The Twilight Report

Your Home For Snappy Repartee

sgmrt: utah

It’s Christmas Eve and I am eating funeral potatoes. Only in Utah would I be eating a dish named for the grieving of a corps. Plus potatoes. Given that they are served at other occasions, it seems just a tad grim for me. My step father is from the Salt Lake City area so we have a house here and my car has been patiently waiting for me while I was in Australia for four years. Hence my road trip is going to start here in the Mormon Vatican.

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Salt Lake is a great place to go skiing. There are several world class ski areas less than an hour’s drive away. Each resort caters to a different type of skier, so no matter your skill level or your preference there is a place that you are going to love. I like Brighton myself because it offers the sort of environment that I remember from skiing Pajarito just outside of my home town. I also like Alta, which is popular among non-snow boarders.

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The capitol building is just up the road from the house. The other day I saw a big red bus with the words “Fire Pelosi” written on the side. Although Utah is deep red, there is a strong liberal streak in Salt Lake itself, especially at the University of Utah.

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Utah’s outdoors are well known for Arches and Monument Valley. All of that is a long way from Salt Lake. Nearer there is the largest publically owned heard of buffalo on Antelope Island. I took this photo four years ago with my old Sigma 70-200mm f/2.8 mounted on my old Minolta 7D. Mum was driving the car carefully so as not to startle the beastie.

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Back on the mainland is Hill Aerospace Museum right next to Hill Air Force Base. They have a great collection including an SR-71 and a couple of MiGs.

My favorite place to eat in SLC is the Red Iguana. It’s also my favorite Mexican place outside of New Mexico.

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At the crosswalks, they have neon colored flags that you are meant to carry with you when you cross the street. Seriously, somebody thought this up. Then somebody (maybe not even that same somebody) didn’t stop the first somebody and implemented the idea. Mum and I laughed at Don when he picked one up the first time (not being in the know we didn’t even notice the flags). Then when I took Lena to Salt Lake and picked up the flag to cross the street she laughed at me.

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The Alfred McCune Home is also located near the center of the city. I always remember it as being featured in the seminal photo book The Americans by Robert Frank. Although not as interesting as some of the other photos in that book, I am always compelled to take a photo of the building whenever I pass it… either as an homage or a rip off. Depends on if you like it or not I suppose.

Unfortunately this trip to Salt Lake has mostly been devoted to packing up the car and getting ready to go. Tomorrow is the first car leg of my road trip!

reid @ nx1 commented:
Red Iguana FTW! I
was just there
(twice) a few weeks
ago.
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SMB Tuba

I was down at Circular Quay yesterday with Torbin and Judy (friends of my mother's) and I heard someone playing the Super Mario Bros. theme on a tuba. It reminded me of my friend Tyler who is a sound designer for EA. On our sojourn through the botanical gardens, we ran into a guy who works for Condi Rice, who was apparently down here at the time.



There were helicopters buzzing about like mad all day. Torbin and Judy opined that they were there to offer protection to the sec-state. After her time in Sydney, she went down to Melbourne to watch the commonwealth games. I watched a little of the games on the TV. England and Scotland compete separately for these games, and Australia dominates the swimming and the bicycling.

I took a number of pictures of the opera house when I wasn't being rudely shooed away by foreign tourists with their own, apparently more important, cameras:

(...many pictures behind this cut)
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Off

Well, I'm leaving Utah finally this afternoon. In LA for the weekend where Tyler and I are going transform into trains and drive around. Then I will be down under! Amazing!
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skiing

I went today.
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Snowbasin

Don flew in this weekend and on Monday we went to Snowbasin. I only went skiing once last year, and my technique has degraded as a result, but I'm starting to get my second wind. The mountain was mostly blue and black. With the exception of two gondolas and a high speed quad, the lifts are old school triples which zoom around and catch you at breakneck speed -- it reminded me a bit of Pajrito. Snowbasin opened in 1939, and is apparently one of the oldest ski resorts in the United States.

The first time we went up in the gondola there were two young girls (omg) discussing wedding rings and weddings (and nothing but). The second gondola was with three young military men discussing where they had served (all locations were stateside as far as I could tell) and how they had spent their 60 days of leave after they had finished at "the academy." I found the contrast between these two rides both refreshing as well as being disturbingly narrow. I imagined riding up in a gondola with a bunch of IBMers/ex-IBMers and one or two non-IBMers. Actually, minus the gondola, that pretty much describes every party that I attended during my years at New York.

There is a Australian "joke" which goes like this:

Q: What's the difference between a buffalo and a bison?
A: Can't wash your hands in a buffalo.

The "humor" is derived from the fact that the way that Australian's pronounce the word basin can be indistinguishable from the word bison to non-Australians.

We went to Antelope Island last weekend which surprisingly does not have any antelope, but does have a large number of bison. Don (my step father), who likes to repeat silly jokes, has been using every opportunity to tell this "joke" ever since.

Therefore: from now on I am going to refer to Snowbasin as Snowbuffalo.
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Salt Lake



I made it to Salt Lake City! I'm tired.
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From the Sublime to the Ridiculous

Yesterday we went up to visit my mother's friend and mentor, Clare, at her rustic cabin home which looks over Bear Lake. Last July I took a photograph which now is on the welcome page of my web site up there. For "Christmas" dinner, we had fish. Although I am not a fan of fish and I did not have seconds, it did taste pretty good. We also drank lots of Australian wine; that probably helped.

(The Sublime)

In short, our range of topics was both wide and deep, and intellectually stimulating.

Then we drove back to Salt Lake City where we attended the annual Christmas Eve party for Don's (my step father) family. Gosh... where to begin. (The Ridiculous)
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Daybreak Bear Lake

From my Utah vacation:

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bob terwilleger @ nx1 commented:
Purple good
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