Doggin'
Ketchum, Idaho: Hike With Your Dog In Hemingway's Last Home Town
In 1879 a tall, wiry prospector named David Ketchum built a small
shelter along the Trail Creek to use as his base of operations
in the area. He didn't stay long. By 1880, when mining operations
began to be permanently established, Ketchum was long gone, rumored
to be in Arizona, or perhaps dead in a saloon standoff.
The new town called itself Leadville but the United States Post
Office turned down the name because Leadvilles were as common
in the West as dashed dreams by that time. The settlers decided
to name their town after pioneering David Ketchum, whose rudimentary
shelter still stood down by Trail Creek.
For more than a decade Ketchum boomed but the collapse of the
silver market in 1894 opened a gash in the town's economy that
drained 90 percent of its population. The town recovered some
with an infusion of sheep ranching but by the 1930s there were
fewer than 300 people living in Ketchum.
In 1935 Austrian Count Felix Schaffgotsch was hired by Union
Pacific Railroad Chairman W. Averell Harriman to scout the American
West for the best site to build a destination ski resort like
the tony resorts in the European Alps. Schaffgotsch scoured the
mountain regions of the West and rejected such places as Aspen,
Jackson Hole and Yosemite. He was prepared to return to New York
and report his failure when a railroad representative from Idaho
asked him to check out Ketchum. Within three days, the Count
wired Harriman: "Among the many attractive spots I have
visited, this combines more delightful features of any place
I have seen in the United States, Switzerland, or Austria for
a winter sports resort." Eleven months later Sun Valley
Resort opened to international acclaim and Ketchum's future viability
was assured.
Ketchum features over 40 miles of dog-friendly trails located
within a 5-mile radius of town. The marquee walk is the 5-mile
Bald Mountain Trail, at the end of 3d Avenue at River Run Plaza
on the edge of town. The trail crosses numerous ski trails up
3400 feet to an elevation above the tree line at 9151 feet. Not
only can you hike with your dog on the Bald Mountain Trail, but
halfway up the mountain, in a glade of giant fir trees, is a
drinking fountain with a perpetually-filled dog drinking bowl
built right into the trail. About the only place dogs are not
allowed is on the ski lifts.
Other trails around Ketchum include hikes along Corral Creek
in the Sun Valley resort and additional alpine walks north of
town on Highway 75 at Fox Creek and Adams Gulch. These dirt and
grass trails are afire with wildflowers through the summer months.
Further up Highway 75, just seven miles from Ketchum is the Sawtooth
National Recreation Area, with 756,000 acres of public land.
A highlight in the Sawtooths, with more than 40 peaks higher
than 10,000 feet, are more than 300 high mountain lakes. Several
of the lakes, including Baker Lake and the Norton Lakes are within
two miles of a trailhead.
The Harriman Trail is a 31-kilometer corridor in three segments
that is open to hiking, biking and cross-country-skiing that
starts at the Sawtooth headquarters. The trail climaxes in Galena,
overlooking the headwaters of the Salmon River.
Ernest Hemingway spent his final years in Ketchum and he is remembered
with a memorial on a shaded bank of Trail Creek in Sun Valley.
Nearby, in the Ketchum Cemetery on the northern edge of town
on Route 75, is Hemingway's unadorned grave. Guarded by a sentry
of trees, the marker is flush with the ground and offers no more
than a name and dates for the life of America's most celebrated
writer of the 20th century. Hemingway's four dogs - Black, Negrita,
Neron, and Linda - are buried in a neat patio at his home in
Cuba.
Ketchum is north of I-80 on Highway 75. The Visitor Center on
Main Street (Highway 75) features abundant material on the various
hiking options in the area.
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