Miguels Pizza in the Mountains

Posted by overmanwarrior 12 years ago to Philosophy
7 comments | Share | Flag

I had a really cool experience over the weekend, my family took me on a mountain trip to celebrate my birthday and my daughter took me to Miguels Pizza which is a destination rock climbers from all over the world come to in order to eat their freshly baked pizzas.

The place is a hole in the wall dive that is very, very simple. Yet the parking lot in the middle of absolutely nowhere was PACKED. People were sitting on the ground, on beat up picknic tables, stuffed into the small dining room eating pizza. It was a fantastic example of what people are willing to do to embrace a quality product.

While there, I kept thinking of Hugh Akston and the kind of place a person of his quality was working at in the mountains of Colorado. I didn't meet the owner of Miguels but I would not be suprised to learn that he has a similar story. They were too busy for me to speak with him.

I do have video and pictures, but haven't had a chance to organize my thoughts on them yet. I will share when I get them uploaded. I didn't get back into civilization until very late last night.
SOURCE URL: http://www.miguelspizza.com/


Add Comment

FORMATTING HELP

All Comments Hide marked as read Mark all as read

  • Posted by khalling 12 years ago
    looks like a cool place, overman.
    hey, I have a question. if I want to follow you on FB do you have a page? I have posted from your website before, but it would be nice if you were just in my feed
    Reply | Mark as read | Best of... | Permalink  
    • Posted by 12 years ago
      I do have a FB for the book which is on the sidebar to the blog site. But I don't have a personal one. Facebook is a great marketing tool, but I am very skeptical about what is being done with all the info collected on it. Even though you can go to private, I am weary of showing some of the people who watch me how any family network is connected and what they are doing at all hours of the day, since some of them broadcast everything, against my warnings. : )

      I believe that information is sold for a price, and I have no intention to make the information easy to discover. So I don't have a personal account.
      Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
      • Posted by khalling 12 years ago
        Thanks. I was looking for a FB page to your blog. But I will like the book, which I have not yet read, but is coming into the gulch with my daughter next week. :)
        Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
        • Posted by 12 years ago
          Cool, my son-in-law runs the FB site so he tells me what's going on there. It took him several months of constant urging to talk me into it. In the end, he's right about the marketing of novels, which I tend not to think much about after the writing is done. Facebook is a tool that should not be passed up. But to me its simply a mouse trap to collect information with the lure of cheese.
          Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
  • Posted by iroseland 12 years ago
    I love these kind of places..
    While I am a systems architect I have a lot of kitchen experience. I have been trying ( unsuccessfully ) to talk my wife into moving to Ouray Colorado. This place is for sale. http://billygoatsouray.com/

    I could double down.. Live in Ouray and pull a Hugh Akston. The only real problem is that Colorado is working hard to turn themselves into a state where I would not actually want to live.
    Reply | Mark as read | Best of... | Permalink  
  • Posted by 12 years ago
    Here is some details about the owner. My problem with the place when my kids presented it to me as a place to go was that it was way too "hippie" for me. But I think that is a bit miscast in this situation. The owner does call himself a "social servent" but I think he's a guy who has fallen into the belief that success in life comes from altruism and not from the fact that he picks all his own veggies from his garden and starts work every day at 5 AM while also working as an artist. Interesting person.

    Pizza maker, artist, family man, social servant; Red River Gorge, Kentucky

    Climbers will find a welcome bit of reverse discrimination at Miguel’s Pizza, in the heart of the Red River Gorge, in Slade, Kentucky. A pizza box tacked to a tree out front reads “Climbers Only.” The man behind the sign is Portuguese émigré Miguel Ventura, 56, the owner of perhaps the most climber-friendly joint in the country. Miguel bought himself a slice of backwoods real estate in 1984, and the next year opened the Rainbow Door, an ice-cream shop catering to the handful of trad climbers at the RRG then. Now, 24 years later he slings pizza and climbing gear instead, and on a busy spring or fall weekend you’ll find upwards of 80 tents in his campground out back. (Miguel’s wife, Susan, and three kids, Dario, Sarah, and Mark, help run the bustling business.) Miguel makes large woodcarvings, too, and if you’ve eaten his pizza, you’ve eaten from his garden.

    We hooked up wireless Internet service …[But] we’ve heard some people complaining that they liked the old times. People interacted more — now they’re all stuck on their computers. It’s not like the old days. Everybody sat around and chatted, and it’d be more personal. Now, anything that goes on here at Miguel’s is broadcast on the Internet.

    We go through people here every four years, basically — they start as they go through college, and then leave when they graduate. So we’ve gone through four generations already. It’s a cycle, like life.

    We all try to make sense of our own lives. I did the same thing [the climbers here] are doing — I traveled for eight years and was an artist. Then I decided I wanted to settle down and make sense of my life. You just have to fit somewhere.

    I think now, the biggest thing is the globalization — kids are traveling the globe now and trying to make a niche with that. One guy came in trying to sell me chalk bags made in India.

    We’re here as long as we’re supposed to be. That’s always how it’s been.

    I leave here, and the climbers take over, so I don’t know what goes on at night. I think the scariest thing that ever happened was when a tree fell on this young lady’s tent. The power line caught it and kept it from crushing her and her little dog… they used a knife to cut her out.

    I start at 5 in the morning and have two guys who help me prep, and I cook up the crusts and get ready for the day.








    The door to Miguel's. Photo by Devaki Murch.
    Art has always been a way out of boredom. I’ve always done it. I came from Portugal and ended up in Connecticut in a ghetto, so art was kind of an escape for me. So, I kept it up. I used to do paper stuff, lithographs and etchings in the 1970s, running around playing the art world. When I came to Kentucky, there was so much timber here that it became my “paper.” I enjoy carving wood — I’m not very good at it but it looks good enough.

    I get along with climbers. There’s a few we’ve had to straighten out, but climbers are pretty easy to deal with. I like their creativity. It’s neat to go down in the basement and see them drawing, creating things. It’s really good. I couldn’t do this for the tourists. I just couldn’t. It would be boring.

    I think the biggest thing a climber can do is to continue humbling himself. Climbing teaches that, and you should stick with that.

    I never really got into sport climbing. So it’s Fortress Wall, Tower Rock, and the Long Wall for me. Trad — that’s what these guys taught me how to do first. Sport climbing — well, I’ve gotten up a few 5.9s and 5.10s, but that’s about it. I really don’t train enough for anything harder. The thing I would like to do is have someone guide me up something big in Yosemite, something tall. I think [big-wall] climbers are really like astronauts. They should make money being astronauts instead of hanging out on cliffs. Because they’ve got it.

    Occasionally I go out and climb, but I never became overwhelmed. Climbing is a good recreational sport. You get to meet a lot of people. My children are all into it — my son is too much into it right now. I wish he’d run the business more.

    I’m a janitor, I’m a pizza man, and I’m a social servant. I’m a gardener, carver, husband, and father. I mean, you just do it all. That’s really life. You don’t have a title — you just exist. Some days you have good days; some days your back hurts.

    Reply | Mark as read | Best of... | Permalink  

FORMATTING HELP

  • Comment hidden. Undo