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MAILING ADDRESS (USPS)
PO BOX 6473
VAIL, COLORADO 81658

PHYSICAL ADDRESS (UPS/FEDEX)
1000 LIONSRIDGE LOOP, SUITE 3B
VAIL, COLORADO 81657

PHONE (970) 393-5912

Vail Veterans Program is a 501c3 Non-profit Organization.
Tax ID 20-5254885

RECENT NEWS

VAIL VETERANS PROGRAM CELEBRATES 20 YEARS
March 13, 2024

VAIL, CO – Nonprofit has provided life-changing events for over 4,700 wounded service members and their families. READ MORE HERE

Wounded veterans and families find healing and support in Vail
February 3, 2024

VAIL – Vail Veterans Program brings 80 participants to Vail Mountain The Vail Veterans Program hosted 80 participants for its Winter Family Program earlier this week. Seventeen wounded veterans, 17 spouses or companions, 45 children and one hospital staff member rounded out the group. Everyone enjoyed ski and snowboard lessons with the instructors from Vail… Read more »

Vail Veterans Programs’ Golf in the Rockies returns to help military injured
August 30, 2023

The Vail Veterans Program brings out wounded warriors for lessons on and off the golf course. Colorado is known for summer activities like rafting, biking and fly fishing, but golfing is right up there as one of the top sports to do here, especially with the golf ball going farther at this altitude. The Vail… Read more »

In The News

NBC Today | Vail Veterans get wounded warriors moving in the snow

July 2, 2015

On these Colorado ski slopes, wounded veterans are not only learning a sport they once thought was out of reach, they’re also gaining confidence to rebuild their lives.

“The thing about skiing, once I’m up there on the mountain, I’m on equal footing with everybody else,” Col. Gregory Gadson told TODAY during his fourth trip to the Vail slopes since losing both legs in Bagdad in 2007.

Gadson is a graduate of the Vail Veterans Program, which has taught wounded warriors to ski for the past ten years.

Lt. Col. David Rozelle, a program co-founder, noted that amputees used to face bleak prognosis in the early years of the recent conflicts abroad.

“Now they’re making it back,” said Rozelle, who refused to give up one of his favorite sports after he lost part of a leg in Baghdad in 2003. “They get in this program and they find their new normal here.”

Cheryl Jenson, the program’s executive director, said she initially came on board thinking the program was strictly about ski and snowboard instruction.

“But what we realized, there’s a lot more healing that takes place here, on and off the mountain,” she said.

Last May, Petty Officer Taylor Morris lost parts of all four limbs in Afghanistan. Today, he’s hitting the Colorado slopes.

“It’s a great feeling to go out and snowboard on your own,” he said.

His girlfriend, Danielle Kelly, said the program gives the couple inspiration about their future.

“This offers us an activity that we’ll be able to do years down the road and hopefully one day with our kids,” she said. “We’ll be able to go out and ski.”

Retired Capt. Melissa Stockwell, who lost part of her leg when she was injured in Baghdad in 2004, is now a veteran of the program.

“I was pretty wobbly at first, you know, on this the bunny hill. By the end of the week, I was up and flying down,” she said. “And I never really felt so free in my entire life.”

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