Utah Realtor Robert Bolar's Office #3


Robert Bolar Office
Originally uploaded by OwnUtah.Com
This is where it really all happens when I am not in my mobile office working. Technology is high on my list so that I can bring my clients the highest service at a quick rate. This picture is my home office in North Ogden. I have another office in South Ogden so that I can best serve all of your Real Estate Needs.

Respectfully,
Robert Bolar
Certified Residential Specialist CRS
Graduate Realtor Institute GRI
Internet Real Estate Professional e-PRO
Certified State of Utah Real Estate Instructor
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Coldwell Banker
"Selling Utah One Home At A Time" ®
(801) 737-3333 Fax: (866) 676.4789
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www.SellUtah.com
www.OwnUtah.com

BEST ACCESS TO THE OUTDOORS | OGDEN, UTAH

BEST ACCESS TO THE OUTDOORS | OGDEN, UTAH

Stephen Trimble from Sunset Magazine
Wasatch Range overlooks Ogden cityscape: A new trail system links them.

The freedom to roam

When it comes to easy access to the great outdoors, Ogden, Utah, had considerable help from nature. The city backs up against the Wasatch Range, whose peaks rise to 9,000 feet and whose face is carved by spectacularly deep mountain canyons.

But man helped too. Take a closer look at Ogden's mountain backdrop, and you'll see footpaths rambling here and there. The Bonneville Shoreline Trail cruises north-south along the mountains' feet, while the Great Western Trail traces many of the ridgelines. Other routes run up Coldwater Canyon, Taylor Canyon, Strongs Canyon, and Burch Creek, connecting with national forest trails that run deeper into the mountains. All in all there are 28 miles of trails to lure hikers, bikers, horse lovers, snowshoers, and nordic skiers out of the city and into the Wasatch.

Why is Ogden blessed with such a wonderful network of trails? The answer, replies Jay Hudson, an Ernest Hemingway look-alike who volunteers many of his hours to the Ogden Trails Network, is simple. "As a group, we were trying to make sure we had public access to the mountains," he says.

Cyclist Joel Bingham says that the easy trail access draws thousands of riders into the hills throughout the year. "It's unique because it's so accessible. There are good parking lots and trailheads."

Just as the trails stream out of the mountains into the city, so do two rivers – the Ogden and the Weber. Come late spring and into the summer, you can cool your hiking-weary toes in these streams or watch kayakers and canoers lured by a watery playground developed for paddlers in the Weber River.

Copyright 2002 Sunset Publishing Corporation