Mountain fun, made-to-order
Jackson Hole serves plenty of fresh powder, with a dash of cowboy culture on the side
Jackson, Wyo. ? Bleary-eyed skiers and snowboarders clambered into Teton Village’s distinctive red tram car for its opening run, squinting as they glanced up at fresh snow sparkling under the morning sun.
Some had been out late at the Mangy Moose Saloon the night before, but a storm had passed through, so those intent on first tracks managed a short night’s sleep.
And they wouldn’t feel tired for long — not with eye-widening views of hulking open bowls and pine-speckled snow fields as the lift glided swiftly up 4,100 vertical feet.
Fresh and abundant powder can make for a memorable day at goliath Jackson Hole.
But even those skiing under clear skies generally get no worse than a mixture of mammoth moguls and long, invigorating groomed runs — not to mention a panorama of one of the most photogenic mountain ranges in North America.
“I ski there day in and day out in the winter and I never get bored,” says former Olympic gold medalist Tommy Moe, who has lived in the area for about 10 years.
Throw in the historic town of Jackson — which clings to its cowboy roots even as the superwealthy, celebrities and artists converge — and you have a place that sates senses both primordial and refined.
Simply awesome
By its simply awesome nature, Jackson Hole always will be a place best suited to courageous and motivated skiers.

Rendezvous Bowl, a Teton Village run, is steep but largely devoid of trees and often has a base of soft snow, which makes the skiing easier than it looks. The slopes near Jackson Hole, Wyo., are best suited for courageous and motivated skiers.
After winning the downhill in 1994 at Lillehammer, Moe could have settled anywhere in the mountain West. He decided to set up an advanced ski school at Jackson Hole.
The skiable terrain rises from about 6,000 feet above sea level to higher than 10,000 feet, with more than 2,500 acres of terrain. It is about as big as they come in North America — a top-to-bottom run can take a half-hour or more with periodic stops to rest and survey the terrain.
“No matter who you are, it’s going to make you feel it a little bit when you get to the bottom,” Moe says.
| Getting there: Jackson Hole is in northwest Wyoming, near the Idaho state line. Jackson recently expanded its airport. American, Delta, Northwest and United combine to offer direct service from Chicago, Dallas, Denver, Minneapolis and Salt Lake City.Getting around: A rental car is ideal, but taxis and buses are available. The START (Southern Teton Rapid Transit) charges $2 for a ride from the town of Jackson to Teton Village.Accommodations: There are hotels and condo rentals at Teton Village, as well as in the town of Jackson, about 12 miles away. Bed-and-breakfasts and other motels dot the route between the two.Jackson Hole: Ski resort, www.jacksonhole.com or (888) DEEP-SNO; Chamber of Commerce, www.jacksonholechamber.com or (307) 733-3316; central reservations line for area hotels, motels, buses, etc., (800) 443-6931.Grand Targhee: www.grandtarghee.com or (800) TARGHEE.Snow King: www.snowking.com or (800) 522-KING.All Trans: Shuttle to the airport or Grand Targhee ski resort, (307) 733-1700.Things to see, eat and do:¢ Four Seasons steep and deep ski camp (with former Olympian Tommy Moe): (800) 295-5281.¢ Million Dollar Cowboy Bar: 25 N. Cache St., (307) 733-2207.¢ Cadillac Grille: 55 N. Cache St., (307) 733-3279.¢ The Granary Restaurant: In the Spring Creek Ranch Inn and Spa, 1800 Spirit Dance Road, (307) 732-8112. Spring Creek Ranch, (800) 443-6139 or (307) 733-8833.¢ The Bunnery: 130 N. Cache St., (307) 733-5474.¢ Jedidiah’s House of Sourdough: Popular breakfast spot, known for sourdough pancakes, 135 E. Broadway, (307) 733-5671.¢ National Museum of Wildlife Art: About five minutes’ drive north of Jackson on U.S. Highway 26, overlooking the National Elk Refuge, (307) 733-5771. |
Taking the tram to the summit is worthwhile if only for the view, but beginners may want to ride the lift back down as well — a common practice here.
Approaching the summit, the tram glides alongside a towering cliff, offering a clear view into the heart of Corbet’s Couloir, a steep, snow-filled chute carved out of the rock. The best (craziest?) skiers drop into it, landing in a deep bed of snow and carving a couple hair-raising, high-speed turns before easing out into Tensleep Bowl below.
“You’ve got to do a high-speed, controlled-slide turn, and once you get over the hard part, the best is the next few turns in the wider part of the couloir, which is blown in with deep snow and it’s unbelievable,” Moe says. “I once flew 40 feet down the chute.”
Many of the ski runs are named with a nod to the French trappers who traded with Indians here two centuries ago. Rendezvous Bowl, a common way down from the tram, is steep but largely devoid of trees and often has a base of soft snow, which makes the skiing easier than it looks.
When conditions are at their best, advanced skiers flock directly from Rendezvous to the Hobacks — legendary because of their vast expanse of mostly treeless terrain that provides seemingly endless powder skiing after a good snowfall. But there are some treacherous, often snow-disguised boulders, along with challenging ravines. Intermediate skiers who can’t resist trying it should have companions who really know what they’re doing, or a paid guide.
Terrain classified as “beginner” is limited compared with the overall expanse. It is among the reasons — along with its relative isolation — that Jackson Hole has struggled to get the number of ski visits of more popular Colorado or Utah resorts.
Coming into its own
But Jackson Hole has improved options and lift service for beginner and intermediate skiers — with two new four-person lifts since 2000 — and has begun to come into its own as a destination resort.
The telltale signs are the multimillion-dollar homes sprouting up like the area’s renowned wildflowers in spring. They include actor Harrison Ford’s place along the Snake River. There are now several spas, one of which boasts the upscale Granary restaurant, built on a hilltop with giant windows overlooking the Snake River valley toward the rocket-ship-shaped peak of Grand Teton.
Last spring, the Internal Revenue Service listed Teton County as America’s richest in terms of average household income. And the mixture of businesses around the main square in the town of Jackson — distinctive for its wooden sidewalks and arches made of antlers — seem to symbolize what the area has become.
More skiing
Those who ski must come in winter, and not just for Teton Village. There’s night skiing at the small but challenging Snow King area in the heart of Jackson. And those who have time for a day trip would cheat themselves terribly by ignoring Grand Targhee.
First, the drive traverses the stunning Teton Pass, where parked cars and ski tracks are the clearest sign of the pull the Tetons have on backcountry ski enthusiasts.
Second, Grand Targhee has been long regarded as one of the best-kept secrets in the West. With its base lodge set atop foothills close to the timberline, Grand Targhee looks from a distance like a 2,400-foot mound of snow just waiting to be played upon.
Its Western exposure keeps it in daylight later and it seems to sit in a portion of the range that captures the most snow. Powder days here are routine — and routinely “epic,” as younger skiers and boarders say.

