Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

A place to chill

Bar made of ice a new spot to grab a cold one

- JOHANNA LOVE

BONDURANT, Wyo. — The coldest town in Wyoming now contains another curiosity: the only free-standing ice bar in America.

The Ice Bar at Jackson Fork Ranch was built at the direction of ranch owner Joe Ricketts, who had seen ice structures on his travels and always wanted to create one on his working bison ranch in Bondurant, said representa­tive Morgan Fischer.

The outside of the snow-and-ice structure is nondescrip­t, blending in with small ranch outbuildin­gs. Once visitors pull on the bison horn door handle and step inside, wonder awaits. Glistening blocks of ice form a service bar, cocktail tables and couches. Seating is covered in elk hides with coyote fur armrests.

Created by Mary Gibbons, who worked at IceHotel on the Arctic Circle in Sweden and authored a coffee table book about it, the ice bar interior combines blue, amber and white LED lighting with intricate carving. Gibbons brought in her design-build team Curley Contractin­g, with her husband Michael Curley, and they hired ranch hands and a local crew to plow and pack snow and erect the building with five wooden trusses, snow blocks and many tons of ice panels trucked in from Idaho and Montana.

At one point during the threeweek constructi­on, when the team removed the plywood molds from packed snow and revealed bits of straw, hay and bison patties, Gibbons got a bit demoralize­d.

“We hand-picked all the hay out of there,” she said, now able to laugh about it.

Then they polished and covered the walls with “snice,” a combinatio­n of snow and ice.

Sitting at about 6,600 feet of elevation, 400 feet higher than Jackson, Bondurant is the coldest place in Wyoming, with an average low January temperatur­e of 5 degrees below zero. It’s surrounded by mountains and is a “cold sink,” as Mountain Weather columnist and meteorolog­ist Jim Woodmencey explains.

“When cold air sinks, as it does at night and under high pressure, the cold air builds and has nowhere to drain out,” Woodmencey said.

Before people walk into the ice bar, Fischer hopes they pack along cross-country skis or a fat bike to enjoy an hour or two of solitude along 7 miles of groomed trails on the ranch. Trail passes are sold via GearedUpBi­kes.com. The Pinedale bike shop owner, Andrew Zook, grooms the trails most days. Or Fischer said smartphone users can scan a QR code at the trailhead and pay electronic­ally. A small ice skating pond allows people to bring their own skates or even try curling.

The winter trail access is part of Fischer’s grassroots community relations and political campaign to gain goodwill after a 45-unit destinatio­n resort was denied in July 2020 by Sublette County commission­ers.

“I’ve been spending the past six months working with the county, especially some of the critics, to try to reach some kind of middle ground,” Fischer said, “to come up with ways to mitigate their concerns. If we can come up with a plan people like, we’ll probably reapply in the fall.”

On Saturday during the Fat Bike World Championsh­ips, the ice bar was hopping, but its location 1.6 miles west of Highway 191 on Upper Hoback Road means it’s usually far more peaceful.

“I’m hoping people will embrace the quietness of it,” Gibbons said. “Mr. Ricketts said it was ‘enchanting’ and that made my lifetime. Especially in these times, I hope there’s a feeling of awe. Just a little escape.”

The ice bar serves an elaborate craft cocktail menu incorporat­ing Jackson and Pinedale spirits. It is open from 1 to 10 p.m. Friday through Sunday this month; the liquor license is run through the Elkhorn Bar just down the highway, so February weekends and Presidents Day are expected but not yet approved. Small bites are sold, and private event inquiries are welcomed before the spring thaw.

Created by Mary Gibbons, who worked at IceHotel on the Arctic Circle in Sweden and authored a coffee table book about it, the ice bar interior combines blue, amber and white LED lighting with intricate carving.

“I’m hoping people will embrace the quietness of it. Mr. Ricketts said it was ‘enchanting’ and that made my lifetime. Especially in these times, I hope there’s a feeling of awe. Just a little escape.”

— Mary Gibbons

 ?? (Jackson Hole News & Guide/Kayla Renie) ?? Bartender Gary Sanders (right) serves specialty drinks to Suzie Mahon (center); her daughter, Isla, 10; sister, Sarah Tenney; and dad, Gary Burstad, at the Ice Bar at Jackson Fork Ranch.
(Jackson Hole News & Guide/Kayla Renie) Bartender Gary Sanders (right) serves specialty drinks to Suzie Mahon (center); her daughter, Isla, 10; sister, Sarah Tenney; and dad, Gary Burstad, at the Ice Bar at Jackson Fork Ranch.
 ??  ?? A bar made mostly of snow and ice is pictured on a bison ranch near Bondurant in western Wyoming for the winter.
A bar made mostly of snow and ice is pictured on a bison ranch near Bondurant in western Wyoming for the winter.

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