Search Results for

Explore: Dornans Wine Dinner

Supper Club Dinner at Dornans, just outside of Grand Teton National Park, is always special, but some winter dinners are more special than others.  // By lila edythe    // Photography by Derek Stal “Usually, I build the menus on food that I like and I want to eat,” says chef Sean Dietz about the themed multicourse dinners he curates and executes at Dornans in Moose in the winter. At a five-course wine dinner at Dornans last January, Dietz wanted to eat—and so the approximately 40 diners got to eat—oxtail stew, lobster cacio e pepe, and lamb shank. Dietz himself…

Read MoreExplore: Dornans Wine Dinner

Explore: Yellowstone

Winter Wonderland Winter in Yellowstone means a lot of snow and few crowds. // By Dina Mishev // photography By KATHRYN ZIESIG Pushing open a hatch in the roof of the Sprinter van that has brought my 16-year-old niece Sofia and myself into Yellowstone National Park, I stand up on one of the back seats and look down on two bison languidly grazing alongside the van. Because their tails are hanging down, I can tell they’re unbothered by the vehicle’s presence or by me peeking out of its roof. (If you ever see a bison with its tail standing straight…

Read MoreExplore: Yellowstone

Explore: History Museum

Old is New The Jackson Hole History Museum has moved to a new home where you can see 11,000 years of human history in this valley. // By Samantha Simma. // photography By Erin burk Natural light streams through the windows of the Jackson Hole History Museum’s main gallery, illuminating artifacts from the past that inform Jackson Hole’s present. Composing chapters of the area’s history are artifacts, videos, and informational panels about the land and geography, community development, conserving and recreating on the land, and contemporary Jackson Hole. These four themes are categorized by interpretive panels, with red panels marking…

Read MoreExplore: History Museum

Explore: Wild Ice

Wild Ice The season is short, but so, so sweet. // Photos & story By Joey Sackett I grew up across from a lake, just outside of Chicago. The lake was murky and mostly useless, except in winter. Publicly maintained as an ice rink, it’s where I learned to ice skate, to play hockey. But there was another lake, this one at the back of a dead-end road. That lake was special; it’s where I learned to wild ice skate. It was hidden in the woods with no Zamboni, no plow, no rescue. I would glide across a lake all…

Read MoreExplore: Wild Ice

Feature: Wildlife

Moose on the Loose One of Jackson Hole’s most iconic large ungulates, moose, only showed up in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem about a century ago. At first, they thrived, but then the population crashed. It still hasn’t come back. // By Mike Koshmrl Sometimes they barrel out of the timber and tear down the slopes, sending skiers scampering for safety. On other occasions, they’re holding up traffic, maybe even near the Jackson Town Square. Or perhaps one decides to make its bed right in your backyard. They’re massive, about six feet from hoof to shoulder and weighing up to 1,000…

Read MoreFeature: Wildlife

Local Life: Hello | Profile

Linda Merigliano The Wilderness Diplomat //By David Gonzales In 1991, soon after joining the staff of the Bridger-Teton National Forest as a wilderness planner, Linda Merigliano was dispatched to the tiny town of Cokeville, Wyoming, to speak at a meeting of snowmobilers about why snowmobiles aren’t allowed in designated Wilderness Areas. “I said, ‘Northwestern Wyoming, this is wild country. So, logically, we’re going to have a lot of wilderness here. In Florida, you grow oranges so, there’s oranges down there. And there’s wilderness here.’ They didn’t like that analogy,” she says with a laugh. Since then, Merigliano’s public communication skills…

Read MoreLocal Life: Hello | Profile

Local Life: Hello | Q&A

Gap Pucci The ‘last of  the old cowboys’ chronicles his life  of adventure  in three books. // By Jim Stanford Dressed in a maroon button-down shirt, kerchief, and sheepskin vest, he tosses forkfuls of hay into a corral beside his cabin, tucked into a draw by the Camp Creek elk feed ground. One wall is adorned with horseshoes he fashioned with a forge and anvil, while the inside teems with stuffed wildlife mounts, bear hides, firearms, old leather saddles, and horse tack. He may not have been on the Lewis and Clark expedition, but Gap Pucci seems to have stepped out…

Read MoreLocal Life: Hello | Q&A

Local Life: Anatomy Of

Mormon Row // By Dina Mishev “Where’s the barn?” There are hundreds of barns in Jackson Hole, but ask this question of any local and they will all give the same answer: the T.A. Moulton Barn is on Mormon Row in Grand Teton National Park. More than a century old, this barn might be the most photographed in the world. With the Tetons rising sharply behind it, it does make for a gorgeous image.  But the barn, and the 30-some other buildings that remain on Mormon Row, are more than props. A $7.4 million multi-year public-private partnership now in its…

Read MoreLocal Life: Anatomy Of

Local Life: All You Need

Take it Easy Gear that elevates relaxing. // By Dina mishev Black Diamond’s Alpenglow Hoody is a full-coverage, lightweight SPF layer (SPF 50+) with in-fiber cooling technology; it reflects 71 percent of near-infrared rays and reduces the wearer’s perceived temperature. $95, available at BlackDiamond, 160 W. Pearl Ave.  Icemule’s Pro soft-sided coolers—available in 23- and 33-liter sizes—retain ice for 24 hours. With backpack straps and a drybag-style roll-top, they are easy to carry and water- and sand-resistant. From $135, icemulecoolers.com  We take our Kammok Roo Single Recycled Hammock everywhere, so we’re ready to nap anytime the desire arises. Only 11.4…

Read MoreLocal Life: All You Need

Local Life: My Jackson Hole Life

Leslie Mattson // By Jim Mahaffie She came here to ski powder; in staying, she’s made an indelible mark on the community.  “People love Grand Teton National Park,” says Leslie Mattson, president of the Grand Teton National Park Foundation since 2004. “They step off their flight, and the mountains are right there in their faces. How can you not love that view? We enable people to support what they love.” During Mattson’s time at GTNPF, it has raised over $150 million for the Craig Thomas Discovery and Visitor Center; major improvements to Jenny Lake, Antelope Flats, and other areas of…

Read MoreLocal Life: My Jackson Hole Life

Local Life: Blast From the Past

Calico This former church—bought for $666.66—has been a community gathering spot for six decades. // By Samantha Simma One of the oldest restaurants in Teton County is still the crown jewel of Moose-Wilson Road—an American-Italian bar and restaurant that turns 400 to 500 covers on a busy summer night. At Calico Bar & Restaurant, muted lighting and a crackling fireplace are welcome comforts on dark, snowy evenings. During the summer, parents sip wine at deck tables while kids romp on the large, grassy lawn. It’s date night with a built-in babysitter.  In a past life, Calico’s bar was a church…

Read MoreLocal Life: Blast From the Past

Local Life: Go Deep

Water Filters & Purifiers We tested these so you don’t have to. // Dina Mishev PLATYPUS GRAVITY WORKS What is it Fill the 4-liter “dirty” bag of this gravity-fed water-filter kit, connect it to the high-flow filter and “clean” bag, hang it so gravity can do its thing, and walk away. Within minutes, you’ll have filtered water.Strengths No pumping or squeezing required; the bags can be converted to a solar shower.Weaknesses This doesn’t kill viruses, and it can be difficult to fill the bag in shallow water sources.Best for Effortless water filter for small groups.Details $135; available at REI, 974 W. Broadway Ave., and rei.com…

Read MoreLocal Life: Go Deep

Local Life: Hello | Profile

Deirdre Griffith //By Rachel Walker In the two years since Jackson local Deirdre Griffith won the epic Mongol Derby—a 1,000-kilometer equestrian endurance race that recreates the horse messenger system developed by Genghis Khan in 1224—the longtime equestrienne has been busy. She helped to spearhead the Parental Mental Wellness program at St. John’s Health; earned recognition as one of the valley’s top-producing realtors; continued to raise two daughters, Lilah, 8, and Delaney, 6, with husband, Vance; and trained horses at the family’s rural property south of town. If there’s a common thread in these seemingly disparate accomplishments, it is Griffith’s passion…

Read MoreLocal Life: Hello | Profile

Local Life: Jackson Hole Icon

Standing Sentinel One tree on the Elk National Refuge has a long history. // By Samantha Simma RISING UP FROM the sage and grasses of the National Elk Refuge’s prairielike expanse immediately east of U.S. Highway 89, a lone cottonwood tree stands tall, casting a shadow over a stretch of Flat Creek. Today, the tree bears a nickname among local guides and tourists as the “eagle tree,” for its propensity to serve as a perch for the birds of prey. Its more official title is the Winegar Tree, after a family of early pioneers who settled in the area in…

Read MoreLocal Life: Jackson Hole Icon

Feature: Water

The Ways of Water Laws say that water in the West must be put to “beneficial use.” Historically, that has meant agriculture, but could recreation and ecosystem health enter the conversation? // By Molly Absolon // photography by bradly j. boner One of the most visited places in Jackson Hole is the Snake River’s Oxbow Bend. Here you can see Mount Moran reflected in the bend’s still waters, watch the pink alpenglow of sunrise light up the Tetons, catch a glimpse of a moose bedded down in the willows, sight a grizzly bear wandering along the shoreline, or land a…

Read MoreFeature: Water

Feature: Photo Gallery

What’s in a Name? Place names in our valley come from many different sources—from the Shoshone language to early explorers and historic characters. //By Jim Mahaffie // photography by BRADLY J. BONER In 1924, when today’s Grand Teton National Park was still the Teton National Forest, cattle rancher, conservationist, and entrepreneur Stephen Leek founded a hunting and fishing camp in the quiet cove on Jackson Lake that today is Leek’s Marina. He applied for a Forest Service permit for “a resort for the accommodation of tourists,” completing construction in 1927. In summer, it was “Teton Camp for Boys,” and in…

Read MoreFeature: Photo Gallery

Enjoy: Health

It’s a Drip Once only available in metropolitan areas, elective IV therapy, which might help with issues ranging from dehydration to vitamin deficiencies, has come toJackson Hole. // By Lila Edythe A 45-year-old single mom, Tibby Plasse describes herself as “someone who is always trying to figure out how to make my body feel better.” She adds: “As a perimenopausal woman, nutritional IVs keep me going completely normally and help with a load of things. I am definitely a believer, and it makes a lot of sense for me.” Nutritional IV therapy is the administration of minerals and vitamins—or sometimes…

Read MoreEnjoy: Health

Enjoy: Design

Outside In Designing homes that connect with the landscape. // By Maggie Theodora “In Jackson Hole, we’re surrounded by this amazing natural environment, and increasingly people want homes that engage with it—homes in which the interior is connected to the exterior,” says Chris Jaubert, founder and principal at A43 Architecture. WRJ Designs principal Rush Jenkins says, “I think as humans, by nature, we want to feel connected to the earth and the elements.” Yes, log cabins are the epitome of cozy, but homes that invite the outside in—whether through the use of extensive glass, color palettes, fabrics, materials, or textures—touch…

Read MoreEnjoy: Design

Enjoy: Culture

Get a Boost As e-bikes explode in popularity, Jackson Hole is trying to figure out where they should be allowed. // By Molly Absolon Midway up the initial steep, gravelly climb out of Grove Creek in Idaho’s Big Hole Mountains, I heard a polite cough behind me. Startled, I pulled my bike off to the side, glad for a chance to stop, catch my breath, and let my pounding heart slow down. A pair of cool-looking (as in not huffing and puffing) bikers pedaled past. One glance at the bottom tubes on their bike frames told the story: they were…

Read MoreEnjoy: Culture