SUNDANCE
SKIING THE LEGEND,
SEARCHING FOR BOB
By Lynn
Ferrin
Let's see now...for
breakfast, to have the smoked trout hash with sweet corn, or the
Santa Fe casserole with chorizo and jack cheese? This creaky-kneed
city-dweller, who hasn't been on downhill skis more than twice in
a decade, needs fortification for those slopes, gleaming like guillotines
outside.
But hey, one
couldn't pick a more ele-gant, thoroughly aesthetic resort than
Sundance for a ski comeback, at least not this side of St. Moritz.
Everything about
Sundance, tucked away in a side canyon off the Provo River in north
central Utah, bears the touch of its resident founder/owner, Robert
Redford. Sundance is like a gallery of Southwestern art and culture
housed in the pages of Architectural Digest. The Tree House
restaurant, at the bottom of the ski hill, displays Redford's priceless
collection of western art and Native American weavings and ceramics-as
well as stills from his films. On Saturday nights the films run
in the Sundance screening room, or you get the videos free from
the front desk and run them on your in-room VCR. And-I love this-the
flower-and-vegetable garden is "fertilized with manure from
the Robert Redford Ranch."
But the best
part, as it turned out, is that Sundance is so skier-friendly. This
is a small resort-41 runs, 450 acres, top elevation 8,250 feet,
with a limit of 1,200 skiers a day. During a three-day sojourn I
saw only one short lift line.
|
Sundance
Film Festival:
The annual Sundance Film Festival is internationally
famed as a showcase for independent films. It attracts
more than 10,000 movie-lovers, stars, writers, and other
industry types. Some 70 films are shown, with multiple
screenings. Most screenings are in Park City, with additional
shows in Salt Lake City and Sundance. This year's dates
are January 16-26. Series tickets are probably sold
out by now. However, seats at individual screenings
start selling January 10 and the day of the show. For
information phone the Sundance Institute at (801) 328-3456
or visit
their Website.
|
|
 |
With its long
cruiser trails and forgiving terrain, Sundance is ideal for someone
warming up after a hiatus of several years. And although skiing's
big boys will find more acreage, altitude, and challenge at Park
City or Snowbird, Sundance does have a few drop-dead chutes and
expert slopes. And shredders will have to go elsewhere, as snowboarding
is not allowed.
At Sundance,
in the Wasatch Range, the skiing is quintessential Rocky Mountains.
Hanging over the runs and bowls are those distinctive layer-cake
pyramidal peaks, including 12,000-foot Mt. Timpanogos. The trails
wind through pale stands of leafless aspen and dark groves of spruce.
At the top of the Arrowhead lift, near Bearclaw's Cabin and cafe,
skiers take the sun in lawn chairs looking out toward the Utah Valley.
After a couple
of days on the downhill runs, I hopped the free shuttlebus over
to stride around Sundance Nordic Center. It's five minutes away,
just over the shoulder of a low ridge. It's a gentle workout, following
the 15k of trails meandering through the aspen and across sun-blasted
meadows. I particularly enjoyed it one star-bright evening, with
lanterns in the trees to guide the way.
| |
|
If
you're going...
For
reservations at Sundance, phone (800) 892-1600, or write
RR3, Box A-1, Sundance, UT 84604. Rates are highest
December 20 through March 31, lowest in fall. Accommodations
are in "cottages"-condominiums-within walking
distance of the ski lifts, restaurants, and grocery/deli.
Rates include American breakfast for two at the Foundry
Grill; they start at $195 for a standard room and run
up to $950 per night for a four-bedroom "mountain
home." Note: Sundance, like many ski resorts, has
strict prepayment and cancellation policies.
Adult
all-day lift tickets are $35; seniors over 65 ski free.
You can buy tickets in advance by calling (801) 223-4TIX.
Ski
school information is at (801) 225-4107. Sundance has
a full program of short lessons, seminars, clinics,
"Learn to Ski" and "Total Quality Skiing"
packages, and a variety of kids' programs.
Sundance
Nordic Center is open daily 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., with night
skiing Wednesday-Sunday 5 to 9 p.m. Trail fee is $8,
$5 after 2 p.m., free for seniors over 65. Rentals of
Nordic and telemark skis, lessons. Phone (801) 223-4170.
AAA
Travel can arrange for flights to Salt Lake City airport,
a 50-minute drive away, and car rental.
|
|
Other pursuits:
Out at the mouth of the canyon, there's a catch-and-release stretch
of the Provo River. One young man told me he stood midstream, shivering
in his hip boots, and in one hour caught 20 fine trout. Maybe the
same trout 20 times. Nevertheless.
At night, when
the day-skiers go home, Sundance gets really quiet. Entertainment
is dinner, an occasional film in the screening room, poetry readings.
(Bubba can drive over to howl in the saloons of Park City, 40 minutes
away.)
The lodgings-mostly
privately owned condos rented out as hotel rooms and suites-are
scattered along the little creek that tumbles through the canyon.
(Walking paths connect the rooms with the ski lifts, cafes, and
shops.) Inside the rooms, everything is so tasteful: unfinished
pine walls, hand-hewn furniture, stone fireplaces, thick comforters,
the right art, the right CDs, arrangements of dried wildflowers
and grasses, a bottle of spring water on the bedside table. Oh,
and so p.c.; soaps are wrapped in recycled paper. Some rooms have
steam vents in the showers, a nice touch for aging bones, shredded
sinews, and lungs seared from gulping mountain air as dry as a fine
chardonnay.
My main pain,
though, was a sore neck from skiing swivel-headed, looking for Bob.
The closest I got was spotting the long driveway curling across
a distant snowy meadow to his secluded manse. On my last run on
my last day, a pudgy clomp-booted pre-pubescent sharing my chairlift
said, "Hey, did you see Redford? He's been skiing this run
all afternoon."
|