Alberta now rivals British Columbia as Canada's best winter playground.
By Kate Siber
Calgary: Cow Town No More
A night in Calgary used to be penance for visiting the Canadian Rockies.
But with a cash infusion from the booming oil-sands industry up north, the ranching hub has a sharp young vibe to
complement some classic fun—like 75-mile-per-hour bobsledding (US $135;
coda.ca) and indoor speed skating (US $4; oval.ucalgary.ca) at the 1988 Olympic venues. For dinner, the Vintage Chophouse & Tavern
nods to the city's cowboy roots with dishes like slow-roasted prime rib
(vintagechophouse.com).
After dark, the beat pulses from the bars on 17th
Avenue Southwest. Our pick: the swanky Mynt Ultralounge (mynt.ca). Six blocks southeast, the rooms at Hotel Arts sport faux-fur rugs and skyline views (doubles from
US$119; hotelarts.ca).
Banff: Party Till the Fleece Falls Off
There are actually three resorts ringing Lake Louise: Ski Norquay
supplies meandering cruisers (lift ticket, US $44; banffnorquay.com), Sunshine
Village's Silver City area holds some of Canada's steepest in-bounds
terrain ($US63; skibanff.com), and Lake Louise's 4,200 acres and five
bowls hide the powder stashes (US $65;
skilouise.com). The streets of Banff also claim the province's best nightlife, with
live music at Wild Bill's (wbsaloon.com), whiskey and microbrew at St.
James Gate (403-762-9355), and well-lubed dance scenes at the Hoodoo
Lounge (hoodoolounge.com) and Aurora Nightclub (aurorabanff.com). From any of them, it's an easy stumble to the Juniper Hotel (double from US$140; decorehotels.com/juniper).
Pincher Creek: The Outpost
Ultra-steep Castle Mountain (US$45, skicastle.ca), outside of Pincher Creek, has long been in the shadow of its northern
counterparts. But with a short film about the resort making the rounds with Warren Miller's Off the Grid this year, the 2,500-acre hill is no longer anonymous. Though Castle still doesn't have a
high-speed quad, it does have Canada's biggest
fall line: the 37-degree, 1,700-vertical-foot Lonestar Chute. After skiing runs like Lone Star, convalescence is mandatory and
best accomplished with bratwurst and cheese fondue at the Swiss Alpine
Restaurant, followed by hot tubbing and a down-draped crib at Limber
Pine Bed and Breakfast (US$72; limberpine.ca).
Canmore: Rock Hard
If you're Canadian, sling ice axes, and have six-pack abs, chances are
you live in Canmore. For the rest of us, that means top-notch guiding.
Yamnuska Mountain Adventures (yamnuska.com) is the biggest outfitter in
town and offers ice climbing classes in Ghost River Valley (US$213), backcountry skiing in Bull Valley (US$230), and
mountaineering-skills courses on a four-day hut-to-hut traverse of the
Wapta Icefields (US$656). The Canmore Nordic
Centre (US$6.75 per day; www.cd.gov.ab.ca/enjoying_alberta/parks), another '88 Games venue, features 40 miles of trails to help visitors burn off beers and burgers at the Grizzly Paw on Main
(thegrizzlypaw.com). Fire Mountain Lodge opened in July and has two- and
three-bedroom condos with decks with grills (from US$158; firemountain.ca).
Jasper: Backcountry Portal
After the summerlong stream of gape-jawed hikers and cyclists clears out, those sapphire-blue lakes and serrated ridgelines are left frozen—and empty. Take a few lift-served runs at Marmot Basin
(US$42-US$52; www.skimarmot.com) before skinning 15 miles into the
Tonquin Valley Backcountry Lodge (US$90 per person, including meals; tonquinvalley.com), where hot cinnamon buns await. More refined is the stone-and-timber
Fairmont Jasper Park Lodge (doubles from US$221; fairmont.com/jasper), a 30-minute hike from Edith Lake, which makes an ideal spot for viewing the northern lights.
Free Agent
Ax Appeal
Bend, Oregon-based alpinist and guide—and our October '06 cover boy—Steve House makes regular pilgrimages to Alberta's towering frozen waterfalls. With House as your guide, make an ascent of the classic four-pitch Weeping Wall, a wide WI 4-6 (on a scale of 1-8) off the Icefields Parkway (US$500 per day; 541-350-9955).
Clearly Canadian
Some activities we happily share with our northern neighbors, like hockey. Others are best attempted with a Labatt in hand.
>>Curling is just like bowling—with slippery shoes and 40-pound stones for
balls (US$9 per hour; calgarycurlingclub.com).
>>Behold the backsides of ten huskies while dogsledding around Spray Lakes, in the Kananaskis Country area (two hours, US$115; maddogsexpeditions.com).
>>Ice fishing's dress code is as strict as Wimbledon's: red flannel and a toque with earflaps. Drop a hook to the walleye of Lesser Slave Lake, 2.5 hours northwest of Edmonton (two days' fishing and lodging for two, US$355; adventurealberta.com)
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