POOF How to hit the slopes at the annual Whistler Pride & Ski Festival - and hit the après-ski even harder
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TRAVEL POWDER POOF How to hit the slopes at the annual Whistler Pride & Ski Festival – and hit the après-ski even harder By Doug Wallace NOVEMBER / DECEMBER 2020 46 IN MAGAZINE
TRAVEL Ever since Benito the mountaineer literally swept me off my feet pools are so hot, everyone has to lounge waist-deep to avoid passing at Gay Ski Week in Arosa, Switzerland, I have vowed to take in out, which makes for premium ogling. Me, I’m just glad it’s dark. Canada’s premier LGBTQ ski event, too. And from the second I step off the YVR Skylynx and into the magic of the Whistler Pride Daytimes, we remind ourselves that we’re here for the hills, not just & Ski Festival, I am hooked – to the vibe, the snow, the conviviality, the gaying, and manage four full days of skiing, which has to be a and the hundreds of very fit men. record for me. The side-by-side mountains of Whistler-Blackcomb have more than 8,000 acres of terrain, with enough variety across I had visited Whistler the previous summer, a week busy with 200 trails for every level of skier. There are so many lifts, we get canoeing, kayaking, and cycling along the 35-kilometre Valley lost not once but twice. We even take the wrong trail down one Trail that connects all of Whistler’s neighbourhoods, lakes, parks afternoon, ending up at the Creekside base, and have to take a and all. There is ATV and zipline adventure for those looking for transit bus back to the hotel – not embarrassing at all. exhilaration, but I was content with just a stroll along the Cloudraker Skybridge high above the treeline, followed up with a nice burrito. Laying out the welcome mat “Pride & Ski is hands-down my favourite week,” says Sarah Morden, Winter at Whistler-Blackcomb, on the north edge of Garibaldi senior specialist of international communications of Vail Resorts. Provincial Park, presents a totally different face, of course. It’s the “The whole vibe of the town is elevated, effervescent. There’s a last week of January and we check into the Aava Whistler Hotel party spirit everywhere you go and the events are amazing – the (the festival headquarters), stash our gear in the basement, then hit dancing, the outfits! the outdoor pool. There’s a buzz in the steamy air, guests looking forward to a week of camaraderie, much of it happening a few steps “Pride tends to be very emotional as well,” she adds. “People come away in the Whistler Conference Centre and surrounding pubs. from all over bringing an international flavour. There’s a weight lifted, a freedom of expression and love. I find it moving every We quickly realize that the après-ski schedule is so breakneck, we’ll year, and people are overwhelmed by how welcoming the town is.” have to trim it down to fit everything in, like my nap. There are cocktail mixers every afternoon, a full weekend of tea dances, an While the parties will have to skip a year due to COVID-related indoor pool party and a full evening takeover of Scandinave Spa dampening, Whistler is taking all the necessary precautions to Whistler, a cousin to our Collingwood outpost, with a rejuvenating ensure the most safe and successful upcoming season possible given maze of outdoor hot and cold pools, steam rooms and wood-fired the circumstances, with a new reservations system to access the saunas. Normally extremely quiet with no talking allowed – attendants mountain. There’s also the new Whistler Blackcomb Day Pass, on are shushing full-time – the spa is chatty and a bit bratty. The hot sale until early December, which yields flexible lift access for one 47
to 10 days at prices way lower than the ticket window. The resort Village dining doesn’t disappoint either, the regular hotspots serving TRAVEL is also continually upgrading both the skiing and the amenities, superb comfort food to line up for. Ditto the cocktail lists, particularly fixing bottlenecks, replacing lifts, getting more people up the at Pangea Pod Hotel, one of the town’s more affordable yet highly mountain faster. “There’s enough space at the top for everybody. styled digs. Burgers at Stonesedge Kitchen come with an onion It’s huge,” says Morden. ring spiked to the bun. The fish and chips at Beacon Pub have me at “pine-nut panko.” Even a bowl of goulash on the very top of As for the Pride festival itself this coming January, it will be scaled Blackcomb Mountain at Horstman Hut, served in a Styrofoam cup down but recognized. “We still have the week of January 24 to 31 with a side of mashed potatoes and gravy, renders me weak at the dedicated to us,” says Sunil Sinha, executive festival director. “The knees. And you can’t throw a stone in this town and not hit a plate resort will continue to support the week with branding throughout of Parmesan french fries. I experience total garlic-fry withdrawal the Village and we’re planning special Whistler Pride rates for for weeks afterwards. hotels, lift passes and equipment rentals,” he explains. “We’ll be updating our site continually with current information so that When we’re not eating or posing or dancing, we are connecting anybody considering attending in 2021 will know exactly what’s with the neighbourhood in cultural ways. The beautifully designed happening and what isn’t.” Audain Art Museum always has something interesting going on in a variety of mediums, showcasing primarily B.C. artists, with Whistler is also completely delicious exhibits curated in-house or breezing in from elsewhere. When we aren’t gaying or skiing, we’re eating – but I actually lose weight despite the three squares a day. Skiing really works up an A full banquet and Indigenous dance performance at Squamish appetite, which we satisfy in many ways, both high end and low. Lil’wat Cultural Centre follows a tour guided by cultural ambassadors from the Squamish and Lil’wat Nations. We also manage to hop Beside the stone fireplace at the Fairmont Château Whistler Grill on a bus one night for a trip a few minutes out of town to Vallea Room, we polish off a few of Chef Isabel Chung’s regional dishes, Lumina, a year-round outdoor light show and multimedia storytelling many of which are meat-forward. In fact, someone from the kitchen experience set in the old-growth forest of Cougar Mountain. wheels a demo cart of raw cuts of meat right to the tables to explain each one – a fun touch. We melt into succulent sablefish, carrot Meanwhile, back at the party “marrow” and a pan-roasted duck duo. On our final day, I’m in the Aava hot tub soothing my sore legs and planning my outfit for Lady Bunny. The iconic New York At Sidecut in the Four Seasons, more surf and turf ensues in the entertainer spent the afternoon holding court at the bottom of form of Pacific oysters, cedar-planked salmon and Alberta beef the ski hill sprawled on a giant Pride flag that she then escorted tenderloin. Chef Eren Curyel also has an eye for showmanship, through town, the rest of us following behind. How does her hair evident in the Long Bone Ribeye, a Flintstones-like Washington state hold up in this weather? I wonder out loud. A man in front of me steak for two. The whole dining room watches with astonishment turns and replies, “I don’t think it’s real.” as a father and son devour it in next to no time, with barely enough left over for a doggie bag. The restaurant is also famous for the Lady Bunny’s Pig in a Wig show is beyond hysterical and quite Tipsy Snowman, a spiked hot chocolate confection. filthy, those giant eyelashes not wavering for a second as she sails through old gags and new. We move to the dance floor down the At both Cure Lounge and Aura Restaurant in Nita Lake Lodge, street at Snowball for a few hours before repairing to the Aava to Chef James Olberg keeps menus modern, simple and local, the break out the liniment. Just before passing out, it becomes obvious Canadiana fare pulling in hotel guests and locals alike from cocktail to me that my first Whistler Pride & Ski will not be my last. hour onward. We pop into the adjacent Champagne Nail Bar for a bubbly buff and polish, and leave feeling particularly manly. Visit WhistlerPride.com. NOVEMBER / DECEMBER 2020 DOUG WALLACE is the editor and publisher of travel resource TravelRight.Today. 48 IN MAGAZINE
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