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Adult zebra mussels lining a plastic tube. (Colorado Parks and Wildlife, Contributed)
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Good morning, Colorado.

I used to be one of *those* early morning people, greeting the day by 5:30 a.m. with my first cup of coffee quickly turning into my second. In theory, I still love mornings. Their stillness. How gentle they can be. But over time, I have devolved into a normal person who aggressively snoozes my alarm and struggles to fight the force of gravity willing me to stay in bed. I want to reclaim my early mornings, maybe even become of *those* extra early morning people who set out to begin conquering the day at 4 a.m. It feels like a lofty goal, but a girl can dream. Which is probably exactly what I’ll do as I keep pressing snooze and burrowing deeper into my covers.

Anyway. Let’s rise, maybe stretch a little, get that coffee into our veins and turn over to today’s news, shall we?

A graphic showing how much the ingredients in a burger have increased
Paraprofessional P. Gideon Daniel studies for his teaching certificate at home July 9 in Colorado Springs. Daniel is working toward becoming a teacher through a new degree apprenticeship program that blends online college coursework with on-the-job classroom training. (Brian Malone, Special to The Colorado Sun)

The architects of the new Colorado program say the early interest is a surefire sign that teacher apprenticeships have the potential to bulk up the state’s educator workforce over time and draw more teachers to classrooms who are likely to stay. As Erica Breunlin reports, having 100 teachers in training in the first two years is a good start.

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A graphic showing how much the ingredients in a burger have increased
Crews with Colorado Parks and Wildlife ready mussel-killing chemicals on the shore of Highline Lake near Loma on March 1, 2023. (Barton Glasser, Special to The Colorado Sun)

The Colorado River is now officially “positive” for invasive zebra mussels in the latest failure of containment for the voracious species. It’s the second year in a row they’ve been discovered in the West’s key river channel through Colorado. CPW officials are also dealing with a full-blown adult zebra mussel invasion in a privately owned lake in western Eagle County. Michael Booth has details.

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A graphic showing how much the ingredients in a burger have increased
Anderson Ellis, left, and Dhileep Sivam of Aquagga set up equipment at the Peterson Space Force base PFAS site July 8 in Colorado Springs. Aquagga will use licensed technology patented by the Colorado School of Mines to destroy PFAS the group collects from soil samples onsite. (Mike Sweeney, Special to The Colorado Sun)

It’s going to take massive amounts of innovation and energy to solve Colorado’s “forever chemicals” problem. But PFAS destruction expert Chris Higgins of the Colorado School of Mines, where some of the most promising techniques were launched, wants people who see the Space Force cleanup sites to come away with another impression: hope. Photographer Mike Sweeney toured the Colorado Springs base recently and has some powerful images of innovation.

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A graphic showing how much the ingredients in a burger have increased
The Mancos Creative District logo, featuring burros, is posted large on the side of the Mancos Chamber of Commerce building. The city’s annual Burrofest in June drew almost as many people who live in the southwestern Colorado town. (Ilana Newman, The Daily Yonder)

Mesa Verde Literary Festival, in Mancos, Saturday is for the writers. The award-winners and the best-sellers alongside the fledgling, the emerging, the curious and the just-for-fun types. More than 40 panels and presentations will be tucked into the coffee shops, bookstores and breweries throughout town with authors from all around the country.

Headlining the festival this year are Colorado writer and essayist Pam Houston, who will present with Diné (Navajo) poet Byron Aspaas, as well as Tim Weed, who will talk about nature writing as an antidote to climate despair.

Panels run the gamut of genres, from historical fiction and crafting memoir, to children’s books and graphic novels, to the ins and outs of the small press publishing world. There will also be a children’s poetry workshop and a character writing class for teens.

The festival is free and open to the public, just RSVP with your ZIP code and reading habits here, then check out the full schedule here to start planning your day.

Free; 9 a.m.-8 p.m., Saturday; Various locations in Mancos


Glad we’re all caught up on today’s headlines. Anyone else ready for a nap? Yeah, me neither. We’ll see you back here tomorrow!

Erica & the whole staff of The Sun

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Type of Story: News

Based on facts, either observed and verified directly by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.

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