
Stephanie Earls
Reporter at The Gazette (Colorado Springs, CO)
Stephanie Earls is a reporter and columnist for The Gazette in Colorado Springs.
Articles
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1 week ago |
gazette.com | Stephanie Earls
Dino Salvatori does not partake in that which he peddles at Palmer Lake’s Dead Flowers, but he’s nonetheless a devoted promoter of weed, and rock ‘n' roll, from his stage in the tiny town northwest of Colorado Springs, where sales of recreational marijuana have been legal since 2023. No gas station, no grocery store, but two rec grass shops just off the main drag through a hamlet of about 2,500.
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1 week ago |
gazette.com | Breeanna Jent |Alex Edwards |Stephanie Earls
Retail sales of recreational marijuana began in Colorado Springs Tuesday morning with less a bang — or bong — than a whisper, with a number of shops still awaiting delivery of the product at the heart of a municipal tangle whose roots date back more than a decade. For the 27 locations approved by the city to engage in such business, sales could legally begin, to customers 21 and up, as soon as doors opened on Tax Day 2025.
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2 weeks ago |
gazette.com | Stephanie Earls
Not so long and forever ago, a group of Colorado Springs entrepreneurs herded its creative energies and funds into a startup brewery named after an epic display of chin whiskers. When we first met Goat Patch Brewing Co.’s founding friends in 2016, they’d secured an anchor location inside Lincoln Center, a former elementary school and then under-development community and small-business hub on Cascade Avenue.
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3 weeks ago |
gazette.com | Stephanie Earls
Not so long and forever ago, a group of Colorado Springs entrepreneurs herded its creative energies and funds into a startup brewery named after an epic display of chin whiskers. When we first met Goat Patch Brewing Co.’s founding friends in 2016, they’d secured an anchor location inside Lincoln Center, a former elementary school and then under-development community and small-business hub on Cascade Avenue.
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3 weeks ago |
gazette.com | Stephanie Earls
It’s the butt of jokes and metaphors invoking locomotives and lawn equipment. For those producing the seismic zzzzzs, snoring’s also usually someone else’s problem. Or, so it begins. “I guess kind of the selfish part of this is, it didn’t really affect me,” said 68 year-old Mike Guber, as his wife — seated beside him on the couch at their Colorado Springs home — nodded in silent, vehement agreement. The snoring certainly affected others in the house, especially the one sleeping next to him.
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RT @IketheScribe: Multiple police cruisers and ambulances at the scene of a reported shooting in Old Colorado City. I count about 20 vehicl…

Do they even make snow boots as tall as this snow?? (Also, is there anything duct tape can't do?) @csgazette #ColoradoSprings #cowx #snow #snowmageddon #snowpocalypse #notadrift https://t.co/EWjIStKAMO

Brilliant.

Did you know if you hold an ermine up to your ear, you can hear what it’s like to be attacked by an ermine? https://t.co/CS20M9XDjh