South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Town vs. mountain

- By Elaine Glusac Chicago Tribune

A hundred people can fit in Big Red, the aerial tram that takes folks from Teton Village to the summit of Rendezvous Mountain, where you can descend on skis or warm up over waffles.

JACKSON, Wyo. – Given the vagaries of winter weather, the best ski plan may involve a mountain destinatio­n with diversity.

That was the thinking that led our family to Jackson, aka Jackson Hole, last winter.

In western Wyoming, Jackson offers not just legendary skiing and snowboardi­ng, but access to several national parks, including Yellowston­e and Grand Teton (the airport resides within the latter) and a lively town that quasi-masks its sophistica­tion behind saddleshap­ed barstools and wooden sidewalks.

Seeking more than skiing alone, we put Jackson to a series of tests: Town or ski village? Ski or snowboard? Snow or no snow?

Visiting Jackson in winter inevitably involves a choice: Stay at Teton Village, the ski area base, which is well equipped with skiin, ski-out hotels, and then drive to town when the urge strikes; or stay in Jackson, a lively town filled with shops and restaurant­s, while driving the 12 miles daily to the ski area (most visitors choose this over the much smaller Snow King Mountain Resort in town).

Eager to ski, we started out in Teton Village at the Hotel Terra (rooms from $209), ideally located at the base but out of the fray of the busy day lodge. A socalled ski valet took our skis and stowed them nightly, allowing us to pick them up each day and easily kick over to the lifts. Outside, a skating rink and a children’s snow village made the hotel a great family choice. Among apres-ski attraction­s, the raucous Mangy Moose bar faces the hotel. Nearby, the sleek Old Yellowston­e Garage restaurant drew lively crowds of Argentines and Australian­s, as well as Americans.

The trade-off for all this convenienc­e: driving to town for more diversions and returning in Skaters take to an outdoor ice rink, bathed in the neon glow of the Million Dollar Cowboy Bar.

the icy dark. That compelled us to relocate to Jackson’s Anvil Hotel (rooms from $135). This stylish overhaul of a former motel offered ample rooms, free spiked hot chocolate around the pot-bellied stove, and a pedestrian-friendly locale. We did more equipment hauling this way, but at least our commutes were in daylight.

When it comes to dining, Jackson, a town of roughly 10,500, overachiev­es for its size, offering an array of choices, from authentic Lebanese at Figs to inventive sashimi at King Sushi. Glorietta Trattoria used the kitchen’s massive wood fire and the genuine welcome of its staff to create one the warmest dining rooms in town, serving hearty pastas and truffle honey chicken.

Spending evenings curling at the rink at Snake River Brewing confirmed our choice: town.

Expert vs. beginner

Our crew of intermedia­te and expert skiers arrived to decent conditions and immediatel­y embraced Jackson Hole Mountain Resort (lift tickets from $94). Half of the runs on its 2,500 acres are

designated expert, while 40 percent are intermedia­te — a sign that that these Tetons are formidable.

Whether expert or beginner, it’s a Jackson Hole rite to take the packed 100-passenger tram 2.4 miles, or 4,139 vertical feet, to the top of blustery Rendezvous Peak, the jumping-off point for backcountr­y skiing. The conductor engaged in a call-and-response with riders heading to out-ofbounds terrain, reminding them of safety precaution­s.

“If you don’t know?” he cried. “Don’t go!” skiers bellowed back.

The rest of us, including tourists in street shoes and more mortal skiers, got off the tram and warmed up over waffles at Corbet’s Cabin, elevation 10,450 feet. Mostly, we went up to be able to take the uncrowded ride down, allowing great views of Corbet’s Couloir, the ski area’s trickiest terrain, a narrow, near-vertical chute and a double-black descent. It’s a good place to learn the definition of “yard sale” (losing all your gear) and “tomahawk” (cartwheeli­ng).

The Jackson Hole ski groomers

were doing their best to move snow around overnight, re-furrowing areas that were skied bald. But by the second snow-free day, I decided to try the beginner area with a snowboard lesson.

“Jackson Hole is the kind of mountain that needs snow,” said one instructor, riding the lift. “It’s a challengin­g mountain, and the more snow there is, the more forgiving it is.”

On paper, Jackson Hole has little to offer beginners, with just 10 percent of terrain devoted to them. I joined the tots learning pizza-wedge stops on the magic carpet, strapped my board on goofy (or left foot forward) and proceeded to have my most satisfying and quad-taxing day. By the afternoon, I was able to navigate the Teewinot chairlift to higher green runs and make it down to report that Jackson Hole, despite its expert reputation, treats beginners just fine.

Postscript: When the ski season opens Nov. 24, Jackson Hole Mountain Resort will debut Solitude Station, a new on-mountain learning center with dining and retail that’s poised to make the resort more beginner-friendly.

Slopes vs. surroundin­gs

By day three, with no snow in the forecast, we set out to sample Jackson’s other-than-vertical attraction­s, starting at the National Elk Refuge.

The thousands of elk that live in the vast 24,700 acres of the refuge cluster in a valley just outside of town each winter, offering visitors close contact with the animals. A wrangler in chaps boarded about 15 of us onto a wagon well stocked with blankets for a sleigh ride to see them. The western safari rewarded us for sitting still with mostly playful displays of dominance, as the bulls locked their majestic racks and began mock fighting (things get serious during rut season).

Overlookin­g the refuge, the National Museum of Wildlife Art captures the wilds in realist, impression­ist and modernist moods. It also illustrate­s humanity’s inherent love of nature from Native American stone sculptures of birds that date to 2500 B.C. to the grand landscapes painted by Thomas Moran — works of art that helped persuade Congress in 1872 to establish the first national park in Yellowston­e.

Arguably the park’s most magical season, winter cloaks Yellowston­e in downy snow, and its geyser eruptions frost the trees. Getting there and back is an allday affair; check out the nonprofit Wildlife Expedition­s of Teton Science School. In the closer Grand Teton National Park, Hole Hiking Experience guides snowshoe tours.

In the end, we didn’t have to choose between the slopes and the surroundin­gs. Mother Nature delivered, socking in Jackson with a two-day storm, granting us a final powder day and a crack at some black runs.

We also endured another skicountry staple: the flight delay on departure, a small and welcome price to pay.

Elaine Glusac is a freelance writer.

 ?? JACKSON HOLE MOUNTAIN RESORT PHOTOS ??
JACKSON HOLE MOUNTAIN RESORT PHOTOS
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States