| If you are looking for information
on skiing in Utah then you have come to the right place!
Life in the Valley magazine has a wide variety of information
on skiing in Utah. Here's an example of the type of information
the Life in the Valley magazine has on skiing in Utah:
Utah has “The Greatest Snow on Earth”,
- an average of 500” of light champagne powder annually.
We also have some of the greatest ski resorts on earth,
home to 12 world class alpine ski resorts. Utah has 10 resorts
within an hour drive of the Salt Lake International Airport,
and there are 7 within a 30-45 minute drive. Served by 13
major airlines and 726 daily flights, getting to Utah is
convenient from just about anywhere.
No one knows for sure when or where skiing
first started in Utah, but what is known is that by the
1870s, miners, snowbound in the canyons of the Wasatch for
most of the winter, were strapping skis on to make their
way around and between the canyons.
During the early 1900s several organizations
began to promote skiing. The Wasatch Mountain Club, still
going, formed in 1912. Club members began leading regular
ski treks into the Wasatch Mountains.
By the 1930s ski jumping tournaments on
famous Utah hills such as Ecker Hill outside Park City and
Becker Hill near Ogden were drawing thousands of fans to
watch local heroes soar to world record jumps. This decade
also saw the opening of Utah’s first alpine ski resorts.
In 1936 the Wasatch Mountain Club build a rope tow at Brighton
Ski Resort and organized Utah’s first official alpine
ski races. In 1938 Alta opened with Utah’s first chairlift
(the second chairlift in the US behind only Sun Valley).
The 1940s saw Utah establish itself as the
hotbed of ski competition. Alta began the famous Snow Cup
tournament in 1940. Snowbasin hosted the US National downhill,
slalom and combined ski championships in 1947 and the 1948
US Olympic team included a large contingent of Utah skiers.
The Utah Winter Sports Park (now called
Utah Olympic Park) opened in 1993 with world-class jumping,
bobsled and luge facilities. Construction also began on
state-of-the-art cross-country skiing facilities at Soldier
Hollow and ice facilities in Salt Lake City. In 1995 the
International Olympic Committee awarded Salt Lake City the
2002 Olympic Winter Games.
Utah began its third millennium of skiing
with a splash by hosting the most successful Winter Games
in history when the state and its people welcomed the world
for the 2002 Olympic Winter Games.
In addition
to Utah Skiing information the Life
in the Valley Magazine's online directory also includes
the following: |