Whitefish Archives - 国产吃瓜黑料 Online /tag/whitefish/ Live Bravely Fri, 31 May 2024 16:49:44 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cdn.outsideonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/favicon-194x194-1.png Whitefish Archives - 国产吃瓜黑料 Online /tag/whitefish/ 32 32 Summer Work in a Mountain Town: Dreamy. The Rent: Not So Much. /adventure-travel/advice/mountain-town-affordable-housing/ Tue, 28 May 2024 10:30:19 +0000 /?p=2669006 Summer Work in a Mountain Town: Dreamy. The Rent: Not So Much.

A seasonal job in a mountain town is one of the most fun adventures there is. Our Colorado-based columnist offers proven tips on how to land lodging that you can afford.

The post Summer Work in a Mountain Town: Dreamy. The Rent: Not So Much. appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
Summer Work in a Mountain Town: Dreamy. The Rent: Not So Much.

I want to live and work in a mountain town this summer, but finding affordable housing is proving to be near impossible. Can you give me any tips or direction so I can turn this dream into reality? 鈥擜 Frustrated Flatlander

鈥淚 came for the winter and stayed for the summer鈥 is a common mountain-town refrain. That sentiment, combined with a pandemic-fueled real estate boom, has resulted in a dearth of affordable housing, both seasonal and permanent, in mountain towns across America.

In many small western communities like Steamboat Springs, Durango, and Snowmass, Colorado; Sun Valley, Idaho; and Mammoth Lakes, California, it used to be that employees and locals lived in houses, and tourists stayed in hotels. The reverse is now true: houses are monopolized by Airbnb and VRBO rentals and second homeowners, and some hotels are being purchased by ski resorts and converted to affordable employee housing.

Sadly, more and more essential jobs are going unfilled, some with six-figure salaries, because potential employees can鈥檛 find reasonably-priced rentals. As a result, many mountain towns are shifting their focus to year-round, affordable-housing programs. In Wyoming, for example, Habitat for Humanity of the Greater Teton Area helps to fill critical nursing and teaching positions by building homes for individuals and families making between 30 to 80 percent of the area鈥檚 median income.

What does this mean for seasonal workers? Here鈥檚 my advice for finding affordable summer housing in a mountain town.

Find Towns Working on Their Housing Shortages

A family mountain-bikes downhill above the town of Whitefish, Montana, with a spectacular view of Flathead Lake.
Whitefish, Montana, a beautiful recreation hub, is making a concerted effort to woo more seasonal workers with affordable-housing programs. (Photo: Craig Moore/Getty)

Whitefish, Montana, the gateway to Glacier National Park, is one such place. Its , which supports full-time and seasonal employees, is funded in part by a added to local lodging, food, and transportation. Half of the contributions from its participants go to Housing Whitefish, a nonprofit that facilitates affordable housing.

Part of last year鈥檚 $52,000 allocation went toward a newly launched rental-assistance program, modeled after a similar one in . Over 12 months, Housing Whitefish will distribute a total of $64,620鈥攐r $5,385 a month鈥攖o 17 qualified applicants. (The money goes directly to the property owner or management company.)

The , which advocates for better options in the North Tahoe and Truckee, California communities, aims to add inventory for the local workforce through its recently launched Accessory Dwelling Unit pilot program. Homeowners are incentivized to add rental space that includes a bedroom, bathroom, and kitchen, and in return they receive assistance with building, permitting, and leasing processes.

Although the organization can鈥檛 help you find housing, it does direct prospective renters to resources through the .

Summer flowers in bloom frame a view of the mountain town of Truckee, California, with the Sierra in the background.
Living and working in a mountain town like Truckee, California (above) is a dream of many young people. According to Zillow, the median rent for a one-bedroom home in May was $2,150. At the time, 11 such properties were available. (Photo: Matt Gush/Getty)

In 2022, Breckenridge, Colorado, allocated $50 million to a five-year workforce housing plan to create some 1,000 new units. The town鈥檚 housing fund also receives money from a short-term rental fee requiring owners to pay a set amount for each bedroom they rent. The goal is for nearly half of the town鈥檚 workforce to live in Breckenridge, with a little over a third of the housing inventory reserved for locals.

In 2016, Aspen Skiing Co., the town鈥檚 largest employer, purchased six 280-square-foot tiny homes for about $100,000 each and put them in the Aspen-Basalt Campground for both summer and winter seasonal employees. The project was such a success that it now offers 69 tiny homes for hires, and for the first time this year has introduced units designed to accommodate year-round employees.听Units range from $550 to $750 a month, and summer leases are available from May 15 through October 31. The units currently have a waitlist for Aspen Skiing Company employees.

The interior of a tiny home in Aspen available to seasonal workers features a kitchen, living room with a L-shaped sofia and, accessed via stairs, a second-level bedroom with windows, a fan, and a mattress.
Aspen Skiing Co.鈥檚 tiny homes, available to seasonal workers, are comfortable, spacious, and affordable, unlike other housing in town. In May, Zillow showed that the average rent for a one-bedroom property was $5,900. (Photo: Courtesy Hal Williams/Aspen Skiing Co.)

Employers in Sun Valley, including the Limelight Ketchum hotel, have also purchased tiny homes in the Meadows RV Park, 3.5 miles away, to rent to employees. Many of these programs run on an application system and most take enrollment for summer employees in March.

Land a Job Before You Head Out

A girl serves a flight of beers at a brewery in Aspen, Colorado. Landing a job before you move to a mountain town is generally a smart course of action.
A recent search for summer work in Aspen, Colorado, showed everything from bartenders and restaurant servers to camp counselors and bike valets. Landing a job before you move to a mountain town is a smart course of action, because you can prove to landlords that you鈥檒l be able to pay. (Photo: RJ Sangosti/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images)

Many large employers, notably ski resorts such as Aspen Snowmass, , and , Colorado, or , Vermont, offer housing or make an effort to help you find housing after you鈥檝e been hired. Sun Valley Resort, for example, has two dorm-style buildings with free laundry and fitness centers available for seasonal employees on a waitlist basis. Two-to-four-person accommodations range from $140 to $210 per person every two weeks. There鈥檚 also an option to pay day-to-day, starting at $10 a day.

Beyond ski resorts, places like offer town employees short-term seasonal rentals, for jobs at businesses like the recreation center or golf course, as well as rental-deposit-assistance programs.

Betsy Crum, housing director for the town of Snowmass Village, notes that winter housing is typically full, while there鈥檚 sometimes more housing available for summer workers.

Montana鈥檚 Big Sky Housing Trust has housing for up to 100 seasonal residents in four- and five-bedroom dorm-style configurations. These units are leased to local independent employers. Lone Mountain Land Company, another major employer in Big Sky, offers dorm-style housing for up to 400 seasonal residents employed by their entities.

Powder Light Development in Big Sky Montana
The Powder Light Development in Montana, part of the Big Sky Housing Trust’s efforts to support affordable housing (Photo: Becky Brockie)

Check Out These Helpful Housing Websites and Social Media Sites

Due to the huge demand for housing, many landlords avoid popular rental-listing sites Craigslist and Zillow. One resident seeking a new tenant for housing she has in Carbondale, Colorado, 30 miles from Aspen, didn鈥檛 publicly post a listing because she knew she鈥檇 be overwhelmed with calls. Instead, she put the word out quietly to friends and looked at posts from people in need of housing on a local Facebook group, .

In fact, local Facebook community groups or neighborhood-focused sites like often have rental listings you won鈥檛 find on larger, public sites like Craigslist. is a free site where you can find a roommate or a room available to rent within a house.

When posting that you鈥檙e seeking housing, be clear about your employment situation, desired rental dates, and budget. Younger people should present themselves as a mature, responsible option, preferably coming in with a job already secured. (For example: 鈥淗ello, I鈥檓 coming here to work for the Solar Institute and need a place to stay from mid-June through July that鈥檚 less than $600 a month.鈥)

You might find success on , a housing marketplace for vacation towns that pays property owners to convert their homes to short- and long-term rentals for the local workforce. Mountain destinations include Woodstock, Vermont; Truckee and South Lake Tahoe, California; Wood River Valley, Idaho; East Placer County, California; and Eagle County, Colorado.

Finally, is a membership-based platform (starting at $10.75 a month) where you can find house-sitting or pet-sitting gigs.

Consider 5 More Resources

1. Look at a Town鈥檚 Website

Many communities offer housing programs or partner with local nonprofits or housing authorities, like the , to administer programs. 鈥淚t鈥檚 always worth a call to any city鈥檚 housing development and housing authority to see if they have resources,鈥 says Daniel Sidder, executive director of Housing Whitefish.

2. Embrace Camping or Vanlife

A handful of tents are pitched on a green, grassy mountainside filled with wildflowers in Crested Butte, Colorado.
Camping for the summer is an option in Crested Butte, and why not, with vistas like these? There are 听in the area, and many are first come, first served鈥攁lthough you’d have to change sites every 14 days, the maximum stay. Additionally, there鈥檚 land for dispersed camping.听

In Colorado, and have options for free car camping for a season. You can shower at local rec centers.

3.听Cruise the Town

Some good old-fashioned neighborhood drive-bys to spot 鈥淔or Rent鈥 signs posted outside of apartments, on community boards at grocery stores, or in coffee shops can lead to deals, too.

 

A woman scans the newspaper classifieds while making a call on her cell phone.
Old-school resources like newspaper classifieds can still pay off, with postings for work and accommodations. (Photo: Kanawa_Studio/Getty)

4. Talk to Locals

Lindsay Nohl, 46, enjoyed free communal housing in Tucson, Arizona, while working as the director of NOLS Southwest. But when the campus closed during Covid, she moved to Teton Valley, Idaho. Recently, she made her eighth move in four years, as landlords continue to increase prices or start to rent their properties on Airbnb.

Her go-to strategy for finding cheap housing on the fly? Word of mouth. Another lesson: be flexible. Even though Nohl hasn鈥檛 had a roommate in two decades, she鈥檚 now paying $1,000 a month to share a two-bedroom, 800-square-foot house so she can remain in Teton Valley for the summer.

5.听Scan Newspaper Classifieds

You might come across opportunities to pet-sit or nanny. Or working as a property manager can also lead to free or affordable housing.

Weigh Your Options

A group of people soak in a thermal pool in a field with beautiful views of Mammoth Mountain, California.
Soaking after work in the thermal waters outside the town of Mountain Lakes is a perk of living in this part of the Sierra. California鈥檚 minimum wage also pays more than many other states.听(Photo: Courtesy Jake Stern)

The last thing you should consider, Flatlander, is which mountain towns are too pricey or too popular. For example, Steamboat, Aspen, and Telluride, Colorado, as well as Jackson, Wyoming, and Big Sky, Montana, have reputations as luxury vacation escapes, which means housing is in high demand and the cost of living will be greater there than in lesser-known but more economical mountain towns like Le Grande, Oregon, and Reno, Nevada. Or even Laramie, Wyoming, which has a lot going for it.

Many seasonal jobs pay minimum wage, which varies from state to state. In Utah and Wyoming, for example, the federal minimum wage is $7.25 an hour, while Montana pays $10.30 an hour, Colorado $14.42 an hour, and California $16 an hour.

You should also consider free services offered by the mountain town you鈥檙e considering. Aspen is expensive, but it offers free public transportation, which is another way to help save on costs.

Spending a summer working in a mountain town can be one of the best experiences of a young person鈥檚 life. I hope my advice lands you good, affordable housing. I鈥檒l be pulling for you.

Author Jen Murphy stops while mountain biking in the woods of Breckenridge, Colorado, for a photo.
The author biking in Breckenridge, Colorado (Photo: Courtesy Jen Murphy)

Travel-advice columnist Jen Murphy has scored affordable rent by offering free travel tips to her landlord, as well as volunteering to take out the building鈥檚 trash cans on garbage day and maintain the gardens.听

The post Summer Work in a Mountain Town: Dreamy. The Rent: Not So Much. appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
This Ski Town Is the Heart of a Winter Paradise /video/this-ski-town-is-the-heart-of-a-winter-paradise/ Mon, 08 Jan 2024 14:55:35 +0000 /?post_type=video&p=2656984 This Ski Town Is the Heart of a Winter Paradise

Yes, Whitefish, Montana is home to amazing ski runs and Whitefish Mountain Resort, but that's just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to winter adventure

The post This Ski Town Is the Heart of a Winter Paradise appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
This Ski Town Is the Heart of a Winter Paradise

Located at the edge of Glacier National Park, the welcoming ski town of is packed with charm and world-class amenities. Rising above is Whitefish Mountain Resort. Ranked among the best-value ski areas in the United States, it has 3,000 skiable acres, pristine groomers, stellar tree skiing, and 360-degree views. and would like to express thanks to its many partners featured in the video above:

触听 触听 触听 触听 触听 触听 触听

The post This Ski Town Is the Heart of a Winter Paradise appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
8 Ski Areas Where You Can Camp in the Parking Lot /adventure-travel/destinations/north-america/best-ski-areas-rv-lots/ Fri, 20 Nov 2020 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/best-ski-areas-rv-lots/ 8 Ski Areas Where You Can Camp in the Parking Lot

This winter, park your rig in these overnight lots and you can swing back to camp for midday lunch or apr猫s-ski from a lawn chair in the parking lot.

The post 8 Ski Areas Where You Can Camp in the Parking Lot appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
8 Ski Areas Where You Can Camp in the Parking Lot

With most听ski lodges and hotels听imposing听limited capacity听this winter due to COVID-19, why not bring or rent a camper or RV听instead? Mostresorts don鈥檛 allow for overnight parking, but we found eight ski hills across the country that have dedicated lots for your cabin on wheels.

If You Have an Ikon Pass

(Megan Michelson)

Crystal Mountain, Washington

听(ticket pricing to be announced), outside of Enumclaw, Washington, allows (from $30) in the resort鈥檚 slopeside RV lot. This winter, reservations will be required鈥攂ook a month in advance if you can, as spots will fill up quickly. The lot offers听66 sites and electrical hookups for RVs. Also new this year, Wi-Fi will cover the entire lot, in case you need to call in for a Zoom meeting mid-ski day. The on-site in the base area will have online ordering this winter, so you can request pickup for groceries听or a six-pack of local lager.

If You Live on the East Coast

(Courtesy Gunstock)

Gunstock, New Hampshire

Not many ski resorts on the East Coast allow overnight camping, but does (day passes from $84). This small ski area, located听in Gilford, New Hampshire, 90 miles from Boston, has a 听(from $45) that comes with access to a bathhouse with hot showers and laundry machines. Make a reservation online ahead of time. Some folks even book sites for the entire winter season. If you want to ditch the RV for a night, the resort also rents out two rustic cabins in a forested area along the cross-country ski trails.

If You Have an Epic Pass

Light in the Mountains
(Vince Barnes/iStock)

Stevens Pass, Washington

The 听at , Washington, (day passes from $124, if you buy a four-pack Epic Day pass)听will be operating this winter with reservations required. Book one of the 60 free RV parking spots in advance to secure your space. Many of the families and individuals who stay overnight here do so every season, so there鈥檚听a real community feel to it. And you can鈥檛 beat the location, right at the base of the ski hill, which is two hours east of Seattle. The T-Bar Market, in听, has espresso and to-go itemsto bring back to your camper.

If You Want Uphill Access

(Courtesy Whitefish)

Whitefish Mountain Resort, Montana

It鈥檚 a few minutes鈥 walk from the Willow Tail Lot鈥攚here to park for up to three nights鈥攖o the base lodge at , in听Montana. No reservations are required for RV parking鈥攊t鈥檚 first come, first served鈥攂ut there is a $15 fee per night, and you鈥檒l need to fill out registration paperwork at the main lodging check-in. From the base lodge, it鈥檚 a couple lifts to the top of the mountain, where you can enjoy views of Glacier National Park before dropping into powder stashes through the trees of North Bowl. If you like skinning, Whitefish allows uphill access on designated routes throughout the day, but this year, you鈥檒l need to buy a听听(from $85).

If Your Season Pass Is Part of the Powder Alliance

(Courtesy China Peak)

China Peak, California

, 65 miles northeast of Fresno, California, doesn鈥檛 bring in the same destination travelers who flock to the ski resorts closer to Lake Tahoe, so you鈥檒l find few crowds at this locally owned resort (day passes from $104). Plus, there鈥檚 plenty of room to spread out, with seven chairlifts and more than 1,400 skiable acres. The best part? You can pull your van or RV into one of (from $49) in a designated overnight lot not far from the slopeside . The resort is part of the 鈥攊f you have a season pass to any of the participating resorts, you get three free days of skiing here.听Reservations are required for overnight parking.

If You鈥檙e with the听Family

(Courtesy Schweitzer)

Schweitzer, Idaho

It鈥檚 free to park in the at 听(day passes from $89) in Sandpoint, Idaho, but there is a three-day limit. You鈥檒l come for the empty glades鈥攖his independently owned resort in the Selkirk Mountains has some of the best tree skiing around鈥攁nd an average of 300-plus inches of snow per听year. Road-tripping families will find many conveniences here, from resort daycare to kids鈥 nights out to snow tubing and entry-level terrain parks.

If You鈥檙e听a Backcountry Skier

Skiers Paradise
(KevinCass/iStock)

Grand Targhee, Wyoming

The nicest thing about the (from $25) at , in Alta, Wyoming, is that there are different lots for different rigs. If you鈥檙e coming in a Sprinter van, park in the Meadow Campground. If you鈥檝e got a big pull-behind trailer, Lot 4 is for you. Need a rig? , located over Teton Pass in Jackson, Wyoming, rents four-wheel-drive truck campers. As for the skiing, there鈥檚 coldsmoke powder, resort-operated cat skiing, and great backcountry access (with options for ) through designated gates (day passes from $103).

If You鈥檙e听an听Intermediate Skier

(Courtesy Sipapu)

Sipapu, New Mexico

Not many ski areas also operate their own year-round campground, but you鈥檒l find one at family-owned , outside of Taos, New Mexico (lift ticket pricing to be announced). 听(from $40) in designated lots a short walk from the ski area鈥檚 base lodge. You won鈥檛 find the same steep terrain as nearby 鈥攎ost of it is more intermediate than听advanced鈥攂ut the snow quality can be just as good.听Sipapu also boasts one of the longest ski seasons in New Mexico鈥攖ypically from November through April. Plus, kidstenyears old and under get to ski free all season long.

The post 8 Ski Areas Where You Can Camp in the Parking Lot appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
Who Owns the Wild: Grizzlies or Humans? /outdoor-adventure/environment/grizzly-bears-habitat-humans/ Thu, 03 Oct 2019 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/grizzly-bears-habitat-humans/ Who Owns the Wild: Grizzlies or Humans?

Somer Treat has run the trail where a grizzly bear killed her husband, Brad, nearly every day since his death in June 2016.

The post Who Owns the Wild: Grizzlies or Humans? appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
Who Owns the Wild: Grizzlies or Humans?

Somer Treat has run the trail听where a grizzly bear killed her husband, Brad, nearly every day since his death in June 2016. Brad听was mountain biking on a national-forest trail near Glacier National Park when he came around a blind corner and rode听straight into a bear. Somer, 40, doesn鈥檛 blame the grizzly. With her husband going听30 feet a second, the animal听just didn鈥檛 see him coming.

Somer grew up near the southern edge of Glacier, in northwestern Montana, and she and Brad lived only a couple minutes away from the site of the attack; the area has always been her home. So no matter the weather, she pulls on her bright purple Brooks shoes and hits the trail. 鈥淩unning has been my therapy,鈥 Somer says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the normal in the not normal.鈥 Lately, she says her daily strides are taking on new meaning.

Over the last five decades, grizzly populations in the lower 48 have rebounded from near extinction. After Brad鈥檚 death, a debate began: one side argued that听mountain biking where grizzlies are making a comeback leads to both more dead bears and dead people, while the other side said it鈥檚 up to the biker to shoulder the risk, and the chances of an encounter are slim. Both parties spiked Brad Treat鈥檚 name back and forth like a volleyball. Now, as more grizzlies and more recreationists roam the northern Rockies, this long-stewing tension over mountain biking in bear country is heating up. At the same time, new but related concerns听are surfacing about another outdoor sport: trail running.

In Flathead National Forest鈥擲omer鈥檚 neck of the woods鈥攑ermits for foot races have drawn the same ire over risk in grizzly habitat . As we talk at a patio table in downtown Whitefish, Montana, Somer says that even though Brad was killed by a grizzly bear while biking, he would never have wanted access limited. He was a law-enforcement officer for the Forest Service. If a grizzly had killed someone else in the same place, he would have been one of the people investigating the death. She points to the summit of Big Mountain, looming more than 3,500 feet above the city. It鈥檚 the highest point of the , a race scheduled for October 5 and 6. From its birth in 2010 as a 10K run, the event has grown over the years, along with the trail system around the city. For the first time, this year听it will include a 50K. The added mileage goes through some Flathead National Forest trails, meaning the Forest Service had to issue a special-use permit听for the race. Somer signed up for the 50K, and unless she breaks a leg, she says, she鈥檚 running that damn race.

Across grizzly country, newly released and upcoming versions of national forest land-management plans are shifting how the Forest Service balances access and recreation. Those plans are technical documents, thousands of pages long, about how the Forest Service prioritizes uses like timber harvest, habitat standards, and wilderness areas. Due to their size and scope, forest plans only come out once every few decades and take years for forest managers to finalize. The newly released Flathead National Forest plan set the stage for permitting the Whitefish Legacy Trail Run. Near Yellowstone National Park, revisions underway on the Custer Gallatin National Forest plan are drawing outrage over the potential to classify some of the country鈥檚 premier alpine mountain-biking terrain鈥攚hich also happens to be right where grizzlies roam鈥攁s wilderness, thereby prohibiting cycling in the area. Together听with revisions across other national forests in grizzly country, these documents will decide the fate of some of the nation鈥檚 wildest ecosystems for the next 20-odd years.听


From Texas to California to Montana, grizzlies were once a mighty population that roamed the forests, mountains, and plains. It鈥檚 an iconic species that has long inspired fear and awe in humans. But the bruins were reduced to a fraction of their historical numbers as white settlers colonized the West. In 1975, they were listed as threatened听under the Endangered Species Act.

Now听there are only two large populations of grizzlies left in the lower 48: about 1,000 in and around Glacier National Park, and a little more than 700 around Yellowstone. (The federal government tried to delist Yellowstone bears twice, but both populations remain on the endangered species list.) Both the Yellowstone and Glacier grizzly populations have grown steadily in recent years. Around Glacier, the number of bears is increasing 2听to 3听percent annually, and the animals are sprouting up in new places鈥攍ike way out east of the mountains, in the prairies of the Rocky Mountain front.

At the same time, Glacier and Yellowstone National Parks continue to set visitation records nearly every year. And the lands听around the parks are burgeoning with growth, due in large part to their beauty and the accessibility of recreation. The population of Flathead County, near Glacier, grew by about between 2000 and 2018. Gallatin County, northwest of Yellowstone, ballooned by 听in the same time period, according to census data. In Montana, the outdoor industry brought in more than $7 billion last year alone.

The future of grizzlies, some experts say, will depend on how well they can get along with humans across the landscape. And biking and running? Those activities might just make the two collide.

But Flathead National Forest supervisor Chip Weber says land managers won鈥檛 get anywhere by telling people what not to do. There鈥檚 no way to separate humans from the natural world. We should focus on bigger questions, like: How can humans and grizzlies coexist? 鈥淚 reject the notion that we should steer clear of sponsoring things just because there is some risk,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 think there鈥檚 a huge amount of Americans鈥 use and enjoyment of wildlands, national forests, parks, and state lands听that comes with some level of risk, and they鈥檙e the ones who can make that choice about whether they take those risks.鈥

Statistically, grizzlies really aren鈥檛 all that dangerous. Yellowstone National Park鈥檚 website puts it bluntly: the odds of getting hurt by a grizzly in the park are about one听in 2.7 million. Combined, grizzly and black bears have killed fewer than three people per year in the U.S. and Canada since 2010. By contrast, in the U.S. alone, 94 people died kayaking in 2017 and 44 died skiing during听the 2016鈥17 season. It鈥檚 all about personal responsibility, Weber says. He encourages recreationists to be smart when they鈥檙e outside听and choose the risks they鈥檙e willing to take carefully.

While public lands face budget cuts, oil and gas drilling, and other threats, Weber sees the debate around recreation in grizzly country as antithetical to the larger conservation movement. 鈥淯ltimately, it drives people apart who could be working together for the greater good,鈥 he says.

Chris Servheen served as the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service鈥檚 grizzly bear recovery coordinator for 35 years. He also led the investigation into Brad Treat鈥檚 death. 鈥淧ublic land and wildlife-management agencies have been telling people for years the ways to be safe when you recreate in bear country,鈥 Servheen says. 鈥淒o not run in grizzly bear habitat. There鈥檚 no safe way to run in grizzly bear habitat.鈥

Unless they鈥檙e protecting their young, bears usually kill or maim people when victims are engaged in fast-moving sports like running or mountain biking, he says. Being quiet in the woods鈥攚hile hunting, for example鈥攃an also lead to trouble. Servheen says those behaviors can surprise the animals, causing them to act defensively and attack.

鈥淒o not run in grizzly bear habitat. There鈥檚 no safe way to run in grizzly bear habitat.鈥

Many grizzly encounters never get reported.听So the relationship between grizzly bear and recreationists is a hard thing to study. But Stephen Herrero, an expert on grizzly attacks, has tried anyway. In 2000, he published a study on grizzly bears and cyclists for Parks Canada. He found reports of 33 grizzly bear-biker incidents across North America, all of which were in Canada and Alaska. In 95 percent of those encounters, the bikers only caught sight of the bear within 164 feet. More than half the time, the cyclists ended up injured.

In the study, Herrero wanted to find out if there were incongruities in the rates at which bikers and hikers had bear encounters. So he posted up on a trail in Canada鈥檚 Banff National Park to count users. He found that hikers outnumbered bikers by at least three to one. But between 1997 and 1998, about three times as many cyclists as hikers had negative run-ins with grizzlies, despite their much smaller numbers overall.

Nearly two decades have passed since Herrero鈥檚 study, but there鈥檚 not much new data on bear-cyclist interactions. No centralized source tracks this stuff.听But in 2017,听Anchorage Daily News 听at least 18 bikers have had run-ins with both black and grizzly bears since the new millennium. Two of those encounters, including Brad Treat鈥檚, were fatal.

There鈥檚 no science at all on if and how running increases the likelihood of a bear encounter. But news reports give a glimpse into runner-grizzly incidents: a听woman was mauled by a grizzly while running with her coworker in Alaska in 2015. A charged a pair of Canadian ultrarunners at close range in 2018; the two fended off the bears with rocks, trekking poles, and bear spray. And earlier this year, a听dog died protecting its owner from a grizzly while they were on a run in Sitka, Alaska. The dog鈥檚 owner said it wasn鈥檛 the first time the pair had had this sort of encounter.

At its core, the issue is simple, Servheen says: runners and bikers cover a lot more ground in a lot less time than hikers, and they do it quietly. He wrote a decisive letter in opposition to the race Somer plans to run while the Forest Service was considering issuing a permit last summer. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think that the public agencies should be permitting, and thereby endorsing, those activities, counter to everything we tell the public to do,鈥 Servheen says. He thinks that听federal and state land managers need to prioritize communication and education. Part of that means sending consistent messages across the board.

Servheen says it鈥檚 not just about risk to people; all that traffic can be bad for bears, too. When a bear attacks someone, he says, officials nearly always feel pressure to trap and kill that bear. Gruesome grizzly attacks also feed public resistance to bears, meaning the more people are听killed by bears, the less likely communities are to tolerate living near them as bruin populations expand.

At its core, the issue is simple, Servheen says: runners and bikers cover a lot more ground in a lot less time than hikers, and they do it quietly.

Then, he says, there are the hidden costs; you don鈥檛 have to smash into the haunches of a grizzly for the bear to have a bad day. More people using those trails can cause what he calls 鈥渁voidance behavior,鈥 meaning spooked bears start to stay away from prime habitat. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not something we can just whistle on by the graveyard and think bears are gonna be fine forever,鈥 he says. 鈥淭o have healthy bear populations, it will take continuous, careful management of the bears and their habitat.鈥


Keith Hammer, chair of the environmental group , has been one of the loudest voices in the crusade against forest-sponsored races in northwest Montana. But his issue isn鈥檛 recreation as a whole in grizzly country. The trouble with mountain biking and running really amps up听when 鈥渢he Forest Service is part of the ringleaders and the cheerleaders and the booster club for it,鈥 he says.听

鈥淎s we have more and more people in these areas with sensitive ecosystems, with threatened and endangered species, each person needs to take on the burden of having less impact, not more,鈥 he says.

In part as a symbolic protest of the race Somer signed up for, Hammer is organizing a sort of anti-race in which participants are encouraged to 鈥渟ee how long you can take to hike 70 miles.鈥澨齋it in the shade and take in the beautiful scenery, he says, and 鈥渃arry lots of heavy plant- and bird-ID books to help slow you down.鈥澨鼿e calls the event the 听There鈥檚 no date or time for the event. Crawlers can their track progress via听an online chart听and start and finish at will.

Back in downtown Whitefish, as tourists chirp by, Somer Treat is telling me about a run she went on the day before we spoke. It was a 20-mile loop through Glacier. She always carries bear spray when she runs in the area, and she saw a grizzly when she did听that same loop last year. She says she knows it鈥檚 cheesy, but whenever she sees the animal, she still gets a tingle, something magical, a sensation to which she can鈥檛 quite put words.

鈥淚 feel lucky to have the choice to still go out and use any of the public lands we鈥檙e surrounded by,鈥 she says. 鈥淭o limit that because of something political like the grizzly bear is something I wouldn鈥檛 want to be part of. And I know Brad wouldn鈥檛 want to be part of it either.鈥

The post Who Owns the Wild: Grizzlies or Humans? appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
The Treehouse Mansion of Your Dreams Is in Montana /gallery/montana-treehouse-retreat/ Tue, 25 Jun 2019 00:00:00 +0000 /gallery/montana-treehouse-retreat/ The Treehouse Mansion of Your Dreams Is in Montana

The Montana Treehouse Retreat is a work of art in itself.

The post The Treehouse Mansion of Your Dreams Is in Montana appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
The Treehouse Mansion of Your Dreams Is in Montana

The post The Treehouse Mansion of Your Dreams Is in Montana appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
Behind the Scenes at a Bundy Rally /outdoor-adventure/environment/ammon-bundy-rally-whitefish-montana/ Wed, 31 Oct 2018 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/ammon-bundy-rally-whitefish-montana/ Behind the Scenes at a Bundy Rally

If there was a defining trait among the several dozen people who gathered recently to hear Ammon Bundy speak at the New Code of the West conference in Whitefish, Montana, it was their age.

The post Behind the Scenes at a Bundy Rally appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
Behind the Scenes at a Bundy Rally

If there was a defining trait among the several dozen people who gathered recently to hear Ammon Bundy speak at the New Code of the West conference in Whitefish, Montana, it was their age鈥攐n average, well into eligibility for Social Security benefits. I don鈥檛 mention this to promote ageist ideas about who should be involved in political activism鈥攖he baby boomers comprise the 鈥攂ut rather to suggest that the 鈥淏undy movement,鈥 such as it exists, appears conspicuously long in the tooth.

The event was hosted by a Kalispell-based group called This West Is OUR West. The group鈥檚 founder, Lauralee O鈥橬eil, told me they spent $8,000 to rent the facility and provide a catered lunch. Perhaps it was the $150 price tag for the day鈥檚 event that kept younger attendees at bay, or perhaps it was a classic Montana scheduling conflict: Saturday, October 13, was the second-to-last day of big-game archery season. Whatever the reason, if the Whitefish event left me convinced of one thing, it鈥檚 that the Bundys and the fringe ideology they espouse has little purchase on young people鈥攁t least in this corner of the northern Rockies. And that ought to be encouraging to anyone who has worried in the nearly three years since the Bundys staged their takeover of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in Burns, Oregon, that a new and vigorous anti鈥損ublic land rebellion was catching fire. The opposite seems more likely. The Bundys鈥 antics鈥攁long with the efforts of the Trump administration and congressional Republicans to undermine environmental laws and regulations, shrink national monuments, and open millions of acres of public land and water to oil and gas development鈥攈ave galvanized a movement around environmental and conservation advocacy that is nonpartisan and transgenerational.

Ammon Bundy holds up a bronze star medal he says was given to him by a veteran during the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge standoff in early 2016.
Ammon Bundy holds up a bronze star medal he says was given to him by a veteran during the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge standoff in early 2016. (Elliott D. Woods)

A crowd of 300 gathered at Whitefish Depot Park to protest the Bundy event, which was taking place at the Grouse Mountain Lodge, a mile and a half away. The competing rally was organized by the and , a group affiliated with the Montana Human Rights Network and formed in response to white supremacist activity in the Flathead Valley. Judging by attendance, there鈥檚 no question which movement鈥擝undyites or public land advocates鈥攈as the numbers. Beyond Whitefish, the rapid growth of groups like Missoula-based Backcountry Hunters and Anglers illustrates the rising pro鈥損ublic land consciousness in the West and across the country. Membership has doubled every year for the past four years, topping 18,000 in 2018. The group now has chapters in 39 states and two Canadian provinces and on dozens of college campuses. One wonders what the Bundys鈥 on-campus presence looks like.

I didn鈥檛 meet any of the protesters who turned out to Depot Park, because I spent the entire day listening to jeremiads about the and the to implement one-world government. According to speakers at the Bundy event, shadowy international bureaucrats and billionaires are the font of such devious urban concepts as 鈥渟ustainable development鈥 and 鈥渟mart growth.鈥 Alex Newman鈥攁 bearded young correspondent for the John Birch Society鈥檚 New American magazine, whom the moderator hailed as 鈥渙ur next George Washington鈥濃攕aid these concepts are part of 鈥渁 global war on farmers and ranchers and loggers.鈥 The audience gasped knowingly. Newman went on to pull the old , suggesting that because in the sea ice off Antarctica one time in 2013, global warming clearly isn鈥檛 real. 鈥淚鈥檝e interviewed dozens of these UN scientists,鈥 said Newman, without mentioning any of the defectors鈥 names. 鈥淭hey told me [climate change] was a hoax, and no one would correct it, so they resigned.鈥 Phew, I thought: I guess we don鈥檛 have to worry about the UN鈥檚 updated projections鈥攚hich give us a mere to take drastic action to avoid Biblical climate catastrophes. ( place the scientific consensus at a minimum of 80 percent supporting the idea of human-caused climate change, with some estimates as high as 97 percent.)

There were shimmers of underlying anti-Semitism and white nationalism in some of the presentations, like when Washington state legislator Matt Shea channeled his inner Richard Spencer, shouting, 鈥淟et鈥檚 be American again! We are a Christian nation, and anyone who says we鈥檙e not is a liar鈥 think we need to be unashamed about our heritage and our history. Amen!鈥 Spencer鈥攚hose parents live in Whitefish and who have for their son鈥檚 racist neo-fascism, which they disavow鈥攄id not attend.

Attendees listen to Ammon Bundy's remarks at the New Code of the West event.
Attendees listen to Ammon Bundy's remarks at the New Code of the West event. (Elliott D. Woods)

The UN鈥檚 platform was the main lightning rod for the assembled conspiracy theorists. Drawn up in 1992 at the UN Conference on Environment and Development in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Agenda 21 is a legally nonbinding policy document that does not force anyone at any level of government of the 178 signatories to do anything. The document lays out strategies for 鈥渃ombating poverty,鈥 鈥減rotecting and promoting human health conditions,鈥 鈥渃ombating deforestation,鈥 鈥渕anaging fragile ecosystems,鈥 鈥渞ecognizing and strengthening the role of indigenous people,鈥 and that sort of thing. I don鈥檛 know about you, but whenever I hear global bureaucrats talking about 鈥渕anaging fragile ecosystems,鈥 I think to myself: Charlie鈥檚 in the wire.

鈥淵ou鈥檇 have to be pretty dang stupid not to be able to connect some of these dots,鈥 said the moderator, Dan Happel, who hosts a podcast called . A retired commercial building contractor, Happel once served as of the Montana Republican Party and as a Madison County commissioner. An avuncular fellow with a warm smile, dressed in a blazer, khakis, and ostrich-skin slip-ons, Happel provided the highlight of my day when, in the midst of his presentation, he said, 鈥淵ou thought the Kavanaugh hearing sucked? These are quotes from the leading Democrats in the country.鈥 He then read from a slide with quotes from Chuck Schumer, Elizabeth Warren, and Cory Booker. Here鈥檚 one:

鈥淭ime and time again, we find progressive laws getting struck down,鈥 Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said in a Senate address. 鈥淎nd it鈥檚 always鈥攁lways鈥攖he ones the Constitution is against. These right-wing judges don鈥檛 think for themselves, they just do whatever the Constitution says. And it鈥檚 time for that to end.鈥

Kerry White, a Republican member of the Montana legislature, talks to reporters outside of the This West is OUR West event.
Kerry White, a Republican member of the Montana legislature, talks to reporters outside of the This West is OUR West event. (Elliott D. Woods)

They perfectly fit Happel鈥檚 narrative about Democrats鈥 disregard for the Constitution. The problem was, the quotes were fake. They came from an article headlined 鈥淪enate Democrats Demand Supreme Court Nominee Not Be Unduly Influenced by U.S. Constitution鈥 in the now-defunct Babylon Bee, a satirical online paper in the model of the Onion. Happel was not the only one to take these quotes out of their native habitat. Fox News contributor David Clarke鈥攖he erstwhile Milwaukee sheriff who caught hell for with flair pins鈥 with the same fake quotes.

The conference ground on for ten hours before Ammon Bundy finally took the mic to sing his paean about triumph over the murderous feds. This was the I鈥檝e attended, and the script did not vary much: of the Constitution mingled with tearful recitation of his family鈥檚 long 鈥渟tand,鈥 which most of us would just interpret as 鈥渂reaking the law and getting away with it.鈥 (The Bundys still in unpaid federal grazing fees. Although several of their , the Bundys were acquitted of all charges for a 2014 standoff and the Malheur occupation, due to .)

Bundy wore a straw cowboy hat and a suit coat. Toward the end of his remarks, he pulled out a garment bag with items for show-and-tell. The first was a ball cap with the Army Airborne logo that he claimed was given to him by a vet. Bundy ratcheted up the totemic power of the items until he was holding up a bronze star medal, claiming a wheelchair-bound man who鈥檇 lost his legs 鈥渟erving in the military鈥 had given it to him at Malheur. Bundy told the audience about how he鈥檇 said he didn鈥檛 deserve it, because he鈥檇 never served, and the man 鈥渢old me I was to never say again that I didn鈥檛 deserve it.鈥 Next, Bundy pulled out a folded American flag, which he claimed was 鈥減resented to me by a man who said this flag was draped over his brother鈥檚 casket because he died serving this country.鈥 Choking back tears, Bundy said, 鈥淭his man gave me this flag, and he felt that this is what his brother died for鈥e were standing up for the very purpose his brother gave his life for.鈥

Ammon Bundy talks to a supporter at the New Code of the West conference.
Ammon Bundy talks to a supporter at the New Code of the West conference. (Elliott D. Woods)

To me, it all seemed like cheap theater, but maybe Bundy believes his own myth. Many in the room seemed to. Then again, they also looked on with jaws agape as Happel warned about the UN鈥檚 plans to 鈥渆liminate anywhere from 95 percent to 75 percent of our population.鈥 While their credulity was astonishing and depressing, I doubt that these would-be crusaders present any meaningful threat to the future of public land or the republic on which it stands. They barely filled a small conference room. The only presenter who actually addressed a Montana public land issue in-depth was Kerry White, a Republican state legislator from Bozeman. White gave a talk on megafires, advocating for more thinning projects in national forests to reduce the severity of fires and boost the timber economy. While White鈥檚 interpretations of wildfire science would raise eyebrows in the company of scientists, the basic premise of thinning forests to minimize wildfires鈥 destructive capacity has in the West.

In an unexpected bit of drama, Bundy took the mic during the question-and-answer period and harangued White for tacitly acknowledging the federal government鈥檚 right to manage public land. Waving his weathered pocket Constitution, Bundy asked, 鈥淒o you see or do you not see that the control of our lands in federal hands is the problem?鈥 White seemed taken aback. 鈥淚 disagree with that,鈥 he said. In a tense back-and-forth, White鈥攁 conservative warhorse in the Montana legislature, born and raised on his family鈥檚 ranch in the Gallatin Valley鈥攔efused to give in to Bundy. Exasperated, he said, 鈥淭he people gave the government the power to do things for us. If they don鈥檛 do it correctly, it is the power of the people to change that. Does that make sense?鈥 Indeed, it was the most sensible thing anyone said all day.

The post Behind the Scenes at a Bundy Rally appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
#1: Glacier Country /adventure-travel/destinations/north-america/glacier-country/ Wed, 11 Apr 2018 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/glacier-country/ #1: Glacier Country

In 2015, Glacier National Park received its 100 millionth visitor since its establishment in 1910. It鈥檚 still every bit as enchanting now as it was back then. Hike a few miles into the backcountry from practically any trailhead and you鈥檒l feel like you have the million-acre wilderness to yourself. The real exploration in these parts, … Continued

The post #1: Glacier Country appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
#1: Glacier Country

In 2015, received its 100 millionth visitor since its establishment in 1910. It鈥檚 still every bit as enchanting now as it was back then. Hike a few miles into the backcountry from practically any trailhead and you鈥檒l feel like you have the million-acre wilderness to yourself. The real exploration in these parts, however, takes place beyond park boundaries.

Columbia Falls to Two Medicine Lake

Road Trip #1

Total distance: 451 miles; total days: 7-9

The Middle Fork of the marks the southwestern boundary of the park. With the on the other side, paddlers can raft Class II鈥揑II whitewater. , in West Glacier, offers half- or full-day trips. One of the best ways to access the park is the Two Medicine entrance, a short nine-mile drive that ends at , where the water is so clear that on some days the surface provides an exact simile of 9,513-foot Rising Wolf and 8,271-foot Sinopah Mountains.

Made in Montana

What started out as a mom-and-pop Whitefish shop to raise money for two ski-racing sons has evolved into an iconic Montana brand. Buy a Glacier tee and $1 will be donated to the Glacier National Park Conservancy for education, research, and preservation.

EAT & STAY: features locally raised beef and makes a mean huckleberry pie. With amazing views, cascading waterfalls, and access to lots of hiking trails, is one of the most spectacular sites in the park.

Biking the Going-to-the-Sun Road.
Biking the Going-to-the-Sun Road.

Going-to-the-Sun Road

, which is open only during the summer, winds from one jaw-dropping vista to another. Let someone else do the driving so you can take pictures by booking seats on one of daily interpretive bus tours. For a stunning day hike, park at Siyeh Bend and lace your boots up for a 4.5-mile hike up to . You鈥檒l be rewarded with fields of wildflowers and panoramic downvalley views.

Trail running above the seven-mile glacial Whitefish Lake.
Trail running above the seven-mile glacial Whitefish Lake.

Whitefish

is a hub for recreation, with a seven-mile-long glacial lake, the ever-expanding , and Whitefish Mountain Resort overlooking it all. Hike Danny On National Recreation Trail to the 6,817-foot summit of the resort, or rent a mountain bike at Village Equipment Rentals and explore the town鈥檚 incredibly well-maintained network of multi-use trails. At Whitefish City Beach, rent a SUP or kayak at Paddlefish Sports. Back in town, treat yourself to an ice cream cone at Sweet Peaks Ice Cream and then take a leisurely stroll along the Whitefish River at nearby Riverside Park.

EAT & STAY: Order elk meatloaf and a glass of wine at Tupelo Grille. At Good Medicine Lodge, the breakfasts, like Montana Morning鈥攁 trout cake topped by a poached egg鈥攁re so delicious that they win national competitions.

Eureka

Six miles south of the Canadian border, sits in the far northwest corner of Montana. With easy access to and , the recreation potential is endless. has 500 routes rated 5.10 and higher and great views to 90-mile-long .

EAT & STAY: serves up soups, salads, juicy burgers, and classic old-fashioned malts. are brand-new and sit eight miles south of Eureka in the heart of the .

Swing bridge over the Kootenai River near Libby.
Swing bridge over the Kootenai River near Libby.

Libby

For a sense of just how pristine the wilderness around is: were both filmed in Kootenai County. North of Libby, check out , which crashes more than 90 feet over the course of a mile. Hike across the swinging and continue on Trail #218 up high cliffs overlooking the river to excellent viewpoints for bighorn sheep and peregrine falcons.

EAT & STAY: has tasty homemade everything, from the chips and salsa to cheese enchiladas. has a friendly staff and serves a complimentary continental breakfast.

The post #1: Glacier Country appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
How Mike Foote Set an Obscure 24-Hour Skiing Record /outdoor-adventure/snow-sports/foote-and-vertical-record/ Tue, 20 Mar 2018 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/foote-and-vertical-record/ How Mike Foote Set an Obscure 24-Hour Skiing Record

One man's quest to ski the equivalent of sea level to the summit of Everest and back. Twice. In 24 hours. On a single ski run.

The post How Mike Foote Set an Obscure 24-Hour Skiing Record appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
How Mike Foote Set an Obscure 24-Hour Skiing Record

Residents of Whitefish, Montana, were curious about why the ski resort just north of town left the lights on all night. Night skiing ended March 3, and now it was Saturday, March 17鈥擲aint Patrick鈥檚 Day. If they had pulled out binoculars, they would have caught glimpses of a lone headlamp inching up Ed鈥檚 Run, a steep intermediate shot that drops right into the mountain village. That headlamp belonged to professional ultrarunner Mike Foote, 34, of Missoula, who was attempting to break the world record for most vertical feet climbed and skied in 24 hours.

Video loading...

Austrian ski-mountaineering racer Ekkehard D枚rschlag set the existing record鈥60,350 feet鈥攂ack in 2009. Foote was shooting for 61,200 feet with a plan to make 60 laps of the 1,020-foot Ed鈥檚 Run. At about 9 p.m. on Friday night, he was more than halfway done, with 31 laps under his belt in less than 12 hours. But the conditions were deteriorating as snow that had warmed and melted during the day began to freeze into chunks the size of small hailstones.

Foote鈥檚 skis were beginning to slide backwards on the last pitch of the run, which was the coldest, windiest, and steepest. His laps were gradually slowing down as his body started to show the effects of the more than 30 miles he had already skinned, all of it straight up. He鈥檇 built a buffer that morning under an unusually blue sky鈥擶hitefish Mountain Resort is famous for its inversions鈥攕having more than two minutes from his projected average of 24 minutes per lap for the first 20 laps. By late afternoon, Foote had bought himself two laps鈥 worth of time鈥攂ut now the knife was cutting the other way.

At the base of the run, Foote鈥檚 support crew of more than a dozen friends manned a folding table with homemade snacks and an assortment of fluids, like water mixed with supplements and warm tea. Foote was burning an average of 500 calories per hour鈥攖wice what he consumes while running. His crew made sure to have a pair of skis waiting for him with skins already mounted so Foote wouldn鈥檛 have to waste a second during transitions. He skidded down from lap 31 and made a sweeping turn around a stake planted in the snow that served as the official lap marker. He popped out of one pair of 65-millimeter-waisted pink and green Dynafit race skis and stepped right into the next pair. Without a moment of pause, Foote stepped off.

Foote steps off on the final lap at about 8:00 a.m. on Sunday, March 18. Alyson Gnam hands him fluids and food as he moves.
Foote steps off on the final lap at about 8:00 a.m. on Sunday, March 18. Alyson Gnam hands him fluids and food as he moves. (Elliot Woods)

A support crew member walked beside him for the first hundred yards, holding a bag of potato chips and a plate with boiled sweet potato slices, preopened energy gels, and bacon-and-rice balls. Foote gobbled as much as he could stomach, took a swig of Coca-Cola from a two-liter bottle, and said, 鈥淚 should do this more often.鈥 He mustered a half-smile and was off again into the night.


Foote grew up in Jefferson, Ohio, a town of a few thousand an hour east of Cleveland. The highest point in Ashtabula County is Owens Mound, which, at 1,150 feet, is not quite 600 feet higher than nearby Lake Erie. Needless to say, Foote was not born with hooves like his rivals in the Pyrenees and the Alps, or like his longtime friend and training partner Luke Nelson, a native Idahoan and a top-ranked American skimo racer and ultrarunner.

Foote didn鈥檛 start running in the mountains until 2004, when he moved to Missoula to study environmental science at the University of Montana. He had been a baseball player in high school, but out West he quickly developed a love of trail running and started competing in short races around Missoula. After working a few years as a raft guide in and a ski patroller at , Foote moved back to Missoula and took a job at the Runner鈥檚 Edge, where he eventually became the race coordinator.

Foote wanted to do something on skis that would emulate the roughly 24-hour effort of a 100-mile race. It was only after he came up with the idea that he found D枚rschlag鈥檚 record.

In 2009, Foote ran his first ultra, the . 鈥淚 had no expectations. I just wanted to survive,鈥 Foote told me. He ended up finishing in the top ten. 鈥淚 caught the bug then,鈥 he said, 鈥渂ut I didn鈥檛 ever want to do a 100-miler again. It was horrible. Super painful. My body was destroyed. I just wasn鈥檛 used to it.鈥 After that first 100-miler, Foote鈥檚 feet were so beat up that he didn鈥檛 run a step for six weeks. But he was hooked. In the years since, he鈥檚 finished second in the in Colorado鈥檚 San Juan Mountains three times and snagged two top-ten finishes in the , which runs through the mountains of France, Italy, and Switzerland. Now it only takes about a week of rest after a 100-miler before Foote starts running again.

Foote rounds the turnaround pole at the top of Ed's Run.
Foote rounds the turnaround pole at the top of Ed's Run. (Elliot Woods)

Foote devotes his winters to high-intensity skimo races all over the world. The idea of setting a new vert record came to him in July 2017, after Hardrock. He wanted to do something on skis that would emulate the roughly 24-hour effort of a 100-mile race. It was only after he came up with the idea that he found D枚rschlag鈥檚 record. 鈥淚t was pretty esoteric,鈥 Foote said.

His girlfriend, Katie Rogotzke, 30, a nurse practitioner who has completed a 50-kilometer race, captained his support team. 鈥淚 was pretty incredulous,鈥 she told me with a laugh as she changed out Foote鈥檚 skins between laps. Rogotzke said she never doubted him once he made the decision to train for the record. 鈥淗e鈥檚 super steady. He likes faraway goals and getting into a Zen state of focus,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd the steeper the better.鈥


To prepare for the feat, Foote worked with coach Scott Johnston, who co-founded with legendary alpinist Steve House. Johnston said determining a race pace was the primary challenge in designing a training program for such a niche event. They settled on a goal of 2,560 feet per hour, including an anticipated average descent time of about 3.5 minutes per hour.

鈥淥nce we knew that was the race pace, we had to design a training schedule to optimize his physiology for that pace and develop his efficiency strategy,鈥 Johnston said. Since Foote had such a depth of training experience from 100-mile and skimo races, Johnston said it was 鈥渏ust a matter of extrapolating鈥 what they already knew about his metabolism and applying it to the unique demands of going uphill at a consistent grade for 24 hours. In the training jargon, Foote trained himself to become highly 鈥渕onodirectional.鈥

鈥淩ather than going out and doing shorter high-intensity work that鈥檚 faster than race pace,鈥 Johnston said, 鈥渨e needed to make him very efficient at that particular pace.鈥 Foote鈥檚 training began last November and reached its apex in early February with two back-to-back 22,000-foot days at Montana Snowbowl, in Missoula. Foote stashed a duffel bag in the trees and set a skin track in fresh snow and banged out laps for about eight hours each day, proving to himself that he had the fitness to maintain race pace for at least a third of the distance, even alone and unsupported in less than optimum conditions.

Unfortunately, those two days took an unexpectedly severe toll on Foote鈥檚 body. 鈥淗e didn鈥檛 recover well from the workout. It put him in a hole, and it took awhile for him to climb out,鈥 Johnston said. 鈥淲e had to go into emergency mode after that, but it鈥檚 a testament to Mike that he got the train back on the track again.鈥 Johnston said he was confident Foote could鈥檝e broken the 60,000-foot record then, and when race week finally came around, he told Foote, 鈥淭he money鈥檚 in the bank. You know what you need to do.鈥

At the beginning of the day, the downhill had been Foote鈥檚 only rest period. By 3:00 a.m., his quads were shattered, his feet were torn up, and he was screaming in pain with every turn on the downhills.

Foote said he had 鈥渁 lot of nerves鈥 on the day of the event and that he actually began to doubt himself during the first few laps. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 feel good at all. My heart rate was through the roof. It was just not clicking. I was sweaty,鈥 Foote said. 鈥淏ut then I set into a groove. Having an aid station every 30 minutes forced me to eat and kept my energy levels constant.鈥 The darkest hours of night were the most challenging, not least because the icy conditions forced Foote to yard on his poles to power through the final pitch, which was demoralizing in addition to creating an unanticipated energy demand.

By then, Foote had pacers leading him up the hill, including Nelson, which allowed him to turn off his brain and focus on putting one foot in front of the other. Foote鈥檚 community of support from his years as a ski patroller at the mountain paid off. The grooming machines came through and ran extra laps on the downhill portion of the run to soften the snow. At the beginning of the day, the downhill had been Foote鈥檚 only rest period. By 3:00 a.m., his quads were shattered, his feet were torn up, and he was screaming in pain with every turn on the downhills.

Foote takes a swig of champagne after breaking the world record.
Foote takes a swig of champagne after breaking the world record. (Elliot Woods)

鈥淲hen the sun started coming up, I started to feel good,鈥 Foote told me, 鈥渙r maybe I was just smelling the barn.鈥 His pace had slowed to about 27 minutes per lap, but he was still barely within the window to complete 60 laps in less than 24 hours. When he finished lap 59, Foote officially broke the record with 60,180 feet gained. 鈥淭he last couple of hours I thought, 鈥業 feel stable enough鈥攖his is probably going to happen,鈥欌 Foote told me from his bed at a nearby condo an hour after the finish.

鈥淚 felt a little emotional. I put a lot into this. It鈥檚 definitely one of the biggest goals of my life so far, and I was very much not confident that I鈥檇 be able to pull it off as the day approached. So I felt happy,鈥 Foote said. 鈥淏ut I didn鈥檛 really have time to think about it, because we wanted to get an extra lap.鈥 A dozen of his friends stepped off with him for the final lap, and with Nelson pacing him, Foote left them scrambling to catch up. Lap 60 was one of the fastest of the entire effort. He finished with five minutes to spare.

The post How Mike Foote Set an Obscure 24-Hour Skiing Record appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
5 Spots Where You Can Actually Ski This Winter /adventure-travel/destinations/5-spots-where-winter-has-actually-arrived/ Thu, 18 Jan 2018 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/5-spots-where-winter-has-actually-arrived/ 5 Spots Where You Can Actually Ski This Winter

Yes, you can still find powder somewhere.

The post 5 Spots Where You Can Actually Ski This Winter appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
5 Spots Where You Can Actually Ski This Winter

Unless you live in New England (or, oddly, Florida), this winter feels like it鈥檚 off to a very slow start. It鈥檚 bone-dry in places around the West right now, with record-low snow conditions in typically snow-drenched locales in the Rockies and the Sierra Nevada. Taos, New Mexico, just saw some of its first snowflakes of the season, and Park City, Utah, has less than 50 percent of its average snowfall for this time of year. But it鈥檚 not all bad news. Resorts in the Pacific Northwest, Canada, and much of Europe are off to a fine start. Here鈥檚 where to go if you鈥檙e craving a dose of deep winter.

Whitefish, Montana

Montana鈥檚 Whitefish Mountain Resort has been coated in more than 13 feet of snow so far this season. There are direct flights into the nearby Kalispell airport from ten major cities, or you can ride Amtrak into town from places like Chicago, Seattle, or Minneapolis. The 86-room (from $139) opened in downtown Whitefish in 2016 and has ski-and-stay packages with lift tickets, an on-site spa, and a rooftop hot tub. A free shuttle will take you from town to the ski hill.

Verbier, Switzerland

Verbier is the perfect place to eat fondue in mountainside cabins and ride endless trams over vast, glaciated peaks. This winter in Switzerland has proven plentiful, with a 100-plus-inch base at upper elevations and good early season conditions. The (from $235) is located right next to the Medran lift and has boot dryers and croissant breakfasts. Tbar, the hotel鈥檚 in-house watering hole, serves sushi and apr猫s-ski drinks.

Jay Peak, Vermont

Jay Peak somehow gets more snow than anywhere else in Vermont. The area has welcomed 190 inches so far, with a base depth of 46 inches. Sure, there have been rain and high winds on a few days, but you might have a better chance of scoring a powder day here than in the Rocky Mountains this winter. is walking distance to the tram, and if you鈥檙e traveling with kids, they鈥檒l appreciate the indoor water park, arcade, and pizzeria downstairs in the hotel.

Mount Baker, Washington

Mount Baker once broke the record for most snowfall in a season when 1,140 inches fell in 1999, and while it听isn鈥檛听having that kind of winter, the snow is听still dependably deep. The mountain currently has 114 inches and counting鈥115 percent of the average for this time of year. Stay in the tiny town of Glacier, at the bottom of the ski resort access road. The has basic, clean rooms (from $119) and is about 25 minutes from the hill. It鈥檚 also next door to , a local favorite.

Kicking Horse, British Columbia

Interior British Columbia is having a stellar winter鈥攐r at least one that looks better than we鈥檙e seeing seeing in the United States. Kicking Horse has gotten more than 236 inches of snow鈥攔ight on par with average. Stay at the (from $124), steps from the gondola, for upscale rooms and a European-style breakfast spread. Don鈥檛 miss the slopeside Double Black Caf茅 for coffee in the morning and beer in the afternoon. You can fly into Calgary, and twice-a-week shuttles鈥攏ew this year鈥攚ill take you from the airport to Kicking Horse, 2.5 hours away.

The post 5 Spots Where You Can Actually Ski This Winter appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
9 Upscale 国产吃瓜黑料 Hostels to Stay in Now /adventure-travel/destinations/9-upscale-hostels-worth-staying/ Tue, 17 Oct 2017 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/9-upscale-hostels-worth-staying/ 9 Upscale 国产吃瓜黑料 Hostels to Stay in Now

There鈥檚 a new breed of low-cost lodging that's custom-made for getting into the wild

The post 9 Upscale 国产吃瓜黑料 Hostels to Stay in Now appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>
9 Upscale 国产吃瓜黑料 Hostels to Stay in Now

If the word 鈥渉ostel鈥 reminds you of backpacking through Central America as a twentysomething, think again. A new breed of affordable shelter for travelers has arrived in North American adventure towns, with great rates, comfortable beds, and hotel-like amenities. You won鈥檛 have to bring your own sheets or sift through a sink full of dirty dishes to cook your ramen noodles, and there are some great deals to be had鈥攑rovided you don鈥檛 mind sharing a bathroom or cooking your breakfast in the company of others. What鈥檚 more, many of these nine spots also offer private rooms.

Breckenridge, Colorado

The Bivvi

was born when two adventure-loving college friends decided to buy a run-down B&B and transform it into a modern hostel. Stay in a bunk, a private suite with an in-room hot tub, or a four-person apartment, and you鈥檒l get a ski and bike storage room (equipped with boot driers), and a hot home-cooked breakfast of pancakes or eggs served each morning. A free bus to Breckenridge鈥檚 gondola picks you up out front, and wine and craft beer are served at the in-house bar. Bunks start at $29; private rooms at $129.

Truckee, California

Redlight Hostel

A block off Truckee鈥檚 main drag, offers easy access to skiing at Northstar, Squaw Valley, and Sugar Bowl. Located in a historic building first constructed in the 1880s, the Redlight derives its name from its previous life as a brothel. Bunks are available with privacy curtains, earplugs, and white-noise machines. There are also private rooms with shared bathrooms. A sauna and communal kitchen are on-site, along with ski and bike storage, plus a bar that attracts locals who pop in for a drink. Bunks start at $39; private rooms at $79.

Whistler, British Columbia

Pangea Pod

The private sleeping quarters at aren鈥檛 spacious, but you鈥檒l get all the comforts of a nice hotel room, including fluffy towels, ski- and bike-savvy concierge services, and a lobby espresso bar. Guests share bathrooms, the gear storage room, and a more-than-spacious lounge that鈥檚 stocked with board games. Pods start around $40.

Ludlow, Vermont听

Homestyle Hostel

Opened by a world-traveling couple in 2014, the feels like a charming New England bed and breakfast鈥攐nly way more affordable. Homemade granola and Vermont-roasted coffee is served each morning, and dinner in the on-site restaurant is served Thursday through Sunday. A bar serves espresso by day and cocktails at night. In winter, a shuttle to Okemo Mountain Resort departs from across the street. A bunk in a six-person room starts at $75; private rooms start at $115.

Denver, Colorado

Hostel Fish

At , rooms are decorated with wall-sized maps, chandeliers, murals, and vintage clocks. There鈥檚 daily housekeeping, iPads available to borrow, free coffee, and a bar and kitchen. The front desk staff is happy to recommend adventures for you, offering tips on everything from nearby mountain bike rides to happy hour at the Museum of Contemporary Art. Bunks start at $35; private rooms from $160.

San Clemente, California

House of Trestles

Surfers make up the majority of guests at , a few miles from San Onofre State Beach, home to San Clemente鈥檚 most popular surf breaks. You can rent a surfboard for $25听a day听and add a cruiser bike with a surf rack for $15 a day. New to surfing? Book a lesson with the Baja Surf Camp. While drinking kombucha in the lounge, you鈥檒l feel like you鈥檙e in the pages of a surf magazine, since each room is sponsored by a different surf brand. You鈥檙e relegated to a bunk bed here, but they come with curtains for a touch of privacy. Bunks from $29.

Ellijay, Georgia

Mulberry Gap

Mountain bikers love , a collection of cabins, plus a camp kitchen and dining hall, set on a 15-acre forested property deep in the southern Appalachian Mountains. The place is surrounded by a network of mountain bike trails that have been designated with status. Home-cooked breakfasts and dinners come included in your stay. Rent a cabin, a bunk cabin, or a campsite, and enjoy access to outdoor hot tubs, fire pits, and communal bathhouses. The staff will tune your bike or shuttle you to a trailhead for an extra fee. Cabins start at $65听per person, or $19听per person for camping.

Whitefish, Montana

Whitefish Hostel

The grants you superb access to skiing at Whitefish Mountain Resort, lake outings on Whitefish Lake, and hiking in Glacier National Park. In winter, you can book the whole house for up to ten friends for $225 a night. During summer months, reserve one of ten bunks starting at $35. The attached Super Sisters Caf茅 serves up tasty vegetarian lunches and smoothies.

Boulder, Colorado

国产吃瓜黑料 Lodge

The opened on the west side of Boulder in 2015. You can rent a private cabin or suite, grab a bunk bed, or pitch a tent on wooden platforms on the banks of Fourmile Creek. Midwinter, the hotel offers free weekend shuttles to Eldora Mountain Resort, 30 minutes away. A newly built community room serves beer and wine near a wood-burning fireplace. Bunks start at $65; private rooms at $209.

The post 9 Upscale 国产吃瓜黑料 Hostels to Stay in Now appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

]]>