Author Archives: Jill Adler

Duelling Pianos at Kimball Junction

It’s been a long time since Club Suede’s owners left the country, leaving the Junction’s only nightclub and live music venue shuttered amid rumors of controversy and fines. Though the upstairs bar, lounge and concert venue at Kimball Junction is still on the seller’s block, a new hotspot is finally emerging. Molly Blooms, Irish Pub and Burger Bar, will be rocking the northside of Park City with dueling pianos. The idea sprang from long-time local singer/songwriter Rich Wyman and buddy Michael Rogers. The two play Dec. 29 (next Saturday night) then hand off the podium to guest pianists every Saturday night during the winter.

Molly Blooms owner Gregg Davison told The Park Record, “I was thoroughly impressed by the quality, the entertainment value and the interaction with the crowd [at the Tavernacle Dueling Piano Bar in Salt Lake City]. I knew I just needed to get that show in Molly Blooms.”


Jamming at the Tavernacle

If you’ve never witnessed a dueling piano event, hold onto your seats. The vibe is electric. It’s essentially karaoke with the whole room singing to live piano music and no autotuner.

Bar goers fill out request forms, donate some green and sit back and wait to hear their song. The more you pay, the sooner the tune. Guests can even pay to make the song stop. A bidding war could potentially start between those who want the song to continue and those who don’t.

“It’s not a scripted show, but we do have a couple of songs in our back pockets to keep the show rolling or to interject some energy,” Wyman told the Record. “We also have laptops with us, so we can call up the chords of songs we’re not quite familiar with.”


The main room is designed around two baby grand pianos with concerts beginning at 9 p.m. Molly Blooms is open to all ages until 10 p.m. because the spot between Park City Coffee Roasters and the Kimball Post Office is also a restaurant. That makes for a great way to end the evening with the family. Burger and blues coming up!

Reservations are suggested. (435) 645-0844.

Other after-hours venues in Kimball Junction:

Jupiter Bowl, 435.658.BOWL (2695).

Maxwell’s, 435.645.7468

Last Minute Gifts For the Mountain Dog

When you’re hanging up those stockings and wrapping gifts for under the tree, don’t forget your ‘other’ child. Here are a few last minute gift ideas to make your pooch want to lick the beard off Santa.

Rover will shred the wrapping when he spies the Hide-A-Squirrel dog toy. The plush “log” comes with three, cute squeaky squirrels that taunt him from various openings. Your dog scatters the squirrels and you stuff them back in the log making it a toy for both of you. Bonus- since he’s ‘removing’ the rodents it’s like pulling stuffing from a normal plushy so he’s less apt to rip them apart. $18.

Nothing like doggy treat crumbs lining your pockets, right? Keep your gloves on and the crumbs out with the Lickety Stik by PetSafe. It looks like roll-on deodorant but dispenses a liquid that tastes like bacon, chicken, cheese, peanut butter, beef or liver pets will flip for. You can feel good knowing it’s low calorie and made with natural ingredients. $6.99.

A leash that not only looks tough but can take a good beating is what you’ll want this year. The Mountain Leash is a thick nylon rope with high impact and water resistant hardware to hold up whether it’s being dragged through snow and mud or used as a chew toy. $18.39.


Those without dogs may consider a kennel akin to cruelty but dogs think of them as home. The Petmate Vari Kennel Ultra is the perfect solution for security while you’re out for long ski days or when you want to keep your dog from getting mud and snow everywhere. The ‘protective’ playpen is made of heavy-duty, easy to clean plastic, that offers tons of venting and an interior floor ‘moat’ to keep your friend dry. It’s airline and car safe and will withstand impact if there’s an accident or skis slip. $79.99, www.petco.com.


Toss him a Snowball that won’t disintegrate. The Orbee-Tuff Snowball is the world’s first doggie-durable, buoyant, bouncy, minty rubber ball that’s 100 guaranteed, non-toxic, recyclable, washable and non-melting. $9.95.

Snow Sightings

Utah’s winter has finally kicked in. Perhaps last season’s weaksauce snow turnout was Mother Nature’s way of putting us in our place. One can only hope that with this past week of storms, we’re back to “normal”. At least it sounds that way on Facebook.

FB is to the ski industry what the movies were to the military. There’s no quicker/better way to get the stoke rolling and to get everyone to ‘enlist’. There’s that brief, pure storm and Whammo! hundreds of posts and reposts:

“Received 10 inches of snow today”, “The Bird Gets the First ‘Dump’ of the Year!”, “Got some fresh stuff today! Who is heading up?”, “Bring it on”, “The white stuff is coming!”, “Yippee!!!!”

Carston Oliver at Alta Resort, December 15, 2012. Photo Posted on Facebook by Lee Cohen.

Carston Oliver at Alta Resort, December 15, 2012. Photo by Lee Cohen.

 

 

 

 

 

December is bringing cold temps and more snow than we ever saw last Christmas. Social media photos of skiers blasting through knee-deep plus erupt faster than zits on a teenager. “Snow in the forecast,” is all it takes to rile the natives.

Utah gets snow and Facebook lights up like Disneyland’s Main Street before a parade. Welcome to, as one prosaic poster wrote, Ski Season Foreplay.

Utah’s 14 resorts are now all open for business and one to two feet of snow is expected by Wednesday. Plus, the evening chill is enough to keep the guns cranked. Most of the resorts are touting ‘increased snowmaking’ as their greatest improvements for 2013; a result of the barren slopes of 2012.

Only Deer Valley and Snowbird threw down the gauntlet this past summer, spending millions on perceivable upgrades. I gotta say it’s about time for both of the two new high-speed quad lifts that debut this season.


The “old” Deer Crest lift. Photo courtesy of skilifts.org.

Deer Valley has replaced the excruciatingly slow Deer Crest lift on, you guessed it, Deer Crest. The new “Mountaineer Express” will carry 1200 skiers/hour much to the chagrin I’m sure of ski instructors who often took clients there to kill time. Look for that scenic side ofn the lower mountain to see huge upticks in skier traffic on its eight groomed runs. I’ve had my eye on the line under the lift ever since they opened Deer Crest but I’ve yet to see it open. Maybe now with popularity will come access.

DV invested more than $8 million over the summer (Snow Park Lodge was renovated and the Empire Lodge deck remodeled as well) but it’ll be Snowbird’s upgrade that makes all the difference in the Wasatch this year. The new Doppelmayr High Speed Little Cloud Express will zip riders to Hidden Peak in half the time. I foresee more skier traffice this year for the mere fact that you won’t have to wait an hour in the tram line to get fresh tracks on a powder day anymore (fingers crossed). Ride Peruvian, cruise into Mineral Basin, ride Mineral Express and drop over to LC for sweet laps in the bowl or, if the Tunnel isn’t yet open and you feel like parking in Gad Valley, ride Gadzoom and go straight to LC.

If reports are correct, the new Little Cloud lift is a hit. Skiers claimed it felt like the mountain was empty on the lift’s opening weekend. Now if only, UDOT (Utah Dept. of Transportation) could figure out how to make the drive up Little Cottonwood Canyon feel empty we’d really be in business.


Ba-Bye old Little Cloud!

P.S. The SkiLink proposal to join Canyons and Solitude resorts is still trotting along. Salt Lake County Councilman Michael Jensen and Canyons Resort Managing Director Mike Goar spoke to the U.S. House of Representatives Natural Resources Committee Subcommittee on National Parks, Forests, and Public Lands on December 2, 2012. Many in the ski industry think adding this kind of resort-to-resort access will be a game changer.

Last Minute Gift Ideas For Mountain Folk

Alta’s 75th Anniversary Ale


Kick off the New Year with a special toast to Alta Ski Resort. In fact, they’re helping you celebrate 75 years of skiing with their own special brew. The beer is bottled and packaged by the award-winning Wasatch Brewery and it goes down as smoothly as any of Wasatch’s popular ales. The brewmeister made it a deeper brown to represent Alta’s ‘Steep and Deep’ and fans couldn’t be more excited to tip back this nod to one of their favorite resorts. It packs a 4% kick at $7.99 a six pack. Pick one up at the Wasatch Beer Store, 1763 S. 300 West, in Salt Lake City. Also look for them in local Utah grocery stores and on tap.

Stabilicers


Move over CatTracks, there’s a more durable, pocketable option out there. The new Stabilicers make it easy to get from Point A to B when your streets and walkways are covered in snow and ice. The traction comes from aggressive cleats and tread and the Elastomer plastic keeps them in place. The best part is you won’t instantly tear them when you pull them on or off your boots. Stabilicers come in three styles depending on your activity- Sport, Lite (pedestrian) and Original for heavy-duty hiking, hunting, etc. The Lite ones are the best for commuters as they roll up and fit in a pocket or purse. $21.

Cuddle Bear


You don’t have to be a baby to love this adorable, cuddly, flat teddy bear. Everyone fell in love with these shearling creatures after Park City Main Steet’s hip store the Flight Boutique gifted them out during the Sundance Film Festival last year. The Elks & Angels Cuddle Bear is easy to clean and naturally bacteria and dirt resistant. Plus, sheepskin breathes, never smells, is flame retardant, resistant to static electricity, and hypoallergenic so it makes a fantastic gift at any age. Did we mention how cute they are?
$49.

Ortovox Beacon Recall

Ortovox Beacon Recall

The last thing you need when frantically searching for your best bud in an avalanche is for your beacon to switch out of search mode. Ortovox is recalling a small group of its 3+ beacons when testing revealed that they switched to transmit mode after two minutes.

The avalanche transceivers switched unintentionally and internal tests showed that the problem is part of a particular production batch shipped to vendors after October 17, 2012.

“Despite our continuously optimized quality control measures, we have now discovered a scenario that has never occurred before in our QA processes,” Ortovox announced on their website.

The glitch seems to be caused by a new internal motion sensor used for “follow-up avalanche switchover”. Apparently, the sensor fails to detect your motion while you’re searching, and turns the beacon to transmit. While you can still manually switch back to search, it’s not an ideal way to use the transceiver.

Ortovox Beacon Recall

Head over to the Ortovox website and input your beacon’s serial number to see if it’s part of the recall. The 10-digit number appears on the beacon’s display two digits at a time when the 3+ is switched on. 

FYI- Your beacon still does the job if you’re buried (i.e. not moving) despite this issue.

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