Other Pages of Interest

Wednesday, October 20, 2021

Salt Lake City 2021

After a positive COVID-19 test canceled our plans to meet in Savannah, Julie, Sarah and I quick pivoted and booked flights to Salt Lake City. We have a running list of cities that we would someday like to visit, and while Salt Lake City was nowhere near the top of that list, it shot to the top when we had to quickly change our plans. 

This city overdelivered! It is beautiful and unique, we were able to hike and explore and see a totally different area of the country. Just by happenstance, we were there for the height of the fall color season!

After parking at a closed nail salon, crossing our fingers that we wouldn't be towed, we checked in to our possibly-haunted AirBnB. Everything creaked, everywhere was dark, and there was a perfectly round pencil-width hole in the kitchen floor that looked into the story below. We covered the hole. 

The weekend centered around catching up on each others' lives and reminiscing the same stories that best friends tell over and over again. This was the first in person telling since we all had reached the next birthday milestone - our 40s!!

Our creepy little house had some perks. It was quiet (when we weren't creaking across the floors) and comfortable. Our morning run took us by many of the historic buildings in downtown Salt Lake City including an impressive public library (SLC doesn't mess around with their libraries),  The Leonardo museum and approximately 400 different places to eat. 

Sarah thought well enough ahead to rent a great, albeit, gigantic truck and chauffeured us all weekend. We were able to visit Park City, which is known for its incredible skiing but also has one of the cutest pedestrian streets I've ever seen. We visited on a cloudy, drizzly day, but when we could see the fall color and enjoy the view of being surrounded by mountains, it was really lovely. 

We also took this day to explore the Homestead Crater, a natural hot spring about halfway between SLC and Park City in a town appropriately named Midway. The Homestead Crater is on one side of the Homestead Resort. The Resort has built a convenient pathway to the crater, which I prefer to traversing down the center as was done in the past. The water is always over 90 degrees and even on a cold, drizzly day a human icicle like me enjoyed floating in the hot spring. 

The only thing lacking was a respectable changing area. We made due, and continued on our day. 



Julie suggested that we try an escape room in Park City, but the reservations were 100% full. Back in SLC however, we were able to get the last reservation of the night to the most bizarre and broken escape room I've ever tried. The host was 45 minutes late starting our reservation. A key part of the room had been accidentally taken home by the previous group. It was a hysterical disaster. 

The walk to the escape room from parking had these super cool stairs! Rainbow swirls! These are the faces of my best friends when they are forced to stop and take a picture.



Obviously, we had to take a closer look at the Great Salt Lake, so we self-explored Antelope Island. There are no antelope. It is not even an island. But all these little black dots far off on the dry grassland are wild buffalo, which are very cool to see, but as there are warning signs every quarter mile or so, definitely do not attempt to feed or pet them.  

According to the public radio broadcast tour, there used to be antelope on the island, but they left. The island is a peninsula until the rain/snow melt season happens and the shallowest strip of land is flooded over. 





We were more impressed by the way the lake changed it's look depending on the light, angle and location we were at. This is us with the lake in the background. Can you see it? It's that thin little strip of light above the yellow grass and below the blue mountains. It looks like you could walk right over it. The salt plays tricks on your eyes. There are also very few living things in the lake, again, too much salt. There are brine shrimp, which attract the birds - and there were lots of birds. 




Before our flights on the last day, we walked all around the capitol building and it's grounds. 

We found a fun mildly challenging 1.5 hour hike up the Living Room Trail. Parking was easy and it felt good to walk around land that was not Texas-flat. The trails were pretty wide and well marked, and I am pretty sure we made it to the top where some rocks have fallen in the shape of chairs, so it appears as though there is a natural "living room" lookout point at the end. This is the only time during the trip that I really felt the elevation. Coming from my sea level city to the ~4,200 ft elevation of SLC was fine, until I wanted to hike. I was properly winded a few times on the trail, though just enough to make me notice.  

This was an incredible, adventurous trip for this trio. In truth, everywhere is fun when you're with good friends. 

No comments:

Post a Comment