Author Archives: Jill Adler

Indoor Rock Climbing Outdoors

ross park

Photo by Ryan Freitas

There’s a stout little place called Ross Park in Idaho you climbers should know about. Sure, when people mention Pocatello it often conjures thoughts of some poh-dunk, hick town where residents eat potatoes, chew tobacco, ridicule non-white people and carry shotguns in their trucks. Well, Pa, it just ain’t true; except for the gun part. But this is the West.

Within Southeastern Idaho’s largest city is a top-rated university (ISU). A booming high-tech industry, hot springs, several clean, pet-friendly hotels and the West’s largest outdoor climbing gym, er, park have sprouted around it.

History of Ross Park

Ross Park, appropriately named after a pioneering mayor of Pocatello who later became Governor of Idaho, is the focal point of the city’s entire 34 Parks and Rec system.  Ancient lava ledges of multi-faceted basalt separate the upper and lower green parks (Shady Side and Sunny Side) and make for ideal sport climbs. 

The walls offer what is arguably the best outdoor bouldering and top roping within 50 paces of any city street. Drive up and park right in front of the crag. Walk across a sidewalk-sized patch of grass and meet the Shady Side- over 60 boulder problems of every degree of difficulty. A quick walk up a grassy knoll on the East end puts you right on top of that wall. Drop a rope from any one of 30 anchors for your toprope pleasure. The “Sunny Side” of Ross offers 60+ relatively-short (40’) traditional gear and bolted sport leads, but you can walk or drive up to the top of Sunny Side and throw down a toprope if you prefer.

Idaho State University Loves Climbing

 The ISU Outdoor program began bolting the Sunny Side climbs in the late 90s. They started with the more difficult routes first; working their way towards bolting the easier ones over the following seasons so you can find  lead routes for all levels. 

Photo by Ryan Freitas

 

ISU has practically taken ownership of Ross Park. They run climbing programs, offer free downloads of the most comprehensive climbing and bouldering guides to the area written by their instructors and host one of the oldest and most entertaining climbing competitions in the Northwest, The Pocatello Pump.

When you tire of climbing, hang out with the native animals of Idaho at the Pocatello Zoo, located inside Ross Park. The park also features the Bannock County Historical Museum, the Fort Hall Replica detailing life as it was during the early pioneer days. Want more climbing? Drive less than an hour north to Massacre Rocks State Park. You’ll find another 500+ climbs.

Ross Park Specifics

Pocatello is 150 miles north of Salt Lake City, Utah, at the intersection of Highways I-15 and I-86. The climate stays sunny and dry almost year-round. Ross Park is at the south end of Pocatello at I-15 & 5th Ave (Exit 67). Go N on 5th. Turn L on Fredregill. Turn L on 2nd, continuing to the rocks on L. Contact the Pocatello Convention and Visitors Bureau, 208.233.7333. The Pocatello Pump occurs in September-208.236.3912. 

Ski Areas To Stay Open Till August

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Memorial Day weekend unofficially kicked off summer but it looks like it really will be an endless winter for skiers in the U.S. this year. With epic base depths surpassing 700″  and late season snowfall, coverage has reached all-time highs. And though while Park City and Deer Valley resorts in Utah incurred the wrath of locals for closing when the town was still covered in white, other ski areas tripped over each other to extend their seasons. Many lasted at least through April. Some, like Breckenridge, Colo., added an extra month to their calendar for late spring skiing and still others remain open.

It’s not over yet

Snowbird, Utah, plans to stay open weekends through at least July 4, 2019, and possibly longer. Those with a 2019/20 Snowbird Season Pass or Ikon Pass can ski free; and with the Mountain Collective or any other season pass, can ski for $50.

Mammoth Mountain just announced they will be open daily until August. This isn’t new for the California resort, both 1995 and 2017 saw extended seasons, but this year the area coverage seems to surpass those other years. Twenty-nine inches fell this month; breaking their May 2015 record for snowfall.

Photo by Ryan Freitas

Also in the Sierras, Squaw Valley stays open through July 7 and is running a “$5 Friday” special in June. You have to buy the tickets online or via Squaw’s app at least 48 hours in advance. All proceeds from those particular lift ticket sales go to support the Tahoe Fund’s goal of raising $35,000 for the “Bike Racks for Basin Businesses” campaign. Funds raised by this program will be matched up to $10,000 by Squaw Valley Alpine Meadows.

Speaking of basins, Arapahoe ‘A’ Basin closes out the longest season in Colorado on June 23. The 2018/19 season began October 19. Tickets are $54 online, possibly less if you have a season pass from another resort.

Oregon slopes tell a different story. There has always been glacier ski and race training in the summer at Mt Hood and Timberline so exactly how long one season lasts and when the next one starts is a blur. You will need to purchase a summer ski pass to ski through Labor Day weekend at Timberline. The area will close for a few weeks and then re-open for the 2019/20 season.

There will also be skiing up at Canada’s Blackcomb Resort. Whistler has closed to make way for their summer mountain biking season but the lifts over on Blackcomb keep spinning through July 14, 2019.

Of course, you can take your skiing elsewhere like Chile, Argentina, Australia and New Zealand but this just may be the year to table those plans, flash your Ikon or Mountain Collective and rip the runs a bit closer to home.

Top 5 Park City Summer Musts

Park CIty Sumer

It’s hot; it’s summer, and you’re more than just a day guest to this vacation town of Park City, Utah. But can you really say you’re a “local”?

Have you hiked or biked the Mid-Mountain Trail? Have you attended the Park Silly Sunday Market or the Canyons Farmers Market? Or boogied on the grass at a Deer Valley Snow Park concert? Eaten breakfast at the Main Street Deli? Gotten hammered at the Fourth of July Parade? Until you express yourself in all things “Park City Summer”, we reserve the right to judge.

So as the summer begins, here are five cool things to add to your Park City Summer (hot) bucket list.

Rock Climb (or hike) in the Uintas

Hit up White Pine Touring for your beta, grab a guidebook, map, and personal supplies, and pack up the car for a day in the wilderness. Head to where the air is cool, clean and quiet; where there’s a lake for the pooch to splash in and where a trail for every fitness level exists- The Uintas.

About 45 minutes east through Kamas on the Mirror Lake Highway, rock climbers will find the Ruth Lake pullout. Hike northwest for less than a mile until a wall, and people scaling it, comes into view. The Lake itself is further along the trail, but for climbers, you can’t pick a better spot to cool off from the Salt Lake Valley heat. The area boasts about 100 sport routes striping the quartzite walls for climbing at all levels. About 1.3 miles north from the large pull out for Ruth Lake, lies the Stone Garden for you more advanced climbers.

Park City Summer
Photo by Ryan Freitas

Paddle the Mighty Weber

Weber River by inner tube or sit-on-top kayak is brought to you by either two commercial outfitters or your own party group. You can also show up on Wednesday evenings for the weekly Utah Whitewater Club float. The Club usually has spare gear and room in rafts. Either way, don’t miss out on your shot at the only river worth paddling within an hour of Park City. Head out I-80 toward Cheyenne then go west on I-84 towards Ogden. The Henefer to Taggert section is about a class II+ – full of mild rapids and boulders to navigate, and nestled in the beautiful, wooded Ogden Canyon.

Mountain Bike Deer Valley

We would have said ride Canyons Resort but Vail Resorts put the kibosh on their bike park last year. The fun and games can still be had over at Deer Valley Resort. For the price of a ticket ($14-53 depending on when and how long you plan to ride), you can pedal on over six mountains, 3,000 vertical feet of elevation change, and nearly 70 miles of trails, including four flow trails designed by Gravity Logic. In addition, several of Deer Valley Resort’s mountain bike trails connect with Park City’s extensive 400-mile network of single track. Do your own thing, join a group lesson or hire your own private guide/instructor to tour you around.

Slide the Slopes

The Alpine Slide at Park City Mountain Resort is a guaranteed thrill ride. But it ain’t the safe Disneyland version. This summertime toboggan-on-wheels can be hazardous to your health not just from the jolt of adrenaline but many a hardy athlete has launched out of the track. After the aches, bruises and road rash subside, you’ll be anxiously drooling for your next visit. Looking for something safer? Try the Alpine Coaster, a gravity fed track that carries you down to the base at speeds up to 30 mph. Hint: double up. The heavier the car, the faster you go.

Fly High at the Utah Oly Park

Adventure Courses at the Utah Olympic Park will bust through your fears, test your limits, and build skills that will carry on into the winter whether you weave through the ropes course, navigate a bobsled (on wheels), ride the world’s steepest zipline, or take a half-day freestyle clinic to learn to jump (into a pool). Or if your heart can take it, try Extreme Tubing. For $15-20, take an inflatable tube onto one of the Nordic Ski Jumps and launch.

Alta’s Earth Day Is Coming

alta earth day

The 10th annual Alta Earth Day 2019 celebration is headed to Utah Saturday, April 20th. There’s no better way to honor all the natural resources and beautiful landscapes of the Wasatch than playing amid the epic conditions of our 2018-19 winter season (so far 500+ inches!).

Alta Earth Day 2019 is a free event honoring the community’s vision to build awareness and appreciation for Utah’s environment. The day’s celebration includes a display of environmentally conscious vendors and organizations, ski and snowboard recycling with Utah Recycling Alliance, a Fix-it Bike Clinic with Salt Lake Bicycle Collective, and other activities.

What’s On Tap For Alta Earth Day 2019

Throughout the day there will be opportunities for people to get in touch with their ‘wild’ side with a naturalist snowshoe tour, Tour with a Ranger, Arborist ski around and Alta birding tour followed with an après ski celebration at Our Lady of the Snows at 4:30 pm. Enjoy live music, food and beverages and an opportunity drawing to support the sustainability efforts of the Alta community.

“This event speaks Alta. A fun casual gathering by Alta patrons to celebrate all that Alta provides by way of its natural environment, skiing, and community mountain experience. It’s my favorite day of the season next to powder days,” Alta resident Maura Olivos.

The Alta community is pleased to host eco-minded vendors with on the snow demos and displays at Wildcat Base the day of the event from 9 am to 4 pm. Featured vendors include Coalatree Organics, Momentum Recycling, Peterson Equipment – PistenBully, Utah Recycling Alliance, Norwex, Xistential Love, Oligie, Meier Skis, and more. This event wouldn’t be possible without the additional support from our sponsors: Natural History Museum of Utah, Porcupine Pub & Grill, REI Salt Lake City, DPS Skis and Arc’Teryx.

Interested environmentally committed vendors and organizations seeking to be a part of this event may contact the Alta Environmental Center at environment@alta.com. For event details visit the Alta Earth Day webpage. This event is a collaborative effort by organizations and members of the Alta community – Alta Community Enrichment, Alta Ski Area,  Alta Environmental Center, Cottonwood Canyons Foundation, Friends of Alta, Tracy Aviary, TreeUtah and the Town of Alta. Share the event:  #AltaEarthDay, Webpage, Facebook, Instagram

Park City Closes Despite Great Snow

Park City Closes

I’m almost done. My last day teaching for Canyons Resort is next week and then Park City closes for skiing April 7. The 2019/20 is drawing to a close for our Park City resorts but it’s way too soon. Locals are angry and asking, “Why?” After all, Colorado ski areas have been announcing extended closing dates right and left. (Of course, they are still closing in April and Utah has a lot more snow.)

This is the first ski season in five that’s still delivering the goods on top of a solid base, yet Deer Valley and Park City won’t budge. Hotel bookings, retail and restaurant sales will plummet. Sure, come to Park City in April. You won’t be able to ski but oh well. To hell with the late spring breakers, Easter guests and season pass holders.
“Vail needs to listen to the locals of Park City. It should be reveling in the fact that there is plenty of skiing left,” says local Jim Snyder. “Aspen and Snowmass are open until April 21st. So the choice is stay open, enjoy 2 additional weekends of great fun, lots of great food and drink, music and so on. Or close down and never get back the business that will be lost, forever.”

Deer Valley Doesn’t See Benefits

Deer Valley’s Emily Summers said history dictates the close. “We have not had success in staying open longer in April when Easter is late like it is this year,” Summers said. “In past seasons where the calendar was similar, we didn’t see the skiers to warrant staying open later, and extending a season doesn’t give people the time to plan ahead and make a last-minute ski trip.”

To date, Deer Valley has a base of 113 inches, with a total snowfall of 324 inches while PCMR was reporting a 113 inches, and nearly 340 inches for the year. There is a cold storm on the way to Utah this Wednesday night and a wet April in the forecast.

“Pretty sad that PCMR won’t stay open,” said Jennilee Post on the ParkRecord.com site. “DV has always closed early so that is actually normal. Since Vail took over it’s been a total crap show. No night skiing for all the kids, no parking. A real ski town has night skiing and stays open when there is finally snow. Sad times for P. City.” Snowbasin and Solitude, owned by DV’s Alterra Mountain Co., will close April 14, followed by Brighton, Alta and Snowbird.

park city closes

Fortunately, our two “indie” resorts, Snowbird and Alta, offer skiing through April. Snowbird might possibly stretch its season through June with all the snow they’ve seen this season (546 inches so far!) so if you’re thinking of learning to ski or snowboard, or you’re not ready to call it quits, you have options. The ski schools are still running as well so find a pro to help you master your spring turns.

Get Better After Park City Closes

In case you need a reason to take a lesson when Park City closes in two weeks, PSIA- the Professional Ski Instructors of America have put out this list. No matter what someone’s level of experience, from never-ever skiers to a slayer of bumps, taking a ski or snowboard lesson in the spring will up your game.

  1. It’s easier and faster to learn from an instructor. Instructors are professionals trained to teach people how to ski and snowboard. “We know how to break down the movements and provide helpful feedback,” said PSIA Alpine Team Member Eric Lipton. “You’ll be a more effective skier or rider if you learn the right way.”
  2. You WILL improve. “No matter your ability level, you can always use a coach – there is always something you can improve on,” said PSIA Alpine Team Member Jennifer Simpson Weier. “The more things that you learn to do on your skis, the more the mountain opens up to you and the more fun you’ll have.”
  3. You can stay pleasantly warm while you stand for tips and answers. You certainly won’t be complaining about cold toes and fingers while your instructor explains how to turn in slush. “Whether you’re a beginner trying to get your helmet adjusted, or an advanced snowboarder working on your tricks, professional instructors are just that, pros. We can show you how to learn a sport using simple steps,” said AASI Snowboard Team member Tony Macri.
  4. Instructors show students new terrain and help them explore the mountain. Looking for a mellow groomer? Or seeking out a hidden powder stash in May? “Our job is part instructor and part mountain guide. We’ll show you the terrain that is going to help you have the most fun,” said PSIA Telemark Team Member Gregory Dixon. “We also know where to find the best snow – so take a lesson and we’ll explore the best places to ski or ride.”
  5. Get welcomed into the mountain culture. “It’s more than just a lesson,” said Dixon. “Many do this job because they enjoy sharing their knowledge and making connections with people, and they want others to love the sport as much as they do.” And after your lesson, there’s apres tailgating!

If you’re new to the sport, check out these PSIA-AASI’s Beginner’s Guides:

thesnowpros.org/take-a-lesson/beginners-guide-to-skiing   

thesnowpros.org/take-a-lesson/beginners-guide-to-snowboarding

Or my own tutorials on skiing spring conditions:

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