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Local Life | Hello Profile

Lindsey Johnson The Sweet Life // By Bevin Wallace After moving to Jackson Hole with her family on a whim, Lindsey Johnson felt unconnected and lonely—until, with inspiration from Wyoming’s natural beauty, she started combining the solace she got from baking with her love of making art.  A California beach kid, Johnson was raised in the surf culture of San Clemente, and she has been in love with art her entire life. “I was always sketching on anything I could get my hands on, whether it was rocks at the beach or drawing in the sand,” she says. After going…

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Enjoy | JH Pantry

Wyoming Wine The grapes come from California, but Jackson Hole Winery does everything else to make its award-winning wines in a barn in Wilson. // By Helen Olsson  During college at Sonoma State University, Anthony Schroth took a wine business class that required an internship. Stomping grapes at a Napa Valley winery planted the seed for an audacious idea: to start a winery at an elevation of 6,229 feet on his family’s 17-acre property in Jackson Hole. “I knew I wanted to have my own label,” Schroth says. The property’s 100-year-old dairy barn with Grand Teton views, he figured, would…

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Local Life | Blast From the Past

Off the Beaten Track For 80 years, Trail Creek Ranch in Wilson has been owned and operated by women. // By Jim Stanford Elizabeth “Betty” Woolsey was a trailblazer, in the mountains and in business. By the early 1940s, she had climbed and skied in the Alps, summited the highest unclimbed peak in Canada, and captained the first U.S. Olympic women’s ski team, winning the national championship in downhill. She had climbed many peaks in the Tetons and Wind River Range, sometimes helping to put up new routes. Her favorite ascent was Mount Moran, on the summit of which she’d…

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Local Life | JH Icon

Jackson Hole Moose Jackson Hole is best-known for its skiing, but we love our semi-pro hockey team.  // By Dakota Richardson As night skiers carve their final turns beneath the lift lights at Snow King Mountain Resort, another set of lights—accompanied by music and a raucous crowd—is just getting fired up as the Jackson Moose Senior A hockey team takes to the ice at the Snow King Center. With a roster of pro players from post-college to the American Hockey League and all the way up to NHL visitors, the Moose almost always play to a capacity crowd of about…

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Local Life | Go Deep

Ski (and Snowboard) Jackets We tested these so you don’t have to. // Dina Mishev stio shot 7 What it isA waterproof Gore-Tex jacket stuffed with 800-fill HyperDRY down, which eliminates the need to wear a ton of layers.  Strengths We love the freedom of not having to bulk up with base layers and letting the Shot 7’s hydrophobic down keep us warm. Weaknesses Its weight and warmth make it a resort-only jacket and, even with only a t-shirt beneath it, it’s too warm for spring skiing days. Best for Resort skiers who don’t like messing around with layers. Details $649; available at Stio…

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Local Life | Hello Q&A

Larry Hartenstein Snow King’s director of operations lives to ski, but he’s even more passionate about helping others. // By brigid mander Despite having non-skiing parents, Larry Hartenstein grew up (in Woodbridge, New Jersey) skiing. “I was about five the first time I went skiing. It was near our family cabin in the Poconos,” Hartenstein, now 48-years-old, says. “I didn’t take a lesson, and my dad waited at the bottom of the beginner area to catch me. I came down fast and knocked him over. I was in a lesson the next day.” By the time Hartenstein was eight, he…

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Local Life | Hello As Told By

Jessyca Valdez // By Lina Collado Garcia Jessyca Valdez first arrived in Jackson in May 2017 from Tlaxcala, Mexico. She and her husband, Emmanuel, used all of their money to buy one-way tickets to the United States. “Our main goal was to have a secure roof over our heads and continue with my college studies in accounting and finances,” Valdez says. Emmanuel’s brother had moved to Jackson in 2010. “He first spoke to us about Jackson and painted a panorama of finding a good job surrounded by nature and animals.” The couple thought Jackson sounded like a place where they could…

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Local Life | All You Need

Wyoming Winter Driving Essential things and bonus gear to have in your vehicle to make winter driving safer. // By Bevin Wallace Sure, you can toss any winter hat in your car, but why not make it something cheery, washable, and recycled, like the Cotopaxi Teca Fleece Beanie? $25, cotopaxi.com  The Wyoming Department of Transportation lists tire chains as the first item motorists should have in their cars. Jumper cables are another must-have.  A staple with ski town locals, Kinco’s 1927KW gloves are made from premium-grain pigskin and canvas with high-performance insulation. Their hardware store price makes them the perfect…

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Explore | As the Hole Deepens

Last Word Jam // By Tim Sandlin   // Illustrations by Birgitta Sif August—I’m tooling down from the park where I’d visited my secret blueberry patch. Two yearling bears had beat me to the good stuff. They were both a reddish dark brown, about the color of an extra-hot cinnamon matcha. The smallest bear took one look at me and climbed an aspen. The other bear ignored me like he was a teenager in a mall.   My immediate problem was I didn’t see the mother. Here’s my daily nature lore tip: if there are bear cubs in your patch,…

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Explore | Epic Bike Rides

Six Epic Rides One of these is perfect for you. // By Brigid Mander The Teton Range and surrounding areas have a reputation for many things: wildlife, scenery, mountain climbing, and skiing, among others. Less-known but equally amazing is our biking—road, mountain, gravel—and the range of the different types of rides possible. “We have such a variety of terrain; with pavement, bike paths, dirt roads, and singletrack, there is something for everyone,” says Cary Smith, a competitive cyclist, racer, and shop manager at The Hub Bicycles, a bike shop in Jackson.  In no particular order, here are six of our…

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Explore | Rodeo

Cowboy Up! Get to know the different rodeo events, plus a way to play cowboy yourself. // By Samantha Simma Jackson Hole’s wild and Western heritage comes alive for spectators of the Jackson Hole Rodeo beneath the arena lights of the Teton County Rodeo Grounds Wednesday and Saturday evenings from Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day (with additional rodeos on Fridays during July and August). In 1890, Sylvestor Wilson accompanied settlers over Teton Pass to settle what is now Jackson Hole. Six generations later, the Jackson Hole Rodeo is a Wilson family affair. Brandon Wilson, Sylvestor’s great-great-grandson, says, “It’s the Old…

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Explore | Sloshies

Sloshie Season This adult slurpee is a staple of Jackson Hole summers. // By Samantha Simma Spinning in the slushie machines throughout Jackson Hole are frozen beverages that give the 21-and-older set a brain freeze with a buzz. These slurpees are not to be taken lightly; they will get you sloshed (hence their name “sloshies”). It was Creekside Market and Deli that first conceived of them, when it introduced the Greyhound, a mixture of vodka and freshly squeezed grapefruit juice, in 2012. But today sloshies seem to have taken over the valley; almost every gas station, market, and liquor store…

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Explore | Bike Rides

Local Life When done by bicycle, these four adventures are favorites of locals.   // By Brigid Mander Every spring, as soon as the weather allows, I enthusiastically ditch my car and use my bike to get around, whether running to the grocery store, shopping for clothes, riding to a trailhead, or meeting friends for dinner. Jackson Hole is an amazing and wonderfully easy place to get around by bike—minus the mountains surrounding us, it’s relatively flat, and there is an ever-increasing amount of amenities for cyclists. Thanks to pathways and bike lanes, you can ride around Jackson and from…

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Feature | Housing

Shacks on Racks Can moving —rather than demolishing— old homes help with  Jackson Hole’s housing crisis? // By Sue Muncaster  David Newby, the owner of Great Divide Earthworks, his wife, Anne, and daughters Kayla (13) and Victoria (10) lived in Afton, Wyoming, when Newby got a phone call they were all happy about. An old workmate wanted to know if Newby, who had been commuting the almost 70 miles (one-way) between Afton and Jackson for 18 years, wanted a new house. And, if he did, could he move the 1,250-square-foot home from West Gros Ventre Butte, between Jackson and Wilson, to…

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Feature | Photo Gallery

The Land is Alive  Having grown up on the R Lazy S Ranch, photographer and archeologist Matt Stirn knows the many aspects of its personality. // Text and photography by Matt Stirn I grew up on the R Lazy S Ranch a mile north of Teton Village. Nestled against Grand Teton National Park to the north, the Snake River to the east, and the Tetons to the west, our ranch is an oasis of lush aspen groves, cottonwood stands, and sagebrush flats. I often travel abroad photographing stories for magazines and working on archaeological excavations, but my home base is…

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Feature | Tribal

Reconnection? Long-excluded Indigenous residents of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem are seeking to forge a new, improved relationship with the national parks, forests, and other federally managed properties that sweep across their ancestral lands. // By Mike Koshmrl About two decades ago, Shoshone-Bannock member and attorney Jeanette Wolfley took a trip to Yellowstone National Park with a group of 20 tribal elders to help document her people’s connection to a land of steaming waters and boiling lakes. An ethnography project—which uses interviews to study people in their own environment—brought the elders into Yellowstone, which, at 151 years old, is one of…

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Feature | Tourism

Responsible Tourism What it is, why it’s important, and how to do it in Jackson Hole. // By Molly Absolon “I never go to [Grand Teton National Park] anymore in the summer, unless it is very strategic, say after 5 p.m.,” says Liz Alva Rosa, who has lived in this area since the 1990s. “I never go to the Town Square or to any restaurants in the summer. I plan my grocery store runs in between the morning ‘buying-things-before-your-adventure’ crowd and the regular craze.” As for the traffic: “The line of cars coming into Jackson from the park in the…

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Feature | Migration

Here, there, in between: The marvel of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem’s migrations  The network of migratory wildlife that pulses in and out of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem’s core is one of the ecological phenomenon prized not just within the United States, but the entire world.  And there’s a unique opportunity to save the whole system.  // By Mike Koshmrl //photography by joe riis One decade ago, Grand Teton National Park biologists set out to learn where the mule deer that live in the park in the summer came from and what route they took to the Tetons.  There were some assumptions…

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Enjoy | Health

Ode to Joy Why, and how, you want to experience this emotion. // By Bevin Wallace // photography By bradly J. Boner This is going to be a bit meta but here goes. I really struggled to figure out how to start this article about joy. I mean, joy is something we all know exists and we all want, but it’s also kind of a vague concept. Joy is universal and mind-blowing (try listening to Beethoven’s 9th Symphony without feeling … something). It’s the subject of an untold number of poems and of a ubiquitous and lovely Christmas carol (……

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