Author Archives: Jill Adler

Lines To Hawaii a Mountainfilm Selection

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Now that winter is over, we turn to surfing and the ocean. ROAM Original, Lines to Hawaii, will screen at the 2018 Mountainfilm in Telluride, Colorado, over Memorial Day weekend. It’s the story of ROAM Founding Contributors Travis Rice (@travisrice) and Ian Walsh (ian.walsh) sailing and surfing from Tahiti to Hawaii via the Line Islands.

But it’s not just fun and games. They took water samples every 100 miles, and 73 percent contained microplastics—a grim reminder of our impact on the planet. Watch the short film:

2018 National Park Fees To Jack Tourists

national park fees

UPDATE: In response to public outcry, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke has backed off doubling national park fees and settled on a “more modest $5 increase” for most entrances. Annual passes, however, will jump $10. Starting June 1, they will go up from $60 to $70. BTW, the NPS wants you to know that nearly two thirds of the park system is free. Fee schedule.

 

I’m not an activist per se. I don’t march on the Capitol nor handout leaflets at the Save Our Canyons rallies but when it comes to jacking fees that would have a detrimental effect on the admiration, inspiration and appreciation of our public lands I can’t just ignore it and hope the greenies do their job.

The National Park Service announced Tuesday that it plans to nearly TRIPLE the entrances fees to some of our most popular parks during peak season (i.e. Summer). * Maybe if you’re a senior with a lifetime pass, big whup but this increase to National Park fees is outrageous and lame. Seventy dollars to take a drive through Zion? Most people would start going to Disneyland. The per vehicle charge would more than double at four of Utah’s five NPs.

The new fee schedule would also charge $50 per motorcycle (WTF?!) and $30 per person not in a personal vehicle. They claim that all of the funds would be used to “improve facilities, infrastructure, and visitor services, with an emphasis on deferred maintenance projects.”

I get that the National Parks are woefully underfunded –  all of our public lands actually — but this hike is counterintuitive. What’s the point in protecting the lands for the people if the people can’t or won’t afford to visit them?! In addition, the Department of Interior plans to cut $1.5 billion in funding and proposes to massively ramp up energy development and they expect the public to pick up the slack if we want to keep our open space protected? Bullshit. Trump strikes again.

And, really, the logic behind this hike is skewed. If you increase entrance fees to a single park to $70 hoping to have money for improvements at all NPs, what’s to stop guests from purchasing the $80 season pass? But if visitors do that, 80 percent of the money from a season pass stays with the Park where it was purchased. And what about parks considering a reservation system like Zion and Arches? There won’t be nearly as much gain hiking peak season prices if fewer guests are allowed into the parks or are steered toward offseason visits.

The fee hike is proposed to go into effect during the high-season of 2018 at Arches, Bryce Canyon, Canyonlands, Denali, Glacier, Grand Canyon, Grand Teton, Olympic, Sequoia & Kings Canyon, Yellowstone, Yosemite, Zion, Acadia, Mount Rainier, Rocky Mountain, Shenandoah, and Joshua Tree national parks.

The 30-day comment period on the proposed fee increase ends on November 23, 2017. Please take a moment to let Secretary Zinke know that you believe national parks should remain accessible — and affordable — for all by clicking “Comment Now”.

 

 

*The peak season for each park is defined as the busiest contiguous five-month period and would be as follows: 

– May 1-September 30 for Arches National Park, Bryce Canyon National Park, Canyonlands National Park, Denali National Park, Glacier National Park, Grand Canyon National Park, Grand Teton National Park, Olympic National Park, Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Park, Yellowstone National Park, Yosemite National Park, Zion National Park
– June 1-October 31 for Acadia National Park, Mount Rainier National Park, Rocky Mountain National Park, Shenandoah National Park
– January 1-May 31 for Joshua Tree National Park

The NPS will still be doing their fee-free days –

  • September 22: National Public Lands Day
  • November 11: Veterans Day

The King and Queen of Corbet’s are INSANE!!!

corbet's with tram passing by

People always ask me what’s my favorite ski resort. It’s Jackson Hole, Wyo.. I love our Utah resorts but seriously, nothing compares to that cowboy mountain. I made the pilgrimage to Jackson Hole this March. I use my PSIA instructors’ Steeps Camp as my motivation but I don’t really need it. My roadtrips to Jackson are something I look forward to annually; and every year as I drive toward that monumental resort in the Tetons my heart races and I wonder what the snow will be like, whether I’m in shape and would Corbet’s be an option.

Arrow points to Corbets Couloir For the King and Queen Event Skiers stand at the top of Corbets Couloir

Corbet’s Couloir looked gnarly on this trip. In other words, not doable. The rumors swirled of this crazy competition a few weeks prior where men and women hucked themselves into this infamous couloir. These athletes had decimated the run, leaving nothing skiable for us amateurs; that was just fine by me.

February 1, 2018. Nearly 25 hardcore skiers and snowboarders (seven were women) amassed beneath Jackson Hole’s aerial tram for the start of an incredulous comp. They would be launching off a massive cornice into Corbet’s Couloir- a legendary shot most riders avoid. But these competitors wouldn’t ski it like most experts or even like most Freeride World Tour skiers. Each athlete had two runs to throw down for a winner-takes-all format for cash and crown. It was go big or go home time.

I’ll admit that I peek over the edge of Corbet’s on every trip; usually I spout some excuse like, “If we had better light,” or “the snow is hardpack” and then shimmy away. There are few days (and times in that day) when Corbet’s is perfect. But it does happen….and then I give it a shot. But to allow for optimal conditions for the first ever King and Queen of Corbet’s, Jackson wasn’t taking any chances. They cordoned off the chute for three days and prayed for snow. Only eight inches fell during that time and the wind buffed it to a stiff bouncy crud. Still, men and women backed up some 20 feet, then straight-ran off the lip.

Karl Fostvedt and 23-year old Caite Zeliff walked with $8k each and bragging rights for years.

P.S. To all of you men who might want to judge the difference between the men and the women- You try it then talk. The fact that there are women ready to charge off that top is HUGE regardless of tricks and style points. They hauled ass all the way to the bottom carrying as much speed as any of the competitors. Frankly, I’m surprised and stoked there were ladies stepping up to compete at all. I’ve skied into Corbet’s three times in my life and there’s no way I would and no way I would hit it like these brave babes.

2017/18 Utah Ski Area Closing Dates & The Resorts Still Standing

Dirt on slopes in the spring

The 2017/2018 ski season in Utah draws to a close. By April 15, only Snowbird will still be open for daily skiing …we think. Here are the most updated Utah ski area closing dates:

Alta Ski Area – Sunday, April 15 
(reopen: April 20-22, 27-29 and May 4-6)

Beaver Mountain – Sunday, April 1

Brian Head Ski Resort – Sunday, April 15

Brighton – Sunday, April 22

Cherry Peak – TBD

Deer Valley Resort – Sunday, April 8th

Eagle Point – Sunday, April 1

Nordic Valley – CLOSED

Park City Mountain – Sunday, April 8

Powder Mountain – Sunday, April 15

Snowbasin Resort – Sunday, April 15

Snowbird – TBD

Solitude Mountain Resort – Sunday, April 15

Sundance Mountain Resort – Sunday, April 1

———————–

As mentioned above, you’ll be able to ski Snowbird into late spring. There are a few other resorts that will try to stay open as long as they can:

MT. BACHELOR, ORE. closing May 27, 2018

Springtime at the area just outside of Bend, Ore., can run anywhere from winter pow to corn to spring slush bumps. End early so there’s less chance for a twisted knee and plenty of time for a few of Oregon’s mouthwatering craft brews. If you had a mind for a multi-sport day, head over to Smith Rocks State Park for rock climbing or whitewater kayaking on the Deschutes River. 

MAMMOTH MOUNTAIN, CA  closing May 28. 2018

Top to bottom skiing, apres music in the Village and hot springs at sunset. This place still lures Los Angelenos on the weekends. 

Whistler/Blackcomb B.C. closing May 21, 2018

Whistler has glacier skiing year round. So even though they will close in May, the party continues when they reopen in June and July for skiing up high and world-class mountain biking below. 

Arapahoe Basin, CO closing June 3, 2018

Skiing spring slush is just an excuse to partake in the biggest parking lot tailgate party in the ski industry; costumes, beer bongs, grilled meat, loud music and partial nudity. what more do you need?

Squaw Valley, CA closing May 31, 2018

Water ski at sunrise and sunset; snow ski in between. There’s also golf, mountain biking, rock climbing and river rafting on top of the ranging apres ski deck scene.

 

 

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