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All You Need: Hiking

Set yourself up for a successful hike with this gear. // by Dina Mishev Black Diamond’s Distance Carbon FLZ Trekking/Running Poles are stiff, adjustable, durable, collapsible, and lightweight. $189.95; available at Teton Mountaineering (170 N. Cache St.) Stio’s Divide Tee(the women’s version is the Divide Shift Shirt) is made from DriRelease fabric, which simultaneously wicks, dries, breathes, and cools without added chemicals. Seams don’t rub when you’re carrying a daypack. $59; available at Stio Mountain Studio(10 E. Broadway Ave.) The Meridien LL sunglasses from Dragon Alliance work as well on the hiking trail as they look good at the brewpub. The…

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Moving Mountains Teton Style

PHOTO BY BRADLY J. BONER Scientists are widening our understanding of the Teton Fault that shapes and shakes Jackson Hole.   // By Mike Koshmrl  Ryan Thigpen’s aha moment came as he gazed at a plastic topographical Jackson Hole map hanging on the wall at a scientific research station on the shores of Jackson Lake. What if, the environmental sciences professor pondered, the Tetons and the fault line that created them once continued farther north, but were seared into oblivion by ancient movements of the North American plate over the gargantuan Yellowstone hotspot? “I was literally having a rain day at the…

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Food: Picnic with a Purpose

PHOTO BY PRICE CHAMBERS To satisfy multiple senses, pack a picnic and head out on a self-directed wildlife-watching adventure. // By Samantha Simma Wildlife biologist and photographer Tenley Thompson (@jacksonholeecotours) has been sharing her passion for the animals and landscapes of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem for thirteen years. “Every day is different,” she says. “Every day is an adventure, and I never know what surprises are in store when I wake up.” Make wildlife watching even more of an adventure by pairing it with a picnic.  The Spots Lupine Meadows: At the base of 12,326-foot-tall Teewinot, a mountain south of Jenny Lake…

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Car Camping 101

PHOTO BY BRADLY J. BONER Five Campgrounds to Check Out // By Whitney Royster  Car camping is a wonderfully accessible and easy way to be in the outdoors and sleep under some of the starriest skies in the lower forty-eight. It is an inexpensive way to feel rugged without having to carry a heavy backpack. However, finding campsites is getting more difficult: Last summer, there was a huge upswing in the number of car campers in Jackson Hole as people escaped Covid-prone cities and took to spending more time in the outdoors. The expectation is for a continued rise this…

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Enjoy: JH Pantry

Mursell’s Sweet Shop // by samantha simma    // Photography by ryan dorgan Open 10 a.m.–6 p.m. daily; 125 N. Cache St.; 307/264-1508, Instagram @mursellssweetshop John Frechette and Christian Burch, the co-founders of successful valley shops MADE and Mountain Dandy, never imagined adding a candy store to their portfolio. But when their dying friend Mursell McLaughlin couldn’t find anyone to take over the store she had founded and run for 34 years, Mursell’s Pottery and Chocolate, the pair asked if they could. (Mursell’s is across Gaslight Alley from MADE.) It turns out that was what McLaughlin had wanted all along.…

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Taste of Jackson Hole:Pizza on the Deck at Calico

DISHING MAGAZINE // By Melissa Thomasma Sit on the petunia-ringed deck at Calico Bar & Restaurant in the summer with some of its wood-fired pizza, and time slows down. (Although it does not quiet down thanks to the restaurant’s generous lawn where gaggles of kids constantly run and play.) The Italian restaurant has a lovely indoor seating area, but it’s the deck, built in 1971, that is iconic. In non-Covid times it has about two dozen tables, and it is covered by a white awning strung with festive lights. Even on drizzly evenings, it’s a delightful spot.  You can order…

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Art: Indian Arts in the Park

PHOTO BY RYAN DORGAN Grand Teton National Park’s Colter Bay Indian Artist Museum closed a decade ago, but the park still hosts the American Indian Guest Artist Program and displays portions of the museum’s collection at the Colter Bay and Craig Thomas Visitor Centers. // By Dina Mishev There are twenty-four Native American tribes associated with Grand Teton National Park (GTNP), from the Apache Tribe of Oklahoma to the Eastern Shoshone Tribe and the Northern Arapahoe Tribe, both of the Wind River Reservation, Wyoming, and the Shoshone-Bannock Tribes of the Fort Hall Reservation, Idaho. These tribes are tied to the lands…

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Culture: He Can Create Forever

PHOTO BY RYAN DORGAN Writer-actor-comedian-collaborator-director Andrew Munz is a force in the valley’s arts and culture scene. // By Whitney Royster A guy who entertains in person, online, and in books, Andrew Munz is a local celebrity and a major tailwind for the valley’s arts community. In 2020, he took the silver in the town’s “Best Actor” category (second to Harrison Ford) and in 2021 won gold in the same category. Between 2014 and 2019, Munz developed and executed the comedic series of plays, I Can Ski Forever, which lampoons Jackson life, sells out, and has fans clamoring for more. The videos…

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Design: The Ultimate Adventure House

If Jackson Hole were a house, it’d be this one, where there’s a ski lift out the back door, entire rooms dedicated to gear and training, and with artwork that includes a painting of an ice climber. // By Lila Edythe   // Photography by aaron kraft You’d think being able to ski from your back door to the Moose Creek ski lift at Jackson Hole Mountain Resort would be enough to make an “adventure house.” But a retired Teton Village couple that has been adventuring together for more than forty years—and also adventuring with their two sons, both now in their thirties—created an entire house built…

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Locals: Pete Lawton

PETE LAWTON GREW up ski racing and training on Snow King Mountain. Fast-forward thirtyish years and Lawton is CEO of the Bank of Jackson Hole and skis the King during his lunch hour. “I always have skis in my car,” says Lawton, whose father, a high school principal, was one of the initial investors in Jackson Hole Mountain Resort. After pulling into the parking lot at the base of the Town Hill, he’ll put his ski jacket and pants over his work outfit, which is almost always a suit. “I’ll eat a sack lunch on the chairlift,” he says. Lawton,…

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Over the River and Through the Woods to the Grandmother of Conservation’s House We Go

A short, scenic snowshoe or Nordic ski brings you to the Murie Ranch, a historic crucible of the conservation movement. By Lila Edythe NOT TO BE too woo-woo or anything, but I always feel the Murie Ranch—where Margaret Thomas “Mardy” Murie, often called the “Grandmother of the Conservation Movement,” lived for more than fifty years—before I see it. The ranch has a peacefulness and tranquility that is palpable. “There is a definite magic about the place,” says Dan McILhenny, who has lived in one of the ranch’s rustic cabins for six summers as a volunteer docent. “My wife and I feel it,…

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A Legacy of Adventure

Two hundred years after John Colter was the first white man to see Yellowstone and Jackson Hole, two friends retrace his route, find it’s still full of adventure, and make a movie about it.  By Dina Mishev. /. Images from Colter: A legacy of Adventure ONE OF THE early scouting trips that inspired Wilsonites Sawyer Thomas and Riis Wilbrecht to tackle the adventure that became the twenty-eight-minute film Colter: A Legacy of Adventure was a seven-day winter ski-camping trip in the Beartooth Mountains. “We managed to completely destroy ourselves on it,” Wilbrecht says. Rather than back off though, the pair doubled…

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Snack Time

Fuel your Jackson Hole adventures with these locally made snacks. By Melissa Thomasma  //  Photography by bradly j. boner WE DON’T REALLY do humdrum in Jackson Hole. Our mountains are extraordinary, as is the snow that covers them. Accordingly, our adventures are extraordinary too, which means that when we’re out in the wild, boring snacks simply won’t do. Meet some of the local companies making snacks as exciting as the adventures—from snowmobile rides to hunting for untouched backcountry powder to snowshoeing along the base of the Tetons—they’re meant to fuel. PERSEPHONE BAKERYYour throwback after-school favorite is all grown up. The…

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Teton Valley Playground

Make the most of a trip to Grand Targhee. By Molly Absolon GRAND TARGHEE RESORT is not only on the opposite side of the Tetons from Jackson, but also Jackson’s opposite in terms of vibe. Instead of the fancy boutiques, upscale hotels, and spas found in Teton Village, Targhee’s base area is rustic and a little dated. Targhee is a family-friendly step back in time where the lift lines are short and the snow is deep. (The resort averages more than 500 inches of snow a year.) The skiing and snowboarding at the ’Ghee are great, but far from the…

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Live Music

Don’t think that skiing all day means you can’t dance all night. By Samantha Simma MANY NIGHT CAPS in Jackson Hole cater to your sense of sound, with a range of genres presented by local musicians. Whether you’d like to twirl around the Silver Dollar’s downtown dance floor to bluegrass or dance to DJ tunes in Wilson, you can easily find a beat for your feet to follow. And while one of the Jackson music scene’s largest venues recently closed its curtain (RIP Pink Garter Theatre), this nighttime pastime will not go quietly. Times listed below are for when there…

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As the Hole Deepens

American Life in 2024 By Tim Sandlin  //  illustrations by birgitta sif AS FATE WOULD have it, my PaPaw’s seventieth birthday and the end of our forty-eighth month in isolation fell on the same day. To celebrate, my son, Chub, who is stuck in an employee dorm at Old Faithful, set up a Zoom party for the family. Four years into this plague and I still haven’t figured out Zoom. I can join meetings but can’t organize one. So the three generations—PaPaw and MeMaw from their place in Moose; me (Peter Pym) and my wife, Delores, from our house in…

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Icon of the West

Noppadol Paothong’s photography exhibit at the National Museum of Wildlife Art highlights the importance of greater sage-grouse to Western culture and conservation.  By maggie theodora  //  Photography by Noppadol Paothong WILDLIFE PHOTOGRAPHER NOPPADOL Paothong spent eleven years working on his first book, Save the Last Dance. It features images of seven species of North American grassland grouse. His second book, Sage Grouse: Icon of the West—which focuses on a single species of grouse, the greater sage-grouse—took five years and is the backbone of an exhibit of the same name hanging at the National Museum of Wildlife Art through May 3.…

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The Browse

A look back at the beginnings of Jackson Hole’s original thrift store on the event of its fiftieth anniversary, coming up in 2022. By Whitney Royster SOME OF MY best purchases include Patagonia jackets for my kids, soccer cleats, coolers, and frying pans. We’ve gotten puzzles and games, then donated them back again for other people to use. The best kid toys were from the lower shelves, including an adding machine (Sure! Punch every button!) and several plastic spatulas that were worth far more than their fifty-cent price tag for the several days of beatings they eventually took.  This is my love affair…

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Rising Dreams

A decade after its founding, Persephone Bakery has its own storefronts and two sister restaurants. BY DINA MISHEV IN 2011, LE Cordon Bleu–trained Kevin Cohane and his wife, Ali, founded Persephone Bakery—named for the Greek goddess of grain. They never imagined where they’d be a decade later: semi-finalists in the Outstanding Pastry Chef category of the 2020 James Beard Foundation Awards with four restaurants around Jackson Hole. “It has been the most wonderful and affirming surprise that the community responded to our little bakery in the way that it did,” Ali Cohane says. Here’s a look at the Cohanes’ three…

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