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High Strangeness at Skinwalker Ranch

By Adventures

Welcome to Skinwalker Ranch, a sprawling 512-acre property at the center of the Uintah Basin—home to tales of the paranormal and unexplained. After decades of study, the ranch remains a disquieting enigma. It’s a real-life X-file. The area continues to lure new investigations to document and discover the source of these strange events, whether it be natural, man-made, extraterrestrial, interdimensional, spiritual or the key to unlocking the secrets of the universe.

The thrum of a propeller precedes the arrival of a black helicopter at Skinwalker Ranch. The ranch’s new owner, Brandon Fugal, and his brother are on board. His brother Cameron, the pilot, lands the helicopter, disturbing the otherwise quiet scenery with a cloud of dust. Fugal steps out onto the helipad, the one he had built specifically for his regular visits over the last six months. He has no reason to suspect this visit will be any different. They walk the perimeter under a punishing sun, now accustomed to the gruesome sight of animal entrails ceremoniously draped over the fenceline. Then, there it is above the mesa, where there had been only cloudless sky an instant before. Wide and flat like a saucer and gleaming silver, an object hovers in the air, moving at angles and trajectories that defy logic or explanation. The group of men freezes, staring, transfixed. The disc moves in the blink of an eye, like a bullet unhindered by physics, and vanishes. 

The Uintah Basin in Northeastern Utah is no stranger to the strange. It’s home to hundreds of reported sightings of UFO (or UAP, Unidentified Aerial Phenomena, which is now the official, government-approved terminology) and the notorious Skinwalker Ranch, the alleged center of the unexplained activity in the Basin. The ranch has had three owners since the early ’90s, and its last two owners have dedicated time, money and untold resources to unearthing its secrets. The owners before them were cattle ranchers trying to get by while immersed in the high strangeness. 

The current owner, Brandon Fugal, a Utah-based commercial real estate executive and chairman of Colliers International, bought the property in 2016. “I was immediately taken aback by how striking the property was,” he says of his first visit to the ranch. Skinwalker Ranch is 512 acres of manifold landscape, from a red rock mesa plateau that runs the expanse of the property to natural waterways and cave systems, dotted with old pioneer homesteads. “It’s surprisingly beautiful,” says Fugal. 

Fugal professes, even though he acquired the property with the intention to research the unexplained activity, he’s more of a Scully than a Mulder. He was a skeptic of its paranormal significance, which he retained on that first visit. “I found nothing unusual about the property, other than, on that first tour, we noticed something unusual about the fence line perimeter,” he says. “These body parts were hanging from the fence line. Animal bladders that were blessed and hung for the purpose of keeping the demonic spirit entities on the property.” Fugal ascribes the act to people living on the nearby reservation. But, despite the efforts to keep any entities from leaving the property, visitors to the ranch have reported that unknown entities followed them home after they left the ranch. The disturbing tableau aside, Fugal’s skepticism remained until he had an unexplained experience of his own.

The ‘X-file’

Years before the ranch passed into Fugal’s hands, he read about the strange happenings on the property in a book called Hunt For The Skinwalker, written by Dr. Colm A. Kelleher, a biochemist, and journalist George Knapp. It details the efforts by the National Institute for Discovery Science (NIDS) to study and document the strange activity on the ranch as well as the accounts of Tom and Ellen Gorman (the pseudonyms used in Hunt For The Skinwalker), the aforementioned cattle ranchers who used to own the ranch. The founder of NIDS, Robert Bigelow, a Las Vegas millionaire, set up the organization specifically to study UFOs and related phenomena. He bought the ranch from the Gormans in 1996 to study it further but hired them on to maintain the ranch and owned the property until he sold it to Fugal in 2016.

The experiences of the Gormans are what brought Bigelow and NIDS to the ranch in the first place. When the cattle ranchers first moved in, they were surprised to discover there were deadbolts on the inside and outside of the doors of the home. Even the windows were bolted. They were also perplexed by a clause in their real estate contract that stipulated there was to be no digging on the ranch without first notifying the previous owners. After settling into their new home, the Gormans’ strange experiences included several cattle mutilations and the appearance of a massive wolf that mangled a calf but whose tracks disappeared suddenly. They witnessed large black objects hovering above the ranch, orange shapes in the sky that appeared to transport passing objects to some other world and blue orbs that killed three dogs. 

When the NIDS team arrived to document the Gormans’ accounts, they began to have experiences of their own. They tell of seeing moving lights with no known source and the mysterious destruction of their surveillance cameras, but the bulk of the unexplained phenomena, as described in Hunt For The Skinwalker, continued to occur around the Gormans. 

But what about before the Gormans got to the ranch? They bought it from a man named Garth Myers in 1994, who had inherited it from his brother and sister-in-law, Kenneth and Edith Myers, who in turn had bought the ranch in the 1930s, by some accounts. In interviews, Garth Myers has denied that there was any sort of UFO activity on the property while his family owned it, and he also disputes parts of the Gormans’ story, like the deadbolts and the digging clause. While the Myers family might not have experienced any strange phenomena, their neighbors did. 

UAP sighting at Skinwalker Ranch. Photo courtesy Brandon Fugal.

Frank B. Salisbury, who headed the plant science department at Utah State University before he died in 2015, also wrote a book on UFO sightings in Utah, The Utah UFO Display. For the 2010 edition of the book, he included interviews with people whose land neighbored Skinwalker Ranch. One neighbor, John Garcia, saw an orange object, as large as a house, floating above his fence before it shot up into the sky and zoomed away. Another, Charles Winn, was out one night when he saw a bright light that he compared to an arc-welder—white and bright, but not hot. The light came for him, and, fearing for his life, he dropped down into a ditch full of water and covered his head with his arms. Others in the area saw orbs in the sky, blue on the outside and orange at the center, giving off slow sparks.

Salisbury, along with his collaborator, Joseph Junior Hicks—a fastidious record-keeping school teacher in Roosevelt—interviewed witnesses and collected first-hand accounts of hundreds of UFO sightings, dating back to the 1950s, in the Uintah Basin. The writers of Hunt For The Skinwalker suggest strange events started long before then, back when the Uintah Basin was still part of the Ute Tribe’s ancestral hunting grounds before the U.S. Government relegated them to the reservation (what is now the Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation) and opened up the area to white ranchers. 

The name “skinwalker” itself is appropriated from the beliefs of some Southwest Native American tribes, in which a skinwalker is often a malevolent magic-user capable of turning into animals. Hicks has collected accounts of people who claim to have seen skinwalkers, often in the form of a large wolf, sometimes capable of walking upright. These beliefs are not just spooky ghost stories or campfire tales for Native Americans whose cultures include those still-living traditions. Traditions that they are often unwilling (understandably so) to share or explain.  

‘I Want to Believe’

One thing that is certain about Skinwalker Ranch and the greater Uintah Basin, the mystery has remained resistant to years of investigation, study and scrutiny, but the same could be said for the broader mystery of UAP in general. Fugal believes the current investigation going on at Skinwalker Ranch could provide the key needed to unlock both mysteries. 

When he acquired the ranch, Fugal installed his own team to begin investigating. He says, “As part of our investigation, I have brought forward a team of multidisciplinary professionals. Physicists, engineers, scientists from an array of disciplines in service to better understand what is at work.” Fugal says his team has conducted drone aerial surveys, soil surveys, seismic record reviews, with the purpose of trying to determine whether there was a natural, prosaic explanation for what had been recorded there. 

As far as what has been recorded, he says, “We’ve seen everything from daylight to nighttime UAP

Events

to extreme electromagnetic anomalies, equipment malfunction, even damage, to acute medical episodes experienced by a number of participants.” None of this is a secret. The current Skinwalker Ranch investigation is the subject of a HISTORY channel documentary series, The Secret of Skinwalker Ranch

Fugal says he was hesitant to sign off on the show, and the producers (the same guys behind Ancient Aliens and other docu-series and reality TV hits) spent a year trying to convince him. Fugal agreed as long as, “Nothing was fabricated or contrived and I could use my own team whom I trusted.” Fugal originally asked for anonymity as well, but felt, in order for the show to be genuine and authentic, “I needed to come forward. As this was my spiritual journey with my group of closely held confidants, I was persuaded to go public as part of the series.” Now the show has aired for two seasons, and they started filming for season three this summer. 

Part of Fugal’s desire to remain anonymous was to protect his reputation in his other business ventures. Who wants to be known as the UFO guy? But the response, he says, has been largely one of support and genuine interest. After all, almost everyone has a story about experiencing something they can’t quite explain. It begs the question, why are we not taking the scientific study of UAP more seriously? Well, some people are. The U.S. Government for one. However, those efforts to investigate UAP and other unexplained phenomena have not been quite as public until recently. 

Skinwalker Ranch. Photo courtesy History.

‘The Truth’ Is Out There?

In 2017, The New York Times broke a story on a multi-million dollar “Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program” in the Pentagon’s budget. Since 2007 (as far as we know), the program investigated reports of unidentified flying objects. Funding for the program reportedly ended in 2012, and most of the money was handed to none other than Robert Bigelow (the one-time owner of Skinwalker Ranch and founder of NIDS, which conducted the investigation laid out in Hunt For the Skinwalker) and his aerospace research company. Bigelow is a definite Mulder, a true believer in the notion that aliens exist and that they have visited Earth. The writer of the book on the topic of government involvement in UFO research, and The New York Times story, investigative journalist Leslie Kean, won’t rule out the possibility of an extraterrestrial explanation but maintains that it is just one of the possible explanations (more on that later).

Fugal poses with rapper Post Malone on a visit to Skinwalker Ranch. Photo courtesy Brandon Fugal.

What we do know, the Pentagon program documented sightings of aircraft that seemed to move at very high velocities or hover with no discernible form of propulsion or lift. It also studied videos of encounters between UAP and military aircraft—including the video of an “encounter” near San Diego between two Navy fighter jets and a UAP in 2004, which was publicly released.

It’s not the first or even the most recent time the government would invest resources in investigating UAP encounters. In 1947, the Air Force began looking into upwards of 12,000 sightings before they officially ended the project two decades later. The project concluded that most sightings had mundane explanations like clouds, conventional aircraft or spy planes, but 701 sightings were never debunked or explained. 

This year, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence released a Preliminary Assessment on Unidentified Flying Phenomena. According to the report, intelligence officials have not found any evidence that 144 recent UAP encounters with military pilots have anything to do with aliens, but they do not offer another explanation. 

What the report does conclude is, “if and when individual UAP incidents are resolved they will fall into one of five potential explanatory categories: airborne clutter, natural atmospheric phenomena, USG or U.S. industry developmental programs, foreign adversary systems and a catchall ‘other’ bin.” What the report is saying, without actually saying it, extraterrestrial involvement has not been ruled out, it just falls squarely in the “other” bin. 

The report also found in 18 of the incidents, “observers reported unusual UAP movement patterns or flight characteristics. Some UAP appeared to remain stationary in winds aloft, move against the wind, maneuver abruptly or move at considerable speed, without discernible means of propulsion.” In a small number of cases, military aircraft systems also received radio signals associated with UAP sightings. 

There also might be more UAP encounters with the military than those of which U.S. intelligence officials are aware. Why? No one wants to be known as the UFO guy. Or, as the assessment puts it, “Although the effects of these stigmas have lessened as senior members of the scientific, policy, military and intelligence communities engage on the topic seriously in public, reputational risk may keep many observers silent, complicating scientific pursuit of the topic.” (Sound familiar?) 

But, as Agent Mulder would say, “no government agency has jurisdiction over the truth.” That brings us back to the privately funded Skinwalker Ranch investigation and Fugal, who believes it’s time the scientific community, and the greater public, took the study of unexplained events like UAP more seriously. According to him, “It really adds up to being the greatest science project of all time.”

Thomas Winterton and Erik Bard pour environmentally friendly green dye into water on the ranch for an experiment. Photo courtesy Brandon Fugal.

‘Are We Truly Alone?’

We don’t want to jerk you around. No one knows what’s behind those UAP or the source of the high strangeness in the Uintah Basin or Skinwalker Ranch. But there are theories. Fugal takes a cautious approach, advising everyone who visits the property, beforehand, “to prepare themselves spiritually. To armor themselves. To enter the property with a degree of reverence and humility. For we are dealing with forces that are not only unexplained, but also have proven harmful, potentially.”

Others have developed their own ideas. Salisbury outlined three hypotheses for the phenomena documented in Uintah Basin in The Utah UFO Display. The first is that favored by UFO debunkers—that all the unexplained phenomena can be explained within the physical laws of the universe with enough data collected. The second Salisbury calls the “Nut and bolts hypothesis,” which theorizes that UFO are advanced machines “traveling through space from civilizations on planets in other solar systems.” You know, aliens. The third is the “Star Gate” hypothesis. This posits that UFO and other paranormal phenomena represent beings with technology to travel from some “nearby parallel universe or another dimension” or using wormholes to “transport from one part of our universe to another.” 

Salisbury recognizes, in some ways, he and the writers of Hunt For the Skinwalker come to the same conclusion: “If there are portals or wormholes between alternate realities, all consistent with [natural] laws that we simply don’t yet understand, it would explain many of the outlandish goings-on that so many have witnessed.” Salisbury also flirts with the possibility of the spiritual (some might say “religious”) explanation. 

The hypotheses outlined in Hunt For The Skinwalker include the possibility of a hoax on the part of the Gormans, delusions on the part of eyewitnesses, a here-to-forth undiscovered advanced civilization here on earth, aliens, ancient aliens and the Tectonic Strain Theory—developed by neuroscientist Michael Persinger hypothesizing that “transient and very localized geophysical forces are a major source of phenomena that have been traditionally labelled as haunts and poltergeists.” He also suggested these geophysical forces could affect the human temporal lobe, causing people to report more paranormal experiences. 

I was raised to believe there were worlds without number

Brandon Fugal

Whether or not this line of study is being pursued at Skinwalker Ranch is unclear at the moment, but Fugal hinted that further expansion of the investigation would include human consciousness studies. He describes the phenomena as being “precognitive, sentient, nonhuman intelligence.” He says, “It can anticipate and even be aware of your thoughts and consciousness and react according to your intention that you bring to the property.” This supposed entity or, perhaps, multiple entities, has remained evasive in revealing its nature or intentions to Fugal’s team. He believes they’re observing a “diversity of origins and agendas” and suggests that there are “malevolent, benevolent and benign” forces at work. 

Fugal also believes Skinwalker Ranch holds the answers to much more than just what is happening on the property itself. “If we can approach the ranch as a sort of living laboratory for verifying that we are not alone in the universe, whether that means we are interacting with extraterrestrials, interdimensional phenomena or spiritual entities, it is all extremely compelling,” he says.

So, after years of frequent visits to the ranch, which does he believe could be the cause? A) Extraterrestrial? B) Interdimensional? C) Spiritual? “Why not ‘D,’ all of the above,” he says, and some of that goes back to his faith and LDS upbringing. “I was raised to believe that there are worlds without number. That there is an intelligent and divine design to our existence. And I believe what we are witnessing and documenting at Skinwalker Ranch is proof of that.”

Could this “science project,” as Fugal calls it, at a remote ranch in Northeastern Utah really be the key to unlocking the secrets of the universe? Whatever they’ve found has made Fugal a true believer. He says, “We have to gain the most compelling evidence regarding the reality of the phenomenon on the planet, that we’re not alone, that our reality is more complex than it may seem and that there is more at work in our world than we know.” In other words, “There are more things in heaven and earth, Dana Scully, than dreamt of in your philosophy.”  

The Skinwalker Ranch crew as featured on HISTORY’S The Secret of Skinwalker Ranch. Photo courtesy History.


This article was originally published Dec. 7, 2021.

Discover more paranormal hotspots in Utah here.

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6 Family Hikes for Summer

By Adventures, Outdoors

You still haven’t taken the family hiking, have you? Well, you still have time before the kids are back in school and you can hear yourself think. So, lace up those Timberlands, grab some Luna bars and hit the trail before it’s too hot to walk outside. Before summer, we suggested six kid-friendly/family hikes. Now, we have six more. Each trail is a chance to introduce kids to the outdoors, starting in our local foothills.

East Mountain Wilderness Park

East Mountain Wilderness Park sign
Just look for the big East Mountain Wilderness Park sign, photo by Jaime Winston

The trail: Along the 1.7-mile loop that starts near the big “East Mountain Wilderness Park” sign, you’ll see wildflowers, joggers and photo-worthy views of Kaysville without putting in much effort. The trail starts wide and flat, perfect for energetic kids. For a more woodsy experience and slight climb, take some of the side trails, like Graveyard, but be aware they are narrower and mountain bikers may be headed your way around the corners. You’ll also see turnoffs for Bonneville Shoreline Trail and a handful of campsites. Don’t get lost, bring your GPS. Getting there: From Salt Lake City, head north on I-15, take exit 324 for US-89 toward South Ogden, take a right on 200 North, make a quick left onto Mountain Road, and then follow it up the hill. Look for the big sign on the left side of the road, just beyond Davis County Animal Control & Care. Take note: The parking area has bathrooms. Dogs welcome.

Thayne Canyon Loop

Family hikes on the Desolation and Thayne Canyon Trails
The Thayne Canyon Loop connects Desolation Trail with the Thayne Canyon Trail in Millcreek Canyon, photo by Jaime Winston

The trail: Hiking Desolation Trail to the Salt Lake overlook is totally worth it, but too much for little legs — shorten the trip with the 1.6-mile Thayne Canyon Loop. Start on the Desolation Trail and stay on it when you see the first Thayne Canyon sign. Make the gradual climb up the shaded Desolation Trail, and when you see the second sign pointing to the Thayne Canyon Trail, follow it and begin heading back down the hill. If the kids ask where you’re going, tell them it’s like a Mortal Kombat cheat code: Up, right, up, left, down, kick! For more of a workout, head left when you see that first Thayne Canyon sign and hike down Desolation instead. Getting there: Drive up Millcreek Canyon Road in Salt Lake, and go just past Millcreek Inn to the South Box Elder Picnic Area. Park there or nearby, and look for the Desolation Trail near the picnic area. Take note: Take $3 to pay on your way out of the canyon.

Olympus Hills Park

Family Hikes in Olympus Hills Park
A paved path leads to stunning views in Olympus Hills Park, photo by Jaime Winston

The trail: Olympus Hills offers a mostly stroller-friendly 0.9-mile paved trail that feels like one of our family hikes in the Wasatch foothills. To find it, just head east after parking your car and climb the steps to the path. If you bear right on the path, the first section will go by noisy I-215, but the rest is pretty quiet and offers stunning views of the valley as it loops back to where you started. You’ll find benches along the way, and a playground, grass and bathrooms in the park below. Getting there: Set your TomTom (or whatever you kids use for navigation these days) for 3131 E. 4500 South, Salt Lake City. Take note: Interconnecting dirt trails go across the loop.

Great Salt Lake Shorelands Preserve

Weasel at GSL Shorelands Preserve
A curious weasel at the GSL Shorelands Preserve; while cute, it’s not wise to get too close to wildlife on the trail; photo by Jaime Winston

The trail: This is one of our favorite family hikes… or strolls. Start at the pavilion where you can read about the preserve and its inhabitants; then go left or right on the 1.3-mile loop with informational displays and spots to stop and bird watch, including a lookout tower at the halfway point. While the peaceful landscape and wide variety of birds are the headliners, you may come across a few side acts as well; on our last visit, a weasel stared us down. Signs ask visitors to keep the noise level low for the enjoyment of others, plus, the birds spook easily, so it’s a great place to practice the quiet game. Getting there: From Salt Lake City, take I-15 north to the Layton Parkway exit (Exit 330). Then take Layton Parkway to Main Street and turn right, turn left on Gentile Street, and, lastly, turn left on 3200 West and drive past the gate onto the dirt road. You can either park outside the gate or near the pavilion. The gate stays open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. daily between April and September. Take note: No dogs allowed, but there are bathrooms.

Freedom Hills Park

Freedom Hills Park trail
One of the lookout points above Freedom Hills Park, photo by Jaime Winston

The trail: Another for your list of after-dinner family hikes. Toward the back of Freedom Hills Park, you’ll find 17 switchbacks that gradually take you up a Wasatch foothill. The short gravel trail features lizards scurrying around during hot months and benches to take in views of Centerville and the Great Salt Lake beyond (sunsets rule here). If the climb ever gets too rough for the kids, tell them they’re training for Adam’s Canyon. Getting there: From Salt Lake City, take I-15 north to the Parrish Lane exit in Centerville (Exit 319). Head east on Parrish Lane, pass the Wal-Mart and Dick’s, and make a left on Main Street. A few minutes later, turn right onto Old Haul Road, drive through the subdivision and make a left on Park Hills Drive. You’ll see the park on your right. Or put 2150 N. 150 East, Centerville in your GPS. Take note: The park also has a paved trail circling the disc golf course.

Anasazi Valley Trailhead

Anasazi Valley petroglyphs
Petroglyphs on the Anasazi Valley Trail, photo by Jaime Winston

The trail: If you’re on your way to Snow Canyon, Mesquite or Grandpa Sterling’s house in St. George, this is a worthy side trip. The short trail near Ivins takes you through desert terrain to a treasure trove of well-preserved petroglyphs just to the right of the trail. It’s about a 3.5-mile round trip, but it’s still suitable for old or out-of-shape people (not that we’d know anything about that). The trail is also stroller-friendly, and bathrooms are near the trailhead. Getting there: Take I-15 down to Exit 6, head north on Bluff Street, make a left onto Sunset Boulevard and turn left after you see a sign for the trail on your right. Take note: Family hikes should be fun, but rock art is fragile. Watch your kids.

SilverKing1

Silver King Coffee: King of the Cup

By Eat & Drink

Of course, I wanted the chocolate covered beans on top. Frankly, I was baffled by the question because the thought of someone willfully eschewing such a delicacy, one perched with attentive care atop the coffee cup, was difficult to wrap my head around. Perhaps it’s because I drink coffee almost exclusively without milk, sugar or other hint of flavoring, but I find the first sip after crunching that delectably sweet bean to be one of the finest moments of consumption, right on par with a cold beer after a bike ride. Anyway, you’ll never catch me saying no to a free chocolate covered bean at Silver King Coffee unless I’m actively choking on another one I already wolfed down so quickly.

Silver King Coffee is a bastion of familiarity in Park City, one of the few constants in a tumultuously evolving community that serves as comfort food for the soul. The relatively indistinct drive-through in the parking lot adjacent to a state-run liquor store may not seize the attention of passersby in Snow Creek, but make no mistake, what’s housed inside is a local special. For more than a decade Silver King has serving up the goods to everyone, whether they’re visitors on the way to enjoy the mountain or locals heading to work. I, myself, used to stop there every morning to slightly delay the indignity of walking into a truly useless office job.

Kristie Buehner, co-owner of Silver King Coffee at the drive-through window of Silver King Coffee
Kristie Buehner, co-owner of Silver King Coffee (Photo by Adam Finkle/Salt Lake magazine)

Silver King’s current location, where it’s been since early 2020, is a convenient stop any time of day accessible from both SR-224 and SR 248 in either direction. That’s a good thing since there’s a lot more to the menu than just the aforementioned delicious coffee. While I am a java fiend to the point I’m not sure it has anything more than a placebo effect on me at this point, the slightly less caffeinated can enjoy a sampling of smoothies, snacks and food.

The breakfast burritos, available with options to suit both meat eaters and vegetarians, are not only tasty items to start the day, but are also a relative steal in Park City in the Park City dining scene at just $7. You can also get a bagel, some bruschetta, a cinnamon or ham and Swiss coffee roll, a variety of muffins and pastries and more all with the convenience of having to leave the driver’s seat. For a post activity recharge, it’s hard to beat the smoothies. The Green Monster—with some almond milk, spinach and agave—makes you feel healthier while you’re still drinking it, and the Berry Delicious is a delightful iteration on the classic smoothie from the halcyon days before everything we eat became a statement on health philosophy—it’s still relatively healthy.

And while I’m somewhat of a coffee purist, Silver King has lots of intricate coffee creations to suit any taste. The Lavender Latte, which features a house made syrup, is uniquely delicious, while the Superfood Coffee has a veritable buffet of dietary supplements infused with your caffeine including organic butter, MCT oil, cacao and a maca blend with six superfoods. It’s not for the faint of heart, or likely those with atherosclerosis either, but it sure tastes good and will help your exercise.

Long story short, stop in at Silver King on your next trip through town. There’s a lot going on behind those inconspicuous walls and a local legacy you can feel good about supporting.

If You Go

1450 Snow Creek Dr., Park City
silverkingcoffee.com
435-640-8261


Read more about what to eat and drink in Utah.

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5 of the Best Burgers in Utah

By Eat & Drink

Utah is a burger-loving state, and though there are many new and notable restaurants serving cutting-edge cuisine in the city, you shouldn’t leave town without a taste of our burger culture. We have national faves, from D.C.’s Five Guys to California’s In-N-Out, and local chains like Hires Big H and Crown Burgers. Pretty much every restaurant has its own special burger. In honor of National Burger Day, these are 5 of the best.

crown burger pastrami

The state’s signature burger–a beef patty topped with an inch of thin-sliced pastrami–has obscure origins, but it’s available at many of the local burger chains, including Crown Burgers, Apollo Burgers, B&D Burgers and Hires Big H.

  • The Bar Burger:  Lucky 13 won first place for burgers in the World Food Championships in Las Vegas last year with its specially concocted Spicy Candied Cajun Burger. You can choose from the regular menu of 11 burgers, ranging from the foot-tall “Big Benny” with its 28 ounces of ground chuck to the “Ring of Fire,” topped with jalapeños and habaneros to the Fungus Amongus, featuring mushrooms sauteed in red wine. With so many choices, you’re bound to find one you like–finishing it is another matter. Of course, you’ll eat it with a local brew or High West Whiskey. 135 W. 1300 South, SLC, 801-487-4418, lucky13slc.com
  • The Artisan Burger: Scott Evans’ little cafe, Pago, has been at the forefront of Salt Lake’s local and artisanal food movement. That doesn’t mean the menu is full of esoterica. In fact, its burger is one of the restaurant’s most famous dishes. This intensely planned sandwich holds a patty of fresh Niman Ranch beef topped with white Cheddar, black garlic aioli, local bacon and house-pickled red onion. Wine expert Evans will be happy to find the perfect pairing from his list or by the glass from his Cruvinet. 878 S. 900 East, SLC, 801-532-0777, pagoslc.com

  • The Family Burger: Three beef cuts–sirloin, chuck and brisket–are ground together and patted into several size burgers, depending on your appetite, from 1/3 pound to the “tiny” Tony for tots. Tonyburgers is also the place for a full-on American burger meal: Milkshakes here are made to order with real scoops of ice cream and the award-winning french fries are hand-cut and twice fried. 613 E. 400 South, SLC, 801-419-0531, 4675 S. 2300 East, Holladay, 801-676-9686; 1695 Towne Center Dr., South Jordan, 801-679-1194. tonyburgers.com
  • The Gourmet Burger: Inside the yeasty house-made bun, The Copper Onion’s (and sister spots Copper Common and Copper Kitchen) beef patty is garnished with aioli, caramelized onions and crisp Iceberg lettuce. You can add cheddar cheese and choose steak fries or an arugula salad to go with. 111 E. Broadway #170, SLC, 801-355-3282, 111 E. Broadway #190, SLC, 801-355-0543, 4640 S. 2300 E. #102, Holladay, 385-237-3159. thecopperonion.com, coppercommon.com, copperkitchenslc.com
  • The Garlic Burger: Garlic burgers are a Salt Lake institution, and The Cotton Bottom Inn is the most authentic place to taste it. A venerable dive with an upscale outdoorsy clientele, Cotton Bottom offers a glimpse into Utah’s classic outdoors lifestyle—great jukebox, cold beer and lots of garlic and tall tales from those who’ve been around on two feet or two wheels. 2820 E. 6200 South, Holladay, 801-273-9830. cottonbottominn.com

This story was originally published in May 2020. 

DLCFeatured

Happy Birthday to The DLC, Downtown’s Year-Old Music Club

By Arts & Culture, Music

The DLC is a small, vibrant music club located deep in the heart of downtown’s popular arcade bar Quarters. Over the past year, the spot’s become a quality small room option for touring bands criss-crossing the west, as well as a much-needed venue for local musicians to headline a weekend night show.

After a year in business, certain patterns have started to emerge, none of them lost on the club’s manager, Shaina Floyd.

“I love doing this because I often hear local bands that I would’ve never found otherwise,” Floyd says. “And honestly, it’s really cool to be able to start hosting slightly-larger touring bands and then getting to pair local bands with those touring bands.”

Running a music schedule five days a week, Floyd sees the touring bands earlier in the week, as they make their to/from Denver and Seattle and other western villages. On the weekends, three-band local bills tend to predominate in a space that’s licensed for 200 concert-goers.

Despite the heavy commitment to local sounds, Floyd admits that for the first year, attendance has been “completely hit-or-miss.” That’s thanks to a few factors: COVID regulations and the public’s on/off desire to attend live events; local bands arguably playing too many shows in the market; and folks still finding the venue for the first time, even after 12 months of operation.

There is a bit of a secret weapon that The DLC enjoys, as dozens of folks are playing old-style arcade games in the space, seemingly at any time the bar’s open. Some serious numbers come through on the weekends, when nearby State Street is humming. Floyd says that “stragglers” from Quarters’ “captive audience” have been known to hear sounds that appeal to them, drifting into the room after arriving at Quarters with no intention of catching live music.

In the next year, The DLC may see some very light programming tweaks.

“I’d like to do more events for the holidays,” Floyd says, “and more social events. Maybe have people come up with idea for special showcases. I’d like to get an acoustic night going and different monthly events. We really want to help build the music scene.”

At some point in 2022, there’s a good chance that a second Quarters will be operation. This one will be in Sugarhouse, with a smaller footprint and a kitchen but without an indoor music venue. Construction’s been underway for a bit and the owners have become regulars at the monthly meetings of the DABC in order to stake their claim to an upcoming license.

As that process plays out, The DLC will be hosting its first anniversary party, an event slated for Saturday, May 28. A Battle of the Bands will be featured that night, with Scheissters, Strawberry Cough, Slick Velveteens, Cudney and Beneath the Sparrows taking part. The winner receives a trophy and a cool $1,000. It’s a 21 and up event with $5 tickets pre-sold at quartersslc.com.

The DLC’s first year of operation has been a process, the room’s brightly-colored stage, full bar and rock’n’roll-plus booking policy finding a foothold. Floyd figures that the club’s growth is both mirroring and pushing along the overall local scene.

On becoming a true music city, Floyd figures that “We’re getting there. There are a lot more venues opening up, including downtown. So we’re slowly getting there.”

If You Go

5 E. 400 South, SLC
801-477-7047
quartersslc.com/the-dlc

PC-Museum-Blue

Experience History in Park City This Summer

By Community

Park City is oft defined by its relentless pace of change. Growth and development are turning what was once considered a low-key mountain town into world-famous destination with all the trappings that entails. But if the change of pace today—while seemingly sudden—is merely a gradual evolution compared to what transformed Park City from a mining outpost into a mountain sports mecca. The Historic Park City Alliance (HPCA) is inviting people to explore the town’s deep historical roots this summer both by visiting the Park City History Museum and through special events including Guided Walking Tours and History Speaks Lectures.

The Park City History Museum is a hidden gem, tucked on Main Street amid a sea of single-brand stores, high-end restaurants, souvenir shops. Inside, a collection of interactive exhibits traces the area’s history from the arrival of settlers on the Western Frontier through its metamorphosis into a booming mining community and ultimately the resort destination it is today. The town’s historic underground jail cell still stands intact, and relics of the “Skier Subway” that turned mining infrastructure into the area’s first lift system are on display. The museum is open daily from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. every day, and admission is $15 for adults and $5 for children over six. For those looking to save a few bucks while learning about the past, the museum offers free admission on the third Saturday of every month.

The abundance of living history in Park City can’t be contained within the walls of a single building, which is why HPCA offers guided walking tours during the summer from June 28 through Sept. 3. Amid the sheen of mountain luxury still exist the fingerprints of history. The walking tours traverse Historic Main Street explores the architecture, people and events that shaped the Park City along the way. Check the events calendar for a complete list of dates and times.  

Walking Tour on Historic Main Street
Walking Tour on Historic Main Street

Finally, the Park City History Museum is offering a free lecture series, History Speaks, which dives into Park City life from before the town was known primarily for powder and après. Upcoming lectures include “Life About Town in Park City’s Mining Days,” which includes a book signing by author Dalton Gackle on June 22 and “Through European Eyes: Imagining the American Frontier West” with Curator Lee Silliman on June 30. These entertaining and educational lectures offer unique insight into a place most of us are just scratching the surface to understand.


Visit the Historic Park City Alliance website for more details and a full list of events for the summer season. Read more about news, people and things to do in Park City.