Bountiful Peak is just south of this upper area in Farmington Canyon.
WHY doesn’t
Davis County have any ski resorts?
According to
the Davis County Clipper of June 13, 1958, a study was done that year in the Bountiful
Peak area (just south of Farmington Canyon) to determine the feasibility of ski
runs being constructed there.
Alf Engren,
best known for his ski school at Alta Ski Resort and his pioneering of powder
skiing, studied the Wasatch Mountains in Davis County for possible ski runs.
“Mr. Engen
Was particularly impressed with one spot southeast of Bountiful Peak,” the
Clipper stated, indicating that it had more promise than Brighton Ski Resort
did. However, the next step was studying aerial photos, along with the feasibility of the Farmington Canyon road being open year-round.
Aerial
pictures apparently showed the terrain to be not as suitable as initially
thought. Also, the construction of a radar station on Francis Peak to the north
compounded year-round travel safety for the area. The Weekly Reflex newspaper
of Oct. 6, 1960 stated that the Bountiful Peak was still “being checked out for
a ski haven.” That was the last word on a Davis ski resort.
The Davis News Journal of May 19, 1959 explained that Davis County had a recreation committee studying the possibility of the winter recreation, located south and east of Bountiful Peak. It even chose an official name, "Big Sky," as the title for the recreation area.
In the end, no ski resort or recreation area ever materialized.
The Davis News Journal of May 19, 1959 explained that Davis County had a recreation committee studying the possibility of the winter recreation, located south and east of Bountiful Peak. It even chose an official name, "Big Sky," as the title for the recreation area.
In the end, no ski resort or recreation area ever materialized.
A steep area of Farmington Canyon, north of and below Bountiful Peak.
-However,
the Clipper of March 10, 1978, reported on a federal proposal to declare the
Bountiful Peak area a wilderness area. That never happened either (but at least
you can access the area seasonally by the dirt road that goes up Farmington
Canyon and heads south along the mountain top to the “B” on the mountainside in
Bountiful).
MORE
HISTORY:
-The Davis
County Clipper of Jun 12, 1942 carried an eye-catching headline in today’s world
– “Davis County men join Avengers.” Of course, it wasn’t the Marvel Comics’
Avengers, but it was a World War II unit, the Utah Avengers’ Naval Unit. The
men, Harry B. Blanchard and Ernest Lehnhof, were known as “Utah Avengers” and
were among 12,235 men at the time who had taken the oath of naval service.
-Just over
four decades ago, there was a wild balloon ride in Davis and Morgan counties. "Balloon crew launched from Lagoon; Ends with an unforeseen ride,” was the
headline in the May 26, 1978 Clipper. A story, written by Roselyn Kirk
chronicled how three people went on a hot air balloon ride and unexpectedly got
carried over the crest of the Wasatch Mountains, just south of Francis Peak.
The
250-pound gondola was at the mercy of the winds or lack thereof and the riders
were not prepared for the approximate 9,700-foot elevation they reached.
After a
chilly ride, they finally landed on a sod farm field in Morgan County, where an
ambulance and sheriff’s deputies were waiting. Everyone was safe. A helicopter had
been called in from Hill AFB, but the balloon had landed by that time.
-What was
perhaps the first mention of bowling in a Utah newspaper? The Salt Lake Tribune
of Dec. 18, 1871 carried the small advertisement for the Pioneer Bowling Alley
in Salt Lake, where a game cost 25 cents.
-Delicate
Arch in Arches National Park has become a Utah icon and is internationally
known now. Yet, when did the name first appear in a newspaper?
The Times
Independent Newspaper of Moab on Jan. 1, 1934 published a story titled, “The
Scenic Appeal of Arches National Monument,” by Frank Beckwith, an archaeologist.
The story
could very well be where the Delicate Arch name originated from.
“A
beautiful, Delicate Arch. About a mile east of Wolf Cabin Ranch is a pretty
arch of pillars delicately carved uprising at once vertically for nearly sixty
feet, then arching over to form the complete arch,” the story stated. “This is
by far the most delicately chiseled arch in the entire area.
Beckwith
later in the story referred to Delicate Arch as “Bloomers Arch” (and “School
Marm’s Bloomers” and “Cowboy Chaps” were among some the Arch’s other early
titles).
The
archaeologist also reported having noticed there were several hundred pounds of
ancient dinosaur bones on display, near Wolf’s Cabin.
Wolf's Cabin.
(This story was originally published on November 18, 2020 in the Deseret News.)
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