The Denver Post

Nederland officials reflect on loss of the town’s “Frozen Dead Guy”

- By Dana Cadey

For decades, Bredo Morstoel was Nederland’s iconic “Frozen Dead Guy.” Starting in 1993, Morstoel’s cryogenica­lly preserved body was housed in a shed just outside the town, and the odd story even inspired Nederland’s annual Frozen Dead Guy Days festival.

That all changed last year, when Morstoel was moved to a new home. His body is now part of the Internatio­nal Cryonics Museum at the Stanley Hotel in Estes Park, the town that recently took over hosting Frozen Dead Guy Days.

For the Nederland community, the reactions to the loss of its Frozen Dead Guy varied. Town Administra­tor Miranda Fisher said those who didn’t mind learning of Morstoel’s move were mostly of the belief that the festival had outgrown the town, anyway.

“There are some people who really do kind of subscribe to the idea that ( the festival) was too large and too big for Nederland,” Fisher said. “So this was just kind of the … finishing piece of this whole process and transition.”

On the other hand, Fisher said, some Nederland residents were devastated.

“The loss of the festival was really heartbreak­ing and concerning, and people are upset about it,” Fisher said. “And so having this happen too was kind of like, ‘ Now Nederland has lost it all together.’ ”

Fisher said that when the festival was purchased by Stanley

Hotel owner John Cullen in December 2022, there was a disconnect between the event in Estes Park and its namesake in Nederland.

“To me, this does feel final, and it makes sense that this would happen,” she said of Morstoel’s move. “It means that officially all aspects of Frozen Dead Guy Days, including the man, are now in a different jurisdicti­on.”

Nederland Mayor Billy Giblin spoke to a different response from the community: apathy.

“There wasn’t a huge outcry to keep him, or to let him stay,” Giblin said. “I think a lot of people don’t care, or don’t know. It’s kind of sad to me that he went

away, and that was that. There doesn’t seem to be much of an impact, or a sense of loss, or even recognitio­n.”

Giblin said there were still people in town who did want to see Morstoel either leave or be buried, believing him to be “a bit of bad luck” for the town.

“I might be in the minority of people who really wanted him to stay,” Giblin said. “I felt like the festival had left us, but the real myth, the real deal, was Bredo.”

On Aug. 25, Morstoel’s body was removed from its shed with little fanfare; Giblin recalled learning of its departure that morning, then seeing the empty shed later that day.

“I was sad to see him go,” Giblin

said. “I just felt like it was kind of the end of a chapter.”

Giblin explained that without the money or political will to add a cryogenics lab to the town, the move to Estes Park was a logical choice for Trygve Bauge, Morstoel’s grandson, to make.

Last year, an event surfaced in Nederland to fill the gap left by Frozen Dead Guy Days’ departure. The new winter festival, Nederdays, is a smaller and more intimate celebratio­n of Nederland that emphasizes local businesses and family- friendly activities. Dates haven’t been nailed down for Nederdays yet, but Fisher said the town is considerin­g some time in April.

 ?? CLIFF GRASSMICK — DAILY CAMERA ?? The Banana Hammock team shows off its coffin racer during the parade in Nederland in 2022.
CLIFF GRASSMICK — DAILY CAMERA The Banana Hammock team shows off its coffin racer during the parade in Nederland in 2022.

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