazebo still houses the terminus of the small, brackish, iron filled bubbly water. No, I don’t recommend drinking it!

Trail to Glen Alpine Springs

Dining Hall at Glen Alpine Springs.

Interior of the Dining Hall
From there, you can continue along the trail to many back country lakes. We didn’t realize it at the time, but there is another falls to the left of the parking area. Next time…
Hike it now, as the road around Fallen Leaf supposedly closes at the end of October.
If you are driving to your destination along the west shore, be sure to stop at PDQ Market in Tahoma along the way for some awesome sandwiches to take on your hike. My favorite is the pesto bread with roast beef and pepperchinis.
For more information and history about Glen Alpine Springs, go here:
www.sierranevadageotourism.org/content/glen-alpine-fallssprings-trail
laketahoe.com/content/glen-alpine-springs-resort

Dining Hall at Glen Alpine Springs

Fall colors at Glen Alpine Springs
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THINK OF ME, LYNN RICHARDSON, FOR ALL OF YOUR LAKE TAHOE AND TRUCKEE REAL ESTATE NEEDS!
Share this: Lynn Richardson, Your Friend in High Places