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Utah's 'Secret' Slopes
Skiers lounge around the Last Chance deck at Utah's Solitude Mountain Resort, where crowds are nearly nonexistent.
(By John Horacek/solitude Mountain Resort)
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At the top of the quad chair is a 20-passenger tram, kind of like a big soup can, which carries brave souls to the start of the 2002 Olympic downhill course, a vertical freeway whose first several hundred yards hurl you downward at a terrifying pitch, then mellows into a broad, still-steep boulevard. You won't want to take intermediates here, but they can play all day von a vast expanse of milder terrain served by the Strawberry and Needles express gondolas.
If you've been to Sun Valley, the soaring wood beams, chandeliers, deluxe restrooms and high-class cuisine at Earl's Lodge at the base will remind you of that gracious Idaho resort. It's the kind of place where you feel almost underdressed walking through in ski clothes. You can have a quick sandwich or wood-fired pizza lunch, or dine in the Huntington Room and spend two hours, European-style, dining on wild mushroom-stuffed chicken breast and other specialties.
The great Snowbasin mystery is this: Why go to the trouble and expense of building such facilities, yet have no base-area accommodations?
Management insists it has plans for an entire village someday. Meanwhile, spokesman Kevin Stauffer bragged that Snowbasin's busiest day last season was the "equivalent to Deer Valley on Monday." I don't understand what's preventing expansion, but go enjoy uncluttered Snowbasin now.
Powder Mountain
For an even more empty experience, head a little bit farther north from Salt Lake City or Park City to Powder Mountain, another underutilized ski hill that claims the most in-bounds terrain in the United States (5,500 acres, bigger than Vail). It is prized by Salt Lake's deep-snow fiends, but navigating it can be tricky. Some newcomers feel there are too many flat areas you must skate across.
Powder's parking, near the top of the mountain, is reached via a two-lane road that can get slick. If you don't have a four-wheel-drive vehicle, you might be happier if you stop and park at Wolf Creek Resort, where you catch a shuttle bus to the resort center.
Best bet for first-timers: a full- or half-day tour from a mountain host. Beyond the view from the lifts is an immense wilderness of ungroomed snow called Powder Country. Ski it and you wind up on the resort's access road. Shuttles run continuously, taking skiers back to the base lodge.
Aside from the fun, how much can you save skiing these resorts? A single-day adult lift ticket at any of the four is cheaper by at least $16 compared with Park City. The only thing you'll miss are the bragging rights. And the crowds.




