Warning: Don’t tread on Park City’s ‘Shoe Tree’ | The Salt Lake Tribune
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(Paul Fraughton | The Salt Lake Tribune) .Shoes dangle from trees near Park City's Main Street and Summit Marriott Watch. It has become a tradition for people to throw shoes into "The Shoe Tree", but recently, after a complaint, the city removed some of the dangling foot ware. Wednesday, September 14, 2011
Warning: Don’t tread on Park City’s ‘Shoe Tree’

Park City • Warning to newcomers: Don’t mess with this town’s funk.

Janet Koal was unaware of that unwritten caveat when she visited the Park City Council recently to exercise what she thought was her civic responsibility. The growing number of shoes hanging from several trees along Deer Valley Drive was becoming unsightly, she told the elected officials.

Koal had no idea that her description of the “Shoe Tree” as “three-dimensional graffiti” would unleash a firestorm of emotion. Parkites came out of the woodwork to defend the beloved Shoe Tree ­— a little-known symbol of this once-funky town turned glitzy stopover for the glitterati.

The tree along Deer Valley Drive near Heber Avenue harks back to the 1970s. It has been, for more than three decades, a place where locals — and some visitors, too — have tossed footwear in hedonistic homage to the mountain spirits, or the snow gods or who knows what.

The Shoe Tree is even marked by a plaque that tells of its origin, something vague about “boys” from Easy Street sitting around a campfire drinking who began throwing their shoes in a tree.

Letters to The Park Record newspaper, as well as posts on a Facebook page called “Keep the P.C. Shoe Tree,” reveal a deep connection to the community totem ­­and what it represents ­— the Park City not reflected in travel brochures or ski magazines.

One post read: “Shove off Shoe-Tree hater.”

Another said: “Lady who just moved here, go back to wherever you came.”

Story continues below

Others were even less kind.

Koal, who has lived in Park City for less than two years, concedes she didn’t recognize the importance the Shoe Tree holds for many residents.

“I was more than surprised,” Koal said of the outpouring. “I encountered some negative reaction from people. I feel like I’ve awakened a sleeping dragon.”

The tree near the Marriott hotel is reminiscent of the mostly forgotten little mountain town that collected characters during a raucous time before Park City was discovered, explained Mayor Dana Williams.

“We look on it as an iconic message to our funk,” he said. “As much as we are a world-class resort, we still are a funky town and the Shoe Tree is part of it.”

The tree ­— which actually is several trees with interlacing branches — represents a deep sense of community for people who live and work in Park City, said City Councilwoman Liza Simpson.

“It’s something that has always made us smile,” she said. “And it’s something more than a few of us have participated in after a few adult beverages on Main Street.”

For Parkites like Candice Chaney, the words “Clean up the Shoe Tree” were too much.

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Attempt to clean up beloved ‘funky’ icon got Parkites fired up.

Photos
The Park City Park's Department removed these 26 bags of shoes
from the Shoe Tree recently. The tree, near Poison Creek and Deer Valley Drive, has been a Park City mainstay since the late 1970s. 
Courtesy Grayson West  |  The Park Record
(Paul Fraughton  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   
Shoes dangle from trees near Park City's Deer Valley Drive and the Summit hotel. It has become a tradition for people to throw shoes into the Shoe Tree. 
  Wednesday, September 14, 2011
(Paul Fraughton  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   
.Shoes dangle from trees near Park City's Main Street   and Summit Marriott Watch. It has become a tradition for people to throw shoes into "The Shoe Tree", but recently, after a complaint, the city removed some of the dangling foot ware. 
  Wednesday, September 14, 2011
(Paul Fraughton  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   
.Shoes dangle from trees near Park City's Main Street   and Summit Marriott Watch. It has become a tradition for people to throw shoes into "The Shoe Tree", but recently, after a complaint, the city removed some of the dangling foot ware. 
  Wednesday, September 14, 2011
(Paul Fraughton  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   
.Shoes dangle from trees near Park City's Main Street   and Summit Marriott Watch. It has become a tradition for people to throw shoes into "The Shoe Tree", but recently, after a complaint, the city removed some of the dangling foot ware. 
  Wednesday, September 14, 2011
(Paul Fraughton  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   
.Shoes dangle from trees near Park City's Main Street   and Summit Marriott Watch. It has become a tradition for people to throw shoes into "The Shoe Tree", but recently, after a complaint, the city removed some of the dangling foot ware. 
  Wednesday, September 14, 2011
(Paul Fraughton  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)   
Passersby  look up at shoes dangling  from trees near Park City's Main Street   and Summit Marriott Watch. It has become a tradition for people to throw shoes into "The Shoe Tree," but recently, after a complaint, the city removed some of the dangling footwear. 
  Wednesday, September 14, 2011
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