Audio By Carbonatix
What kind of tattoo would a three-year-old get? That’s probably not the first question that most of the people walking or driving by
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No, Mondragon (who is married to a Westword employee) didn’t tattoo his son. “A lot of people know me and my relationship with my son. They know I would never do anything like that, so it’s kind of funny,” he says. “It’s pissed off a lot of people, and it’s open for interpretation, for sure. There are definitely people who are thinking that we’re condoning tattooing kids, for some reason, even though it’s so ridiculous.
“Kids try to grow up faster than they’re ready for,” he continues. “Being a father/son picture, it shows my face, and I’m kind of giving the expression, like, ‘You asked for it.’ His face, with him screaming like that, he understands, like, ‘Maybe I’m not ready to grow up this fast and I need to enjoy my childhood.'”
This is the third mural that Gamma has painted for Mondragon — and the most successful by far. “The past two were characters and pretty much freehand; no planning went into them whatsoever,” says Gamma, explaining that the mural was based on a photo that Mondragon staged. “This was a little more satisfying and a lot harder to execute.”
The other murals, which represented milestones in Mondragon’s life, stayed up for a few months, but the tattoo artist plans to keep this one up longer than the others. “I don’t think I’ll be able to paint over that one. It’ll probably be there for at least a year.”
Bearly there: There’s an undeniable fascination about urban bear rescues, as witnessed by the way a photo of a bear falling out of a tree in Boulder went viral last year. No telling whether images of a bear being plucked from a tree in Colorado Springs last weekend will become equally ubiquitous. But the operation, which involved not one, but two tranquilizer darts and a fire truck’s ladder, was certainly striking. (You can see photos of both rescues on the Latest Word blog at westword.com).
The story didn’t end well for the bear in the April 2012 photo: it was reportedly relocated to a wilderness area fifty miles from Boulder, but found its way back into the vicinity of Boulder within weeks and was killed after being struck by a car on Highway 36. Colorado Parks and Wildlife staffers are doing everything they can to avoid a similar fate for the Colorado Springs bear, a 200-pound female found in a tree near the Colorado Springs intersection of South Chelton Road and South Claremont Street. According to the Colorado Springs Gazette, the bear will be taken to a locale one hundred miles away from where she perched — double the distance of the Boulder bear.