Estes Valley Voice Podcast

Danny St. John – an Allenspark fixture for more than seven decades

Brett Wilson Season 2 Episode 110

Story by Elisabeth Sherwin

Not many people know that Danny St. John, a fixture in Allenspark for more than 70 years, grew up in Southern California.

Don’t hold that against him. 

He and his family came to Colorado during the summers until he was old enough to move here. 

“I’ve been coming here on and off since I was 1 year old,” he said. 

He and his family came to Colorado during the summers until he was old enough to move here. 

“I’ve been coming here on and off since I was 1 year old,” he said. 

“My roots are here,” he said. “I’ve tried to move away, but these mountains draw me back and I cannot leave.” 

DANNY ST. JOHN

His mother, Irene Hannen, was the second daughter in the family. She married Al St. John, who built a cabin on the property in 1941.

St. John said his whole family was in love with the mountains.

“But at that time, the winters were really harsh. No one lived up here year-round.”

After graduating from high school in California, he also came to the mountains.

He knocked around for a while and did a stint in Southern Colorado, where he met the woman who would become his wife, Rocky (Roxanne). In 1974, he started his own business, Wild Basin Builders. 

In the late 1970s, he began writing a column in The Wind called “Windfalls.” The column expresses his opinions on philosophy, people, events, the environment, and the state of Allenspark. 

Readers also learned about the wisdom of the Zen Tree through his column. He communes with the tree regularly. 

“The Zen Tree teaches us to look at the big picture, the whole planet,” he said. 

He loves to write and has a folder of stories and memoirs dating back to high school. He also attends a weekly online writing workshop with Estes Park author Kevin Wolf. 

He is working on a folk tale, “Old Ned: The Longs Peak Body-Snatcher,” set in the 1920s, about a chef at the Baldpate Inn who chops up the kitchen help and runs off to the mountains to hide.

“I try to write daily,” he said. He is also a teller of tales, entertaining folks with stories during the summer at Meeker Park Lodge. He provides homemade pies for those gatherings of visitors and locals. 

Folks in Allenspark know St. John through his construction business and the Meadow Mountain Café, which he and Rocky bought in 2007. Two of his four children work at the café. His son, Joe, is the cook. 

“I never thought I would own a restaurant,” he said. 

Rocky died in 2015 of breast cancer. St. John did not know if he would keep the café. 

“Joe wanted to continue with it,” he said. So, they did. It is a family affair with daughter Jennifer waitressing and St. John himself doing some baking. Cookies are a specialty. 

He has seen Allenspark change considerably over the years, with the working class shrinking and the retirement community growing. 

He is now 78 years old and is content to spend his coming years in the mountains he loves. 

“My roots are here,” he said. “I’ve tried to move away, but these mountains draw me back and I cannot leave.” 

He suggests that those who want to stay in the mountains and make a living should have two skills. They should be both self-sufficient and be able to diversify.  

He hopes the Meadow Mountain Café reflects those skills. He and Joe are building planters behind the café so they will have fresh greens to serve. They will also sell produce in addition to breads and pies at the Allenspark Farmers’ Market at The Old Gallery this summer. 

Read full story here: