A Wonderful Wheelchair-Accessible Place to Stay in the Rocky Mountains

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Rooms with a view!

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Oh my goodness! I want to share with you a great place to stay if you ever get to Estes Park, Colorado. It’s the Appenzell Inn.

I have vacationed there twice now and I love it! Was just there last month. Reminiscent of a Swiss alpine lodge, the Appenzell is conveniently located right on the paved Riverwalk in Estes Park. The Riverwalk is a meandering sidewalk (at least five miles long) that, on a scooter, walking, or using a manual wheelchair leads you right into town, to the Visitors’ Center, or around Lake Estes depending which direction you want to go. The hotel has a year-’round indoor heated pool with a chairlift. In the summertime, visitors are delighted by a host of colorful flowers at every turn and are greeted by surprise brooks, ponds and waterfalls nestled into the landscaped grounds.

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Those who dine on the restaurant deck enjoy the sounds of this lovely water feature.

At the Appenzell there are several wheelchair-accessible rooms, but my favorite is the Patio Room on the ground level. It has easy access from close parking spots and a cute patio right outside the room’s entrance door. There is also a nicely ramped hotel dinner-only restaurant next door and up a story that is open in the summer and provides room service.

Lunch on the patio right outside the room.

Lunch and chit chat on the patio right outside the room.

When you enter the Patio Room you’ll see that there is a small kitchenette, a comfortable king size bed at the perfect height for a wheelchair-user and an accessible bathroom. You can ask the hotel for a bath bench right now, but they plan to renovate soon adding a roll-in shower and an ADA-height toilet. I love the three windows that allow dappled mountain sunlight and fresh air to permeate the room. If you want to be cozy both at night and early in the cool mornings, the centrally located gas fireplace turns on with a timer switch. As it crackles and warms, sipping on a hot cup of room-brewed coffee or tea is a heavenly touch. The built-in dining table and desk are the right height, easy to access. If you move some furniture around a little, there is lots of floor space for wheeling. Two difficult things: the microwave and kitchen sink are high and tough to use, but the dishwasher and fridge are easy to reach. Prices for this room are seasonal and range from $110.00-$180.00 per night.

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There is a wheelchair-accessible campsite at Sprague Lake near Estes Park.

Estes Park, Colorado is a gorgeous place to visit. About 8,000 feet up, it is at the gateway to Rocky Mountain National Park. There are many paved hiking spots and even an accessible campsite or two in the area–great for anyone with a post-polio disability.

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We saw this guy right outside our room at the Appenzell Inn.

There are many kinds of wildlife around–elk, moose, big-horned sheep and bears. Sometimes they like to amble into town for a swim on a hot day in the river or for a bite to eat from the trash bins behind restaurants.

When I visited Estes Park I rented a fairly large scooter that could steady me on the slanted sidewalks. Travel scooters are tippy on mountain terrain. All I had to do was call Mobility and More in Loveland, CO. They delivered and picked up the scooter and were very cordial. Click here for more information.

If you want to have fun in the stunning Rocky Mountains, go to Estes Park and stay at the Appenzell Inn and enjoy the wonderful walks into town and around the mountain lakes…

Right behind Starbuck’s along the Riverwalk…Shop StarbucksStore.com

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As you’re rolling into town…

Do you know of any great places to stay that really work for wheelchair-users or crutch-walkers?

Would love to hear about them!

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“Wheel-friends” at Sprague Lake!

Advice From a Beautiful, Healthy Friend

Ugh! Struggle…struggle…struggle. That’s me trying to lose weight. I have such a hard time with that. Recently I wrote to a slender gorgeous friend who has a post-polio disability and is a power wheelchair user. I asked her how she stays so slim. She shared her secrets. What do you think? What have you tried that worked? We need good ideas! 

Here’s what Linda writes…

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Oh, Sunny, where shall I begin?

10461966_10153083515964815_3582603946940855215_nI “work” on my weight 24/7 so have many various techniques. My program is post polio friendly; and as you know, I am a full-time powerchair user, so my weight program must be pretty much solely comprised of caloric restriction. Nevertheless, energy is important to polio survivors, so I do a number of things to keep my energy up. My nutrition heroes are Dr. Joel Fuhrman (who often does ‘specials’ for PBS), Dr. Mehmet Oz, and Adelle Davis whom I latched onto in the Sixties and never let go. Her main book is Let’s Eat Right to Keep Fit  and it is really amazing how true her information is today in 2014 as it was in 1954. Good grief, that is 60 years ago!

When friends ask me what I do, I start by saying I gave up everything white, which I did. No white bread, no cake (well, duh), no white rice, no white potato, no white pasta, etc. What else that I do NOT eat: no dairy, no sugar, no exceptions.

That is an easy way to explain it in telegram format. Then if they want more detail, and they usually do, I go into more depth explaining what 5 things I DO eat daily. So here goes.

(1)  I eat a large green salad every day, and put some raw onion and add in some shredded cruciferous veggies. I dress it with walnut oil and apple cider vinegar. That is my principle meal of the day and I really look forward to it.

(2)  I eat ½ to 1 cup of hot soup or stew containing beans and other low-glycemic vegetables (no potatoes). I prepare it on the weekend and then have some each weekday. Here is the low-glycemic veggie list that Dr. Oz suggests. http://www.doctoroz.com/videos/low-glycemic-vegetable-list

(3)  I eat 1-3 fresh fruits a day, especially berries, plums, apples, and oranges. Not sure that those fruits are the absolute best for nutrition and weight loss, but they are the ones I like best. 🙂

(4)  I eat about an ounce of roasted or raw nuts and seeds daily, utilizing some chia seeds, flax seeds, and walnuts. I splurged on a Vitamix Blender and formerly used a Nutri-Bullet blender to pulverize these foods into smoothies.

(5)  I eat a large serving of steamed greens daily, and add onions in all of these dishes since Dr Joel Fuhrman writes about how healthy onions are and he raves about their anti-cancer properties. Besides that, I like their taste so it is easy to incorporate them into all my meals.

You may be wondering, “Where’s the beef?”  Well, I do eat animal protein, but just in small quantities. I mostly eat salmon and chicken and then dice it and put it into my green salad. That is where the “post polio friendly” bit comes in. I remember a wonderful article by Dr. Lauro Halstead saying how protein at each meal helped him with weight loss and energy; it was probably in Managing Post-Polio: A Guide to Living and Aging Well with Post-Polio Syndrome.

Now, I must conclude by saying you seem to be an ideal weight to me, Sunny. However, friends used to say that about me and only I knew what I was hiding under all those baggy clothes. Ha ha.

Any more questions? I am more than happy to answer them.

Hugs and Happiness,

Linda
Linda Wheeler Donahue
President, The Polio Outreach of CT
Director, Independence Northwest
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