Author Archives: Jill Adler

Cocktails The Lite Way

  Leave it to summer vacations to creep up and smack you down with fancy drinks. I’m sailing out on the Disney Fantasy May 3 and I’m terrified. I finally got into bikini condition and those umbrella spawns of Satan lay in wait. Alcoholic drinks are heavy with calories, sugar, and even salt but if you must drink (as I feel I should) I’ve come across some healthier options to order. Here are some ways to lighten the load:

  1. *Ask for seltzer water over soda or tonic that way you avoid the extra sodium and other additives.
  2. *Flavored sodas themselves are just plain toxic but if you must, use diet soda over the regular stuff. The alcohol should mask the diety taste and you’ll save a couple of hundred calories.
  3. *Order drinks with natural ingredients- coffee, lemon, berries, ginger. Their proven health benefits may not offset the negative effects of alcohol but it’s a nice little offering to the psyche.
  4. *If you have to have that screwdriver or sex on the beach don’t use anything other than fresh-squeezed or 100 percent fruit juice as a mixer. Normal bar juices have added sugar.
  5. *Light alcohols not only have fewer calories but less “congeners” than darker alcohols. Plus, those byproducts of fermentation are usually serious hangover culprits.
*One shot (1.5 ounces) per drink. Multi-alcohol cocktails float in high calories. Also, sip don’t chug your 8-ounce glass. You’ll drink less in the long run and just may be able to drive at the end of the night.

Suggestions from the bar:

Fruit mojito (rum, seltzer and muddled fresh fruit)

Seabreeze

Mint Julep

Bloody Mary

Screwdriver

Tequila Sunrise

Lite White Russian (use skim milk)

Tom Collins

Tropical rum punch with fresh 100% fruit juice and light rum

Fuzzy navel

Pina Colado with coconut milk and fresh pineapple. Do not let them use a mix!

Mimosa (seltzer not soda)

Now, go ahead and raise a toast to the end of ski season and the return of bikini season!

Cotopaxi Questival Storms Into Utah

Photos by Erica Jessop

 

Want to launch an unknown brand in a sea of well-known major players and expect to come out ahead? Do one of two things. Create a Questival or hire Davis Smith. The self-professed entrepreneur and BYU grad not only has a track record for finding and filling gaps in ecommerce but he can throw one hell of an event.

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Questival, a scavenger/adventure race (scaventure?) kicked off in Salt Lake City yesterday to celebrate the launch of Davis’ latest endeavor. Cotopaxi is a benefit corporation that will manufacture and sell outdoor packs, water bottles and apparel direct to consumer online with a portion of sales going to third world countries to aid impoverished kids. Davis is trying to show you that is possible and easy to pay it forward. Buying just one water bottle will create two years of clean water. One pack can educate one child in Nepal for a week.


There were 1300 registrants for the 24-hour event before anyone had ever seen a pack. At the check-in point at Rice Eccles Stadium at 4 p.m. teams of up to four received their first Cotopaxi pack (named after the second highest summit in Equador) along with instructions that sent them all over Utah earning points for performing certain tasks and Instagraming them. Not only are they required to hashtag #cotopaxi #gearforgood #questival and the task number but the photo must have one teammate and four of the packs pictured. After six hours, they had logged more than 21 thousand tags. How’s that for marketing?

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“We make money, give it to nonprofits and sell at super-competitive prices. It’s a great business model IF you can build an incredible brand,” said Davis. But with a zillion backpack companies in the outdoor market it’s “dang hard to build a brand.” Questival became his inspiration for mass awareness.

Each team from the three categories- co-ed, all men, all women- has a shot at a trip to Machu Picchu, Angkor Wat, or Kilimanjaro. They accumulate points by choosing “challenges” from a variety of categories like adventure, service, social media, survival and quirky. You can ride a slide at a public park for two points or drive to a national park for 30 points; strike a yoga pose in a natural setting, take a photo of a county line sign; hike to Ensign Peak or do an hour of community service. The photos that have emerged are both hilarious and inspiring.

“The Questival is the perfect culmination of our ideas,” said Davis. “It’s adventure, memories, viral and social all tied to a social mission that we can do good with our packs. There are tons of points for doing the good tasks. It makes you feel amazing.” There’s also a huge bonding aspect as teammates race across the city taking creative pictures with catchy phrases for all the world to see. Like Team Thunder_Ducks going buff at Stewart Falls- “As our good brother Job said: Naked came I out of my mother’s womb and naked shall I return thither save for my “Cotopaxi backpack.”

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To learn more about Cotopaxi and feel a pack firsthand, get on down to Thanksgiving Point tonight at 6 p.m. (Saturday, April 12) for the free concert. Mates Of State, Joshua James, and Kenz Hall + Fictionist +Brumby perform.

Park City v. Talisker- Summary Judgment Time

 

Park City Mountain Resort fought the good fight yesterday as they appeared in Summit County Utah’s 3rd District Court. It was finally time for Judge Ryan Harris to hear both sides in the issue of whether PCMR renewed its lease with Talisker Land Holdings.

The judge had originally decided the lease should be construed under a strict landlord/tenant standard (i.e. you sign a lease, you have a duty to notify the landlord of your intent to renew when it expires and if you don’t, you lose your lease) but PCMR had made a motion for summary judgment for reconsideration. In other words they want to court to overturn that initial ruling so that they can go to trial where presumably a jury of peers would decide whether PCMR had an implied lease renewal.

You see, once you filter out all the legal mumbo jumbo and puffery, yesterday’s hearing boiled down to two arguments. 1- could PCMR reasonably believe that they had constructively renewed the lease even if they didn’t send over written notification by the lease deadline and 2- are there additional interests involved in this lease that would suffer undue harm if they had to vacate?

At dispute is a longstanding lease that PCMR had with United Park City Mines to allegedly pay $155,000 a year to run a ski resort on its land. There was an option to renew clause that would extend the lease (for the same terms) through 2051 and all PCMR had to do was notify them in writing by April 30, 2011. UPCM transferred its land rights to Talisker in 2003 making Talisker the new landlord and the recipient of the letter of intent.

The renewal deadline came and went without written notice but it took Talisker nine months to speak up. The following year Talisker announced it was leasing Canyons Resort to Vail and that as part of the multi-million dollar deal, Vail would also get to take over the PCMR property either as a landlord or land operator depending on the outcome of the case.

PCMR’s attorneys argued that when a landlord grants an option to extend the lease he can’t go out and look for a more favorable tenant as soon as the original lease is up. The judge questioned that if it was so important that the property remain in PCMR’s hands until 2051, why not just put it in the lease? Why even create the option to extend if you could write one, 80-year lease? PCMR explained that because there is a risk of failure or decreased revenue in the ski industry they wanted some flexibility that would allow them to terminate the lease.

Harris asked, “If Vail is willing to come in and pay more why does it matter (to have to keep the original tenant)?” To which attorney Mark Sullivan said, “The property is tied up so a new tenant can’t just set up shop and make use of the property.” PCMR owns the base facilities, parking structures and lower lifts so that even if Vail assumes the lease they won’t have access to the resort from Park City’s base area. “A landlord can’t replace the tenant with someone who can’t come in and operate the property in the way it was intended to be used,” Sullivan explained. Underneath this argument is the assumption that the city only approved PCMR’s master development plan because it intended for PCMR alone to run the show from base to peak. And PCMR contends that Talisker agreed to be bound by this master plan agreement.

“Talsiker agreed that the leased premises would continue to run relevant to the 1998 development agreement. They committed to PCMR,” said Sullivan. He described how PCMR relied on Talisker’s previous discussions of a long-continued relationship to sink more than $100 million in improvements on the land since 1998. “They would talk about how much they looked forward to working with us and joked about how old they were going to be in 2051. There was a common understanding that the lease would continue. What Vail hopes to obtain is a windfall where everyone has operated on the assumption that the lease would not expire till 2051,” he said.

Talisker’s attorney Howard Shapiro simply stood, looked at PCMR’s table then said to Harris, “They only had to provide 60 days’ notice and they failed to do that. All Supreme Court cases make clear that that is not to be excused. They have negligently slaughtered the golden goose that has been laying eggs for decades.” He also refuted PCMR’s suggestion that to invalidate the lease would cause undue hardship on creditors and the city. “There is no harm to anyone else if you give Vail the business. The land in question would continue to support a vibrant ski area.”

Shapiro continued, “You can’t ignore the reality of the leases,” he said. “Even extended they expire in 2051 not in perpetuity. This day was bound to come but due to their negligence it’s here today. The Court must resist the temptation to ignore legal principles.”

Judge Harris told the court that he gives himself 60 days to rule on these matters but because of the complexity it might be a little longer. The next chapter in the Park City saga is next Tuesday, April 8, 2014. PCMR will argue that Talisker had no right to enter into talks with Vail without notifying them first and making the same offer to them.

PCMR said in court yesterday that they would like to settle and that they have made “plenty of offers” but that Vail and Talisker are unresponsive. There’s still time for the parties to work it out but it probably won’t happen before the judge decides on these issues. It might have to be the prospect of a jury trial that forces someone to bend. 

Park City USA- City of Champions

We are now the “City of Champions” and in honor of our Olympic celebrity, Park City, Utah, is having a parade.

This weekend’s homecoming applauds the more than 20 Olympians and Paralympians who live, train and coach in our little town.

Hometown medalists Joss Christensen (2014 Freeskiing gold medalist), Steve Holcomb (2014 Bobsled 2x bronze medalist), Ted Ligety (2014 Alpine Skiing gold medalist), and Sage Kotsenburg (2014 Snowboard gold medalist) will wave to the crowd on Main Street, April 5, from 1-5 p.m.

Stein Eriksen, 1952 Alpine Olympic gold medalist and long-time Park City resident, will be the Grand Marshal for the event.

The parade leads to the Town Lift Plaza for a meet and greet, live music, food, drinks and fireworks show.

photo courtesy Park City Mountain Resort

The celebration continues Saturday, April 6, over at Park City Mountain Resort where Ted Ligety learned to race.

 

1:00 p.m. – Parade of flags down lower PayDay run
1:15 p.m. – Ted Ligety introduced on stage, participates in live Q&A with guests
1:30 p.m. – Remarks from former world champion Stein Eriksen , US Ski & Snowboard Association President Bill Marolt and Park City Mayor Dana Williams
1:45 p.m. – Remarks from Ted Ligety
2:00-3:00 p.m.  – Meet and greet with Ted Ligety at PayDay plaza
3:00 p.m. – Live music featuring Bryon Friedman on PayDay Deck at Legacy Lodge

Park City-based Olympians closed out the 2014 Sochi Olympic Winter Games with three gold medals, two silver and three bronze medals. If Park City competed as its own country they would have finished 14th in the world medal standings between South Korea and Sweden.

For more information, please contact the Youth Sports Alliance at events@ysapc.org, 435.214.0792, or visit ysaparkcity.org.

U.S. Forest Service Sides With Alta In Fight Over Snowboarding Terrain

 

There is “no authority holding that the…Fourteenth Amendment protects those who stand sideways on snowboards” said Alta Ski Area in a motion to dismiss a lawsuit raised by riders this January. And it looks like the U.S. Forest Service is siding with the resort.

A group of snowboarders along with a local nonprofit calling themselves Wasatch Equality filed the suit shortly after being denied as they tried to board the Collins Lift. They want to force the resort and the Forest Service to open its borders to boarders. But the Forest Service says the case without merit.

Not only is snowboarding allowed on Forest Service land in 13 other states (showing that they don’t harbor an “anti-snowboarding” policy) but that there is no evidence they worked with Alta in the resort’s decision to ban that particular sliding device. They went on to say that due to federal immunity, the court does not have jurisdiction to hear the case.


Further, they say Alta’s approved operating plan gives it the right to exclude any “skiing device deemed a risk, harmful to snow quality or not consistent with its business decisions.” Alta is a private resort, says the resort’s attorneys. If they consider snowboarders a hazard to skiers because of a “blind spot” that exists as they ride sideways down trails then that’s their right.

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