This is my 9th year searching for the epic winter ride in Utah. I started in bad locations in Southern Utah, outside of Brian Head and Elk Meadows (closest snow to my home in Vegas). I then moved North in 01 for better snow and wind. From my home in Draper I was perfectly central to all of Utah's Snowkiting (known and unknown at the time). In 01 and 02 the Snow was good low and opened up many early riding spots that have since disappeared. Rush Lake was a huge favorite those first years with wind and snow, but it hadn't turned much until this past winter when lake effect got the better of it. Beside Rush, I kited with others in parks and fields regularly across the valley... some of those spots are now known as IKEA (damn urban sprawl). The Point of the Mountain was also a regular meeting place for out of towners dropping in during winter, a place that has seen less snow every winter since.
The next 'first' spot I remember was Kimball Junction in Park City, but after a couple years it turned into a nature preserve, and we were forced to search for other close spots nearby... finding the home depot field, the DOT field and Kevins Corner. Some of which are closed to 'tresspassing' or may become closed in the future due to urban growth.
Then came the 'bad snow' years, that forced snowkiters to search the high ground. After a miserable winter where Sulfer was the only ice/snow around, we stumbled onto the mountain meccas of Pow-Mow, Strawbs and Skyline. The first years, there were not enough riders to exploit the true potential of any of these spots. As locals, I think we have all been skunked our fair share at all of these spots, and then moved on to either more predictable or closer locations.
So there are now dozens of new places to ride in Utah, just depends on the snowpack. Park City is a backcountry dream if you are willing to hike. There is a ridge above Deer Valley that turns out very reliable conditions...and D rides his splitboard solo on a ridge opposite Park City, along with numerous other untracked ridges in the region. Strawbs has unlimited potential when the wind is good, as does Skyline. Then head North and one realizes that Pow Mow is just one of many ridge tops to ride in Nor-Utah. Everything boils down to 'Access and consistent conditions'.
So with that I ask, What Snowkite spot do you ride most?
Do you ride because its closer, because the wind is better, or because the terrain draws you in?
Windzup,
Brian Schenck
I ride Skyline because I find it predictable, I am in love with its terrain, and it is now the closest spot to my home in Mt. Plez. I wish I lived in a motorhome that ran off of wind
