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International Women’s Day Events in Salt Lake City

By Adventures, Arts & Culture, City Watch

International Women’s day is this Sunday, March 8.

(We’ve come a long way as women, but the fight for equal rights continues. According to the The Institute for Women’s Policy Research, in 2018, female full-time, year-round workers made only 82 cents for every dollar earned by men.)

Stay aware, stay strong and most importantly, be sure to celebrate yourself, and all the women in your life with these empowering Women’s Day events:

International Women‘s Day Queens of Music Festival at The Gateway:

The Gateway, Utah’s premier community gathering, dining and entertainment destination, is partnering with KRCL Radio 90.9fm and THE BLOCKS for an International Women’s Day Celebration on Saturday, March 7, 2020 from 2-10 p.m. The festival will feature a day full of live music, live mural paintings of iconic “queens of music,” vendors that support women-run business, panel discussions and a free screening of RBG, sponsored by Bumble, held at Kiln Co-working. A special Women & Wine pop-up bar by Vine Lore will feature hand-selected wines from four glass-crashing female winemakers.

Utah Women Working for Better Days!:

A new exhibition at the Utah Museum of Fine Arts (UMFA) at the University of Utah celebrates voting rights anniversaries in 2020, including the 150th anniversary of Utah as the first place where women voted in the modern nation. But Utah Women Working for Better Days! is less a history lesson than it is a provocation: What do “better days” look like to you? Utah Women Working for Better Days is view March 5–December 6.

Girls Climb for Free with Cotopaxi and Rebel Girls:

Join Cotopaxi and Rebel Girls for an International Women’s Day event at the Front Climbing Club in Salt Lake City at 5 pm on Friday, March 6th. We’ve joined forces with the International Rescue Committee to support the launch of Rebel Girls’ newest book, Junko Tabei Masters the Mountains. The Cotopaxi Foundation will be sponsoring free climbing for all girls under 17 and a presentation will be given by National Geographic youth explorer, Lilliana Libecki, and her dad, Mike Libecki.

International Women’s Day Ride: 

 

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Moab’s Famous Slickrock Trail Spared From Oil and Gas Lease

By Adventures, Outdoors

Slickrock is perhaps the most well-known trail in all of Moab. Mountain bikers, hikers and OHV drivers from around the world flock to the Sand Flats Recreation Area to explore Slickrock’s unique geology and formations, which have very few analogs anywhere else. Despite the area’s popularity for recreation, it was under threat after the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) included two parcels within Sand Flats Recreation Area to the list of areas being considered for an oil and gas lease sale in June. Intense pressure from local groups led the BLM to removing the parcels from consideration, but threats to similar areas remain.

For clarity, it’s important to address the implications and processes that were involved in the proposed lease and development. Land within Sand Flats Recreation Area is under a “No Surface Occupancy” regulation, which means no oil and gas extraction infrastructure would have been placed on top of the Slickrock or anywhere within the Recreation Area. Rather, a developer would have had to use directional drilling, in which surface operations from a nearby parcel would extract resources by drilling horizontally underneath Sand Flats. It’s possible that such an operation would have had little impact on the recreation opportunities available within Sand Flats, though the bigger concern is that the area was ever considered appropriate for energy development.

The parcels under Sand Flats had always theoretically been candidates for development, but prior to the Trump administration, they likely wouldn’t have been considered plausible choices. Previously, the BLM would study the sustainability of any parcel which was nominated—through an Expression of Interest (EOI)—before being placed up for auction. Local and state officials would weigh the merits of energy extraction against benefits of the area as a wildlife habitat, recreation area or watershed protection area to determine the area’s suitability for development. After president Trump signed Executive Order 13783—the “Energy Dominance” policy—in March 2017, however, federal agencies were instructed to remove all regulatory and procedural obstacles to energy development. Leases nominated under the new guidelines are almost always offered for auction, which is the alarming factor underlying why the two parcels below Sand Flats Recreation were given serious consideration.

As much as I and many others would have hated to see our favorite recreation areas impacted, there is a much larger concern to address which should have excluded the two parcels beneath Sand Flats Recreation Area from consideration for energy development: water. The two parcels are within the Moab/Spanish Valley watershed, and sit directly above the Glen Canyon Aquifer, the “sole source aquifer” providing water to 90% of the Grand County population. Even with meticulous planning and execution, drilling and fracking carry the risk of contaminating the groundwater that makes the entire area livable. Quite frankly, that possibility should have been a nonstarter for even considering the proposals.

While these two parcels have been spared, the same process is playing out more broadly all across Utah and the American West. Land use in Utah is always a contentious issue, and it’s more important than ever to be involved in the process to ensure our best interests are being considered. Contact your local representatives and the Governor’s office to make your voice heard on these issues.

See all our outdoors coverage here.

 

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Wild Utah: Wild Goose Chase in Delta

By Adventures

“Whatcha doin this weekend?”

“Looking at geese,” was my answer last weekend, instead of the usual, “Nothing.”

Every year, the same time almost to the day, 20–30,000 snow geese stop at Gunnison Bend reservoir just outside Delta, Utah, for some R&R on their way back from Mexico. They started their journey at their breeding grounds at the very top of North America—the top of Alaska, northern Canada, where the continent starts to break up into little islands and runs into Greenland. And they travel 3,000 miles to Mexico.

In the spring, they do it again, in reverse, taking time to stop at Gunnison Bend Reservoir just west of Delta, Utah. Snow geese population overall numbers in the millions; thousands stop at the reservoir. You see them as a white haze on the water until you focus (bring your binoculars and a folding chair) and at first the sight is not that impressive.

Stick around a few minutes and watch. A Division of Wildlife Resources representative is there with a spotting scope and answers to your questions, and the closer you look, the more fascinating the whole scene becomes and the more geese you realize you’re looking at.

Plus you’ll see some other things.

Mixed in with the (technically) Lesser Snow Geese are Ross’s Geese, smaller but with similar markings, and every here and there is a dark morph of the snow goose.

Every few hours, like a wave at a football game, 10,000 geese or so decide to head for nearby fields to feed—the giant whirring sound of their wings almost drowns out their incessant honking and the goose-watchers let out a unanimous and involuntary “ooooooh” as if they were watching fireworks. Then they take up their V-formation making flying calligraphy in the sky.

I think they call that breathtaking.

Where is Sir David Attenborough? you wonder. He’d love this.

Be sure to mark your calendars for next year’s festival and see what small town Utah looks like—a quilt show, local honey and jam, hand-dyed scarves, face-painting for the kids.

Delta is an easy two-hour drive from Salt Lake City—so you can make the Snow Goose Festival a day trip or a weekend. Go to deltagoosefestival.com or check out the DWR website, wildlife.utah.gov.

 

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Get Some Color! Upcoming Art Events You Should Check Out

By Adventures, Arts & Culture

I don’t know about you, but I’ve been craving color! My goodness, it seems like everyday I wake up to the same grey-blue winter sky and dead trees. The only thing that’s been getting me through this dreary season is the bouquet of flowers I keep at my desk. Which got me thinking- it’s absolutely the best time of year to get out of our cozy homes and check out some beautiful art! Below are some fabulous upcoming art exhibitions/events:

  • Love in the Abstract: February 21, 6:00-8:00 pm (Group Exhibition runs February 4th – February 29) 801-583-4800, 1321 S. 2100 E. Salt Lake City, UT 84108.
  • Art For Justice: Select Women Artists from the Agnes Gund Collection and Select Artists Associated with the Art for Justice Fund, curated by Nicole Gallo. Reception of the complete exhibition will be held on Friday, February 21. The private reception will run from 6:00-7:00 pm, with the public reception from 7:00-9:00 pm. 412 South 700 West
    Salt Lake City, Utah 84104, 801-355-3383.
  • Open Studio/First Friday Art Stroll: The Photography Studio will be open for the evening. Landscape and other Artwork will be for sale. Event night/Walk-in single image shots available for just $25, light Refreshments served. (Every first Friday from now until December 2020) The Monarch, 455 25th Street Ogden, Utah 84401, 801-893-6604.
Whatever you do, be sure to get out of the house, support the arts and look at some stunning (colorful!) art this winter. At the very least, it’ll boost your spirits.
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Salt Lake City Council Reviewing Foothills Trail System Master Plan

By Adventures, Outdoors

The Salt Lake City Council is reviewing an updated master plan for the Foothills Trail System. The Mayor’s Administration spent nearly two years gathering public input between 2016 and 2018, which was used to guide plan development. If approved, the master plan will provide a development outline including layouts and timelines for the next ten years. The Council is currently accepting comments on the master plan, and will be holding a public hearing on Tuesday, February 18 at 7:00 p.m. at the City and County Building. If you want your priorities to be considered during the process for determining the future of this area, it’s time to speak or forever hold your peace.

This effort represents the first master plan for the Foothills Natural Area, which covers the area between Salt Lake City’s northern boundary and Emigration Canyon. Due to an ongoing recreation boom and steadily rising user demand, the current trail system faces increased pressure that isn’t sustainable into the future. Resource management, trail maintenance and user conflict issues are especially acute during the spring and fall as snowbound higher elevation trails force users from disparate trail systems into a single area.

The Foothills Trail System currently contains 41 miles of existing trails, to which the master plan aims to add 65 miles of new trails. These new trails would include a mixture of multi-directional and one-way trails in addition to multi-use and dedicated single-use trails. Providing designated trails for specific user groups has historically helped reduce the user conflict and maintenance issues that often threaten access and development. Additionally, the plan would provide for a growing network of improved trailheads, information kiosks and wayfinding signage at trail intersections. Currently, the dearth of this basic infrastructure in the Foothills Trail System can’t meet the needs of a growing user base, and doesn’t meet the standard set by comparable trail systems in other places.

Master planning may not sound like the most exciting process, but it’s an essential starting point to creating a sustainable trail system. Substantial time and resources are committed to trail system development, so it’s crucial to get things right with a holistic vision. Take a look at the complete details of the Foothills Trail System Master Plan here, and click here to submit your comments to the Salt Lake City Council and for further information about the Council’s public hearing next week.

See all our outdoors coverage here.

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City Critters—Raccoons, better learn to love them.

By Adventures, Outdoors

In Salt Lake, while we love our domestic pet population and will go to any length to ensure their health, diet, entertainment and social scene are ideal. There are other woodland creatures, lurking in our backyard shadows, trees and sheds, who have made the city their home.

On any given night, through our neighborhoods are thousands of black-masked, stripy tailed bandits, we call raccoons. Its scientific name Procyon lotor, which points out its lesser relationship is to the dog (did you hear that, fido?) and its tendency to “wash” its food prior to eating (hey, that’s one up on you too). During the cold months, unlike other animals like bears, hedgehogs, snakes and bumblebees—raccoons do not hibernate—so they’ll be wandering around, searching out for neighborhood snacks all year round.

To deter raccoons from hitting your trash can, try adding some spice. Apparently, garlic, cayenne or black pepper will do the trick.

While raccoons are prolific and can take residence in places that may be a nuisance to both homeowners and sanitation engineers, being omnivores allows them to forage a variety of food sources, keeping many unwanted pests, including our rodent populations in check.

With the rise of homesteading, backyard compost piles and chicken coops, raccoons are naturally drawn to these. They do prey on living things and have been known to kill a hen, kitten or a full-grown cat. Raccoons will, of course, rummage through your trash containers, gardens and bird feeders. And, can you blame them? It’s like placing an all-you-can-eat buffet for them, and you keep the supply flowing. It is advisable to lock up your hens in the coop at night and gate-up any other garden or compost spaces for obvious reasons.

Urban raccoons like to make their homes in chimneys and attic spaces. And while raccoons are not protected by the law, in Utah you do not need a trapping or hunting license to kill them. However, you can’t process a nuisance raccoon for table meat or fish bait without one. While it seems there isn’t a huge demand for its meat at the present moment, perhaps trapping and releasing pesky raccoons, or hiring a professional to do so would be a better method for their removal.

Interested in Utah’s incredible and diverse wildlife? Our Outdoors section is the place to go to learn other fun facts about snakes, cougars, spiders and more…

 

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Park City’s Colby Stevenson Wins Two X Games Gold Medals

By Adventures

Park City skier Colby Stevenson had never been invited to X Games before this year, but the rookie stamped his name on the competition this week and is leaving Aspen with two fresh Gold Medals around his neck. Stevenson stormed out of the gate to take the win at the inaugural Ski Knuckle Huck competition—a modified big-air event that emphasizes creativity, style and variety over sheer technicality and amplitude—before dominating the field with four flawless runs to secure gold in Ski Slopestyle. Sundance is in full swing, but Stevenson could well be the biggest star in Park City right now.

Stevenson may not have been widely-known to a broader audience prior to his historic X Games performance, but the 22-year-old from Park City was was already regarded as a world-class talent within the freeskiing community. After Stevenson won the hotly-contested SVLSH Cup in both 2018 and 2019, it wasn’t hard to envision his competitive pedigree and well-rounded skillset—he finished first in slopestyle and second in halfpipe at the 2014 USASA Nationals—taking him to the top of the podium at freeskiing’s premier events.

Colby Stevenson Competing in X Games Slopestyle. Photo by Matt Morning / ESPN Images

No X Games rookie before Stevenson had ever won gold in slopestyle, an event in which skiers compete on a course filled with complex rails and massive jumps. The new jam-style format allowed Stevenson to showcase an arsenal of tricks and variations that helped him stand out from the crowd and lead the finals wire to wire. To win the event, he had to best a stacked field of competitors including Olympic, X Games and World Championship medalist Alex Beaulieu-Marchand, X Games gold medalist Fabian Bösch and defending X Games Slopestyle champion Alex Hall, who also calls Park City Home.

The sky’s the limit for Park City’s latest freeskiing phenom. Stevenson may have just announced himself on the world stage, but with plenty more X Games on the way—not to mention World Championships and the Beijing Winter Olympics in 2022—he’s just getting started.

 

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No Argument. Utah Really Does Have the Greatest Snow on Earth.

By Adventures, Outdoors

I skipped an entire day of work yesterday. I didn’t mean to, but the skiing was just too good to head back inside and slouch in front of a computer screen. It was hammering fluffy, Utah powder and a couple of quick runs soon bled into a full day of lapping my favorite lifts. What was so special about this particular day? Nothing. It was a random Wednesday in early January in what’s been an exceedingly typical season in Utah that won’t even register on the post-season tall tales meter. The unremarkable remarkableness of January 8 was a perfect encapsulation of “The Greatest Snow on Earth” and was the catalyst that compelled me to take to the keyboard in defense of the Beehive State’s place atop the snow podium.

Our cross-border colleagues at 5280 hemmed and hawed about whether Utah or Colorado has better snow in a recent piece and—bless their hearts—tried to opine on how Colorado snow could kinda, sorta, maybe be on par with Utah snow. The primary evidence cited consisted of a 2018 tweet from Steamboat referring to their trademark Champagne Powder™ and a mention of how their resorts are higher in elevation and thus have a longer ski season. Naming your snow after a regional bubbly grape drink that nobody really likes unless they’re bordering on a New Year’s Eve loss of consciousness or working off a possibly-related hangover by mixing it with orange juice the next morning? Elucidating upon the merits of enjoying oxygen-depleted, wind-scoured dust on crust all winter just to brave a few extra early fall and late spring days on the white ribbon of death? That’s what we’re working with? Sheesh.

To author Shauna Farnell’s credit, she’s a wonderful and far more accomplished writer than I, and she did the best with the available evidence at hand. Defense attorneys are compelled to act on behalf of even their most doomed clients after all. Calling on witnesses like University of Utah professor atmospheric science Jim Steenburgh—who said, “There really is no argument,”—and OpenSnow forecasters Joel Gratz and Evan Thayer didn’t help Colorado’s cause. Consulting Z Rankings mind-numbingly meticulous and empirically sourced quantitative snow rankings—Alta, Snowbird and Brighton hold the top three spots for Total Snow Score in North America—effectively closed the case. Utah gets more snow, of higher quality, more consistently than Colorado. When it comes to snow, Utah simply has the best. Full stop.

Turning to 5280’s red herrings about what one should prioritize in skiing—e.g., steepness, crowds, weather, time of the season, etc.—they unearth some valid points. Indeed, traffic in the Cottonwood Canyons occasionally approaches I-70 levels of gridlock, and Utah’s myriad quirks undoubtedly don’t appeal to everyone. Colorado is a beautiful state with marvelous skiing and fabulous people. Just don’t bring up snow around Utahns. We get a little defensive. When you come at the king, you best not miss.

Related Article: Explore the Science Behind the Greatest Snow on Earth

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Dining at the Solitude Yurt

By Adventures, Arts & Culture, Eat & Drink

Let’s be honest: The opportunity to dine in the mountainside Yurt at Solitude Mountain Resort on a snowy evening is enticement enough. Few fantasies can be more romantic.

The fir trees, laden with snow, the hushed background of fresh snow that makes every crunchy step of your boots sound digitally clear, the icy cold that feels bracingly fresh and hardens to lip-paralyzing numbness by the time you reach the welcoming glow of the entryway and that first body-warming taste of wine after you’ve stamped the snow off and hung up your coat—all those sensations are delightful enough without even considering the food.

And when you realize that all the cooking equipment, stove, pans, tables, table settings, linens—every single thing you need for a dinner party, including cases of wine—have to be transported up the mountain. It’s the ultimate camping kitchen, the very thought of which makes you relish the idea of a hotdog on a stick even more. I have to point out, they could have saved a little weight by choosing to pack a smaller pepper grinder.

But that the meal is prepared at all is amazing. That it’s a five-course meal served all at once to 40 people or so is more amazing.

And that the quality of the meal exceeds that of most Salt Lake City and Park City restaurants is jaw-dropping. Well, pick up your jaw and chew, because that’s how good this is. (And all served with showmanship and perfect timing.)

The perfect scallop. The hefty frisee salad that makes you want a second serving. (When does that happen) Beef cooked two ways—perfectly raspberry-rare loin and deeply braised TK, served together, a trick that would be just that if the two flavors weren’t bridged by just-cooked greens instead of bland potato. Siding meat with greens instead of starch provides a flavor segue between the metallic flavor of rare beef and the mouth-coating fat of the braise. A brilliant move by Chef Craig Gerome.

Most brilliant of all is the confined, cozy ambiance of the Yurt. Everyone is seated communally and after some shared wine, your fellow dinner guests are your friends.

Solitude Mountain Resort, 12000 Big Cottonwood Canyon Road 801-536-5765.

Note: In past years, the yurt has been a winter-only experience, but there is talk of adding summer hours. Check with the resort to see.

For more food, click here.

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Explore the Canadian Rockies from a Luxury Train

By Adventures, Outdoors, Travel

“Bear on the left!” a spotter calls out. The guests aboard the train scramble to the left, their eyes to the glass and cameras and cell phones in hand. Those down below on the landing between passenger cars stick their heads out, the wind whipping through their hair as they look for the elusive beast.

“There he is!”

It’s a black bear, sunning himself where the forest meets the railroad tracks, either unaware or uncaring of the 83-ton train passing him. We add him to our list: bighorn sheep, elk, eagles, osprey, and I’m certain I spotted a female moose meandering along the trees.

They’re all breathtaking sights for the passengers aboard the Rocky Mountaineer train, moving eastward 35 miles per hour along the Canadian Pacific Railway. The railways cut through mountain and cross over rivers on the train’s First Passage to the West route, a journey from bustling Vancouver to Kamloops, then finally Banff and Lake Louise.

You’ve probably seen the world by plane, by car. But what about a good old-fashioned iron horse?

All Aboard

Our adventure begins in the luxe Fairmont Vancouver, just steps away from the Vancouver Art Gallery and an easy walk to the waterfront. With an early train departure, we’re greeted at the Rocky Mountaineer station with coffee and a live pianist. As staff, dressed in navy blue vests and slacks, gently ushers us toward the train to board, a bagpiper sends us off into the wilderness.

The first floor is the dining room, where guests take turns indulging in cuisine that Chef Jean Pierre Guerin calls “elevated comfort food” for breakfast and lunch. Until your seating, have no fear: Servers load your tray with drinks, pastries and fruit.

But we’re not here for the food. We’re here for the views. On the Gold Leaf cars, riders have a 180-degree dome window overhead, where tree branches caress the glass like wayward curtains. The mountains crash into the clouds, sprinkled with trees and sugary snow. We pass logging towns, cross the Fraser River, spy strawberries, corn and blackberry bushes thriving in the meadows.

Standing in the open-air landing between cars, you can smell the earthy underforest, green leaves still drenched in morning dew, the thick wall of ponderosa pines. I can’t say how the sun and the wind have a smell, but from that landing, you could breathe it in.

The white heads of osprey and eagles dot the sky, decorating their treetop nests with orange fishing nets. You can spot the emerald flashes of ducks swimming. On the river, the beavers are the engineers, jamming up the waterways with their logs. We pass a bighorn sheep, nature’s Spider-Man, as it looks down at us while clinging precariously to the sides of jagged rock. Each time, spotters call out their discoveries. 

“It’s a fun job,” Train Manager Peter Masejo tells me. “Every trip is so different…even a week ago it wasn’t as green, and the river is lower.”

With our feet propped up, watching Canada pass, one of the last sights before we arrive in Kamloops is the eerie Tranquille Sanatorium. It was originally built in 1907 to treat patients with tuberculosis, then converted into an “insane asylum” in 1959. It’s no wonder that this secluded white building, paint peeling, is rumored to be haunted.

Kamloops

Our first overnight stop is the “cow town” of Kamloops. Three men on horseback greet the Rocky Mountaineer into the station, waving and tipping their cowboy hats.

Chef Guerin invites our group to join him for dinner in town. I ask him, “Is it hard to cook on a train, with the cars rocking back and forth without mercy?” Non. A former airline chef aboard first-class flights, he says you can do so much more on a train.

A guide tells guests about the mountain range before them

“You can’t sauté and flambé in the air,” he explains.

A glass of red wine in hand, Guerin tells us about the ranch he owns an hour outside of town. He’s seen Kamloops, where the Canadian Pacific and Canadian National railways meet, grow from a supply town into a city of 90,000 people. At this busy hub—the city’s name is derived from the Shuswap First Nation word for “meeting of the waters”—people are on their way east to Banff or Jasper, or to the big city of Vancouver.

As indicated by the restaurants, there’s a large Japanese population in town, their ancestors were forcibly moved from Vancouver into internment camps nearby during World War II (not unlike what was happening across the border).

The next day is another trip on the rails. A few hours into the leg, we pass a source of pride for the railroad: Craigellachie, the memorial where the last spike was driven into the tracks, much like Utah’s famed Golden Spike. Take a second to look down, and there’s a story behind the scenery: the sweat, blood and dynamite that built the Canadian Pacific Railway.

After Canada became independent in 1867, the nation’s first prime minister, Sir John A. Macdonald, was determined to not let the western territories join the United States. He hatched a plan to connect the land from coast to coast, a huge feat requiring that his men survey millions of acres of Canadian wilderness.

Once a pass was found in 1881, the next four and a half years were a race to the Pacific. Railway workers battled blizzards, raging rivers, cliffs, rockslides, mishandled dynamite, hunger and disease. More than 10,000 Chinese men were brought in from California, earning less than half what their white colleagues were making.

In 1885, the Last Spike was smashed into the railroad, completing Canada’s first transcontinental railroad—six years ahead of schedule.

Banff & Lake Louise

On the second night of the trip, we arrive in the burgeoning tourist hub of Banff, a snowy playground where visitors ski, hike and escape to the hot springs. Here, the lakes are frozen over and the mountains are truly snow-capped.

A view of the Cascade Mountain over Banff

After checking into the hotel, I wander the mountainside town and pop into local shops—I buy a wedge of bourbon chocolate at Mountain Chocolate, organic soaps and lotions at Rocky Mountain Soap Company, and a wooden bear ornament at The Spirit of Christmas. For dinner, we dine at Grizzly House, a wacky fondue restaurant serving up shark, alligator, rattlesnake, buffalo, venison and more. We follow dinner with a tour of Park Distillery and a tasting of its vodka and gin—be sure to try the spirits infused with espresso and vanilla.

But a trip to Banff without stopping at Lake Louise is a travesty. En route to the lake we make a stop on the side of the road to take in the grandeur of the Castle Mountains, named for their flat-topped peaks. While taking photos, a long, rumbling freight train goes by. I see trains differently now.

To access Lake Louise, we stop at the Fairmont Chateau Lake Louise, an elegant hotel with floor-to-ceiling picture windows framing a postcard view of the lake set against the mountains. I learn it’s named for Princess Louise, the fourth daughter of Queen Victoria, and I also learn it’s not an exaggeration to call the waters Tiffany blue. After taking a romp around the lake, grab a drink or lunch at the hotel’s picturesque Fairview restaurant or Lakeview Lounge.

Alas, my journey across the Canadian Rockies had to come to an end. Getting up before the sun rose, I took an airport van to Calgary, where I flew back to the United States and sunny South Florida.

An Elk spots tourists rafting on the Athabasca River in Jasper

After spending days on a locomotive, being rocked back and forth as I took in the sights and smells of the wild, I said goodbye to the mighty mountains.