Is there anything more American than eating stuff between two pieces of bread? Hot dogs, hamburgers, peanut butter and jelly, who doesn’t love a sandwich? We decided to celebrate the sandwich in this inaugural Park City Sampler, featuring three meals between two pieces of bread, all on one menu. Then, be sure to book a Park City vacation rental through us and taste these delicious sandwiches yourself!
Breakfast: Wasatch Bagel and Grill
$

We argue that the perfect way to start the day is with a tall stack of egg stuffed between two pieces of properly boiled and baked bagel. Warm colors, lots of interesting décor, and no shortage of comfy seating make this out-of-the-way eatery a perfect place to warm up to the world in the early hours. Wasatch Bagel and Grill offers plenty of options when it comes to breakfast bagel sandwiches, from classic egg and cheese to more ambitious combinations, like the spicy Wasatch Huevos, with jalapeños, bell peppers, and grilled onions. Not everything on the menu is between two slices of starchy goodness, but all the best things are.
Lunch: The Back Door Delicatessen
$
We argue that the perfect way to start the day is with a tall stack of egg stuffed between two pieces of properly boiled and baked bagel. Warm colors, lots of interesting décor, and no shortage of comfy seating make this out-of-the-way eatery a perfect place to warm up to the world in the early hours. Wasatch Bagel and Grill offers plenty of options when it comes to breakfast bagel sandwiches, from classic egg and cheese to more ambitious combinations, like the spicy Wasatch Huevos, with jalapeños, bell peppers, and grilled onions. Not everything on the menu is between two slices of starchy goodness, but all the best things are.
Dinner: Burgers and Bourbon
$$

We argue that the perfect way to start the day is with a tall stack of egg stuffed between two pieces of properly boiled and baked bagel. Warm colors, lots of interesting décor, and no shortage of comfy seating make this out-of-the-way eatery a perfect place to warm up to the world in the early hours. Wasatch Bagel and Grill offers plenty of options when it comes to breakfast bagel sandwiches, from classic egg and cheese to more ambitious combinations, like the spicy Wasatch Huevos, with jalapeños, bell peppers, and grilled onions. Not everything on the menu is between two slices of starchy goodness, but all the best things are.
Spotlight: Burgers and Bourbon
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Stepping through the Montage double doors, one is immediately filled with the air of business done right. Deer Valley, well known as the champion of high-class skiing, works hard to earn its reputation. Restaurants, lodging, location, and service are the pillars that support the commitment to excellence Deer Valley is known for; Burgers and Bourbon is no exception.
Located inside Deer Valley’s Montage Hotel, Burgers and Bourbon offers perfected takes on some of America’s most iconic favorites. From bison burgers and truffle fries to wagyu beef nachos, it’s all there. Walking into the kitchen, one finds that Burgers and Bourbon is not isolated, but a part of the larger Montage food service center of operations. Inside this joint kitchen, expert hands busily craft delicious fare for not just B&B, but the rest of the Montage’s food services, including its room service and two other eateries.
Logistical feat doesn’t quite do the operation justice. The level of expertise and caliber of organization needed to pull what Deer Valley does off is tremendous.
While most people will never see this back-of-house jewel, everyone can enjoy the results. The dishes served at B&B deliver. If you’re looking for a chef-choice cut of meat with French cheeses and exotic assortments of toppings, search no further. The masterminds behind the menu took special care to craft every burger with dignity and poise. No mishaps or disappointments here.
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Seriously Silly: The Park Silly Sunday Market
Every summer Sunday, Historic Main Street turns into a bustling, unusual spectacle known as the Park Silly Sunday Market. One of Park City’s best known and most spectacular events, this unusual collection of artists, vendors, performers, and restaurants brings visitors from all over the world. We spoke with Kimberly Kuehn and Kate McChesney, the CEO/founder and executive director of the Silly Market, respectively, about this crazy weekly bazaar.
All Seasons Resort Lodging [ASRL]: We’ll start with the basics. Park Silly Sunday market is a unique institution, where did it come from?
Kimberly: It was originated in 2006, and it was just something that we wanted to really hype up Main Street. The economy was really bad back then, so we wanted to give people the opportunity to sell their hobbies, enjoy a free event on main street, and create commotion on Main Street for the Main Street merchants. So we took community elements such as nonprofits, musicians, sustainability advocacy, and we put them all together on the street for everybody in park city. That eventually attracted visitors and tourists, because we’re a pretty colorful community when it comes to our hobbies and our interest in art. We’re definitely a slice of heaven in the state of Utah. We’re a little bit quirky, a little bit more unique than the average community. It’s a nice little staycation day for people in Utah. That right there, along with the organic farmers market, the organic assortment of product that we have, which we spent a lot of time on and have a lot of pride in. So we have importers, organic farmers, photographers, jewelers, and we juggle those categories to make our market a really great, unique place. Never the same, and unique every week.
ASRL: As far as unique every week, what was the very first Sunday like compared to last Sunday?
Kimberly: Our beer garden had one picnic table, and now we have 25-50 tables. I don’t even know. Maybe 30 picnic tables? We had 40 vendors, and now we have about 200. When we started, we were really inviting people of the community to get up onstage, a stepping-stone for people to get up onstage that really never played music in front of an audience. Now we book our music before January. And that’s about 100 bands per season. But we are still keeping the mission in place, and keeping those opportunities open. We never want to say no. We want to open that door to everybody and give everyone an opportunity. So if we have 200 spaces on the street, we want make sure that everyone gets an opportunity. But you do have to meet the deadlines for the applications.

ASRL: What’s the furthest someone has come from to visit the festival?
Kate: Australia, UK, New Zealand…
Kimberly: Groups will come into Salt Lake and then I’ll host them at the Silly Market. I had a really great group of Pakistani ladies that really shed a lot of light on me.
ASRL: How did some businesswomen from Pakistan decide to come to Park City?
Kimberly: They asked us, “How did you do this. As a woman, how did you start a business?” That’s what they came to America for, to study business and women. They were not allowed in their country, so they came here. It was really interesting. It was really neat to hear their stories. I still hear from them on Facebook.
ASRL: It really is very global then.
Kimberly: Yeah, we get visitors from all over. I’ve had translators at my hospitality booth. We’ve had a lot of people coming in with TV, magazines that are in all different languages. This summer, when we ask certain people how they heard about us, a lot of them are saying magazines, or the blog that TripAdvisor did about us when they were profiling the top 20 farmers markets in America. So, we’ve been nationally and internationally recognized now.
ASRL: There’s a lot that happens at the market. There’s obviously vendors, musicians, performers…of all those sorts of things, what’s the best part about the market for you, personally?
Kimberly: It’s a free event that you can walk through. You can see unique, one of a kind items. That’s the big kicker for me. That, and seeing performers that are different. You don’t go to a normal farmers market and see belly dancers and stilt walkers and people hanging from the bridges. It’s the experience of walking through and seeing all these different, unique items and performances. I think that’s why people come back. And when they do come back, it’s actually different. There’s never a market day that’s identical.
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Independence Day is behind us, and Pioneer Day is around the corner. In the spirit of this particularly western holiday, we celebrate the first-timers, the oddballs, the trendsetters, and the boldly-goers.
As many know, Park City was not originally a ski town. For decades, our alpine community was primarily known as a mining outpost. Silver flowed from the mountains by the cartload, and miners eagerly climbed into the depths of the earth in search of the next big vein. No one came to Park City to ski.
Except one man: Emmett “Bud” Wright.
Of course, for Emmett, it wasn’t a case of recreation or sport. Mr. Wright was a lineman for the local phone company in the 1920s. Nearly 100 years ago, “Bud” was tasked with the upkeep of telephone equipment in some of the most remote environments in Utah. To do so, he enlisted the aid of his hand-carved 10-foot skis. With these trusty implements, he skied around the slopes, keeping Park City connected to the outside world by repairing telephone equipment.

When one of Emmett’s skis broke in the line of duty, he took to the use of a mismatched replacement, as no ski shop existing in Park City at the time. It is with this odd pair that “Bud” is remembered and immortalized. A true pioneer, Emmett Wright plied the slopes with his heterogenous equipment decades before Park City became Utah’s premier ski destination. To commemorate Bud, a bronze statue of the faithful lineman stands on Historic Main Street near the Park City Museum. There he stands, ever vigilant in his coat and hat, mismatched skis in hand, at the heart of the city he so notably served long before his preferred method of travel became the town’s claim to fame.
The next time you come to Park City to ski, make sure to take a moment to visit Bud on Main Street. Give his skis a quick rub for luck. Who knows? Maybe the spirit of Emmett Wright will watch out for you on the slopes.
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Park City can be a pricey place to hang out. There are plenty of expensive lodging, restaurants, and activities to enjoy while you are in town. But a trip to Park City doesn’t have to drain your wallet. There are plenty of budget-conscious activities to enjoy in the mountains. In fact, here is a list of several Park City highlights that cost nothing at all. Try these great activities, absolutely free!
Park City Farmers Market

There’s nothing more wholesome than a good farmers market. As it so happens, Park City has an amazing farmers market, every Wednesday from 12 p.m. – 6 p.m. at the Canyons Village, just off state Route 224. Aside from the mountains of perfectly ripe produce, you’ll find dozens of artists, vendors, food trucks, and more. There is a ton to see, do, and taste. It doesn’t cost anything to enjoy the market, but you might just find yourself leaving with a bag of fresh greens or juicy fruits.
Free Concert Series

Music is important in Park City. There are a disproportionate number of musical venues dotted around town, and each summer sees them filled to the brim with a variety of excellent concert series, many of them entirely free of charge. Whether you like funk, folk, bluegrass, country, soul, rock, or something else, odds are that Park City has a concert series with your name on it. There are at least a half-dozen amphitheaters offering a variety of musical fare each summer, usually starting in June. Concerts are spread through the week, and generally occur on a recurring weekly basis at each venue. There are a couple of paid concert series running through the summer, for those interested. For those interested in a cost-lite experience, though, there is no end to the smorgasbord of great local and touring options.
Olympic Park Museum

Back in 2002, Salt Lake City hosted the Olympic Games. Of course, being the Winter Games, that meant skiing. Lots of skiing. And lots of other snow-dependent activities, to boot. That meant plenty of Olympic action for Park City. The Olympic Park is still up on the side of the mountain above Kimball Junction, including a fascinating museum dedicated to the 2002 spectacle. There are all kinds of images and artifacts from the games on display, and there is plenty to explore about the history of skiing in the region. There is even a bit of virtual reality skiing to do when it is too warm outside to enjoy the real thing. Admission to the museum is free. Outside, there are some more active options that require a bit of cash to enjoy, though a run down the Summer Comet bobsled is well worth the investment.
Kimball Art Center

For the artistically inclined, the Kimball Art Center is a perfect destination. The Kimball has been around since 1976, and serves as a center for the arts up in the mountains. Open seven days a week, the Kimball Art Center is home to a variety of exhibitions and events that are open to the public. Show yourself around the current exhibits, or sign up for a gallery tour or Art Talk. Those willing to pay a modest fee can participate in all sorts of classes and workshops, from figure drawing to welded sculpture. If you come for a visit during the summer, don’t miss the annual Park City Kimball Arts Festival, a sprawling celebration of art that comes by for one weekend each August. Now in its 47th year, the festival serves as the Kimball’s largest fundraising source, and is packed with awesome events and experiences.
Trails

If you read our blog about the Mountain Trails Foundation, you already know that Park City is home to a truly massive network of interconnected trails, all lovingly maintained by a group of passionate individuals. Whether you like to get boots on the ground, or you prefer to go for a spin on two wheels, you’ll find hundreds of miles of trail to enjoy. There is a trail for everyone here, regardless of skill level. Large, flat loops coexist with winding uphill climbs, all featuring exceptional views of the mountains and our cozy community. You’ll even find plenty of space for your four-legged companion, and those with an equestrian inclination are welcome to join the bipeds and bicycles. With all these trails, you could stay busy for months exploring every nook and cranny around town.
Park City Public Transportation

Less glamorous and fun by itself than all the other items on this list, this is arguably the most helpful freebie in town. The Park City public transport system is not only crucial for getting Sundance Film Festival-goers and powder hounds to and from the winter’s finest attractions, it is a fantastic bit of year-round public infrastructure. Buses are easily accessible from almost any part of town, and run for all but a few hours of the day. Park City is a town that takes green living seriously, and the fare-free transport is tangible evidence that Parkites are willing to walk the walk (or at least ride the bus) as much as they talk the talk. Special shuttles are available during special events, and consulting a schedule and map before coming up for a visit is generally a good idea.
Browse our collection of Park City vacation rentals and book to take advantage of the fun and free activities this destination has to offer.
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Right behind historic Main Street lies an esoteric Park City oddity: The Shoe Tree.
Not a tree that grows shoes, not a tree made of shoes-technically not even just one tree-the Shoe Tree is a longstanding local landmark dating back to the ’70s, when a few soused celebrants chucked their footwear into one of the trees on the side of the road near the famous downtown destination. Now a row of several arboreal monuments along Deer Valley Drive, these trees are covered with shoes and ski boots year round.
Making an offering to the shoe tree is one of the more unusual must-do activities in Park City.
Many tourists aren’t even aware of the existence of this unique town totem. Back in 2011, efforts were even made to unshoe the trees. The well-meaning plan was “de-feeted” in the end, and the trees continue to gently wave their boot-y in the breeze year in and year out. The Shoe Tree even does a bit of community service on the side, as each fall sees the Park City Park Department reaping a harvest of castoffs for St. Mary’s church.
The little known oddity of Park City
When asked exactly what the Shoe Tree stands for, nobody quite knows for sure. A symbol for quirky mountain life? Sacrifices to the mountain spirits? A plea for a bountiful snowfall? Collective madness? Just because? There probably isn’t a single answer. There is one thing that everyone can agree on, at least: the Shoe Tree is a uniquely Park City oddity, and we like it that way.
Take a walk and see it sometime; maybe even leave a pair of shoes for Park City to remember you by. The Shoe Tree sits on Deer Valley Drive, behind Marriott’s Summit Watch.
Visit the Shoe Tree and all of Park City’s wonderful attractions when you book one of our Park City vacation rentals!

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Is there anything more American than eating stuff between two pieces of bread? Hot dogs, hamburgers, peanut butter, and jelly, who doesn’t love a sandwich? We decided to celebrate the sandwich in this inaugural Park City Sampler, featuring three meals between two pieces of bread, all on one menu. Then, be sure to book a Park City vacation rental through us and taste these delicious sandwiches yourself!
Park City Summer Activities
Gallery Stroll

We argue that the perfect way to start the day is with a tall stack of egg stuffed between two pieces of properly boiled and baked bagel. Warm colors, lots of interesting décor, and no shortage of comfy seating make this out-of-the-way eatery a perfect place to warm up to the world in the early hours. Wasatch Bagel and Grill offers plenty of options when it comes to breakfast bagel sandwiches, from classic egg and cheese to more ambitious combinations, like the spicy Wasatch Huevos, with jalapeños, bell peppers, and grilled onions. Not everything on the menu is between two slices of starchy goodness, but all the best things are.
Provo River Fly Fishing

Let out your inner angler. Spring is a gorgeous time in the mountains. Enjoy some of that legendary mountain scenery while angling for dinner. Provo River offers an abundance of large, beautiful trout. Grab a guide for a leg up, or go it solo with only your own wits and experience to guide you. Either way, the quality of the world-class angling here will leave you reeling.
Main Street Museum

Park City was a bustling western mining town in days gone by. The story of how a skier’s paradise rose from the remains of Park City’s silver mines is a fascinating trip back in time. Explore everything from a two-story scale replica of the mines to reconstructed structures like a prison, saloon, or general store. Kids can even enjoy a Park City history detective activity for extra fun.
Alpine Coaster

There isn’t a better way to enjoy the beauty of Park City spring than racing down the mountain at breakneck speeds, the greenery rushing by. Let gravity carry you downhill at over 30 mph at Park City Mountain. The rails zig and zag through gorgeous vistas, verdant thickets, and tight turns. You’ll want to hop back on and go again, it is that thrilling.
Hiking and Biking

It may be mud season, but there are still plenty of trails that aren’t mucky and sodden. Do a little research; maybe check out the Mountain Trails Foundation. Pick a trail that has dried out for the season, and get out on your feet/two wheels for a trip through the breathtaking beauty of Park City in the spring. No matter your skill level, there is plenty here for fans of outdoor excursions.
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Without a doubt, Park City’s extensive and well-groomed trail network is an amazing way to enjoy an afternoon in the great outdoors. Whether walking, biking, horseback riding, or exercising a dog, there is a bit of everything for everyone somewhere in the sprawling, interconnected web of trails that crisscrosses the Park City area.
The size and careful maintenance of the local trails is due, in large part, to the efforts of the Mountain Trails Foundation. This non-profit organization works hard to bring the finest in recreational trails to the people who visit and live in Park City. We recently spoke to Charlie Sturgis, executive director of the Mountain Trails Foundation, about the creation, maintenance, and promotion of trails around our mountain paradise.
As it turns out, the process of creating a trail is much more involved than simply heading out into the wilderness with a shovel. First, you have to get permission, sometimes from many landowners, to put down new trails.

We basically work with land owners, to get permission to cross their lands,” Sturgis said. “Or we work with the conservation organizations, like Summit Lands Conservancy and Utah Open Lands to see about the possibility of building trails across land that has been purchased, and has a recreational component to the easement.”
It isn’t all easy. When talking about a planned addition to the network for next year, Charlie briefly covered a roadblock the foundation hit while planning a connection. The sale of land crucial to a new trail can make things difficult when planning new routes around town. Sturgis didn’t seem overly concerned, however.
“That project is currently slightly stalled. Land is up for sale, is changing hands. So no one is going to encumber it with an easement at this point. But we’re working with the landowners; that’s all going to get closed up. Someone is going to write a check, and we’ll be able to move ahead.”
“…But if you can go out there and just take a walk and there is no cost, and you take your dog out, and so forth, so there’s really not a good excuse for not going.”
All of the hassle of negotiating for passage isn’t what Charlie is interested in. He likes to build trails. All of the paperwork is simply formality. Charlie likes to play in the dirt. He had a lot to say on the topic, all delivered with excitement in his voice and fire in his eyes.
“From the time you have permission, of course you have to have budgets and so forth, but the big deal is actually getting out in the dirt, and actually walking it, and really establishing where you really want the trail to go. You can look at a line on a map, but its not going to tell you what you need to know when you go walk it. You walk everything. So you’re beating through the bushes, through all the scrub oak, putting little flags out there so you can see from one flag to the next, so its sort of like chasing breadcrumbs. And then you basically come back in and cut everything out of your way. You can’t just bulldoze it off.”

Photo Credit: Mountain Trails Foundation
There is an art and a science to the process. No big machines are involved in the process. They would wreck the trail. This is the work of human hands wielding small tools; part of a process Charlie called “grubbing out.” The trail, which started as an alteration to a topographical map, takes on a shape of its own, a purpose, and a life.
“From that point on, you really design it for what you think it is going to be. Is it going to be a downhill trail? Is it bike only? Is it an uphill trail? Most of our trails are multi-directional, multi-use. So we’re starting to build a few more things a little differently than that, you know, with some berms on it so you can have a little bit more fun on it downhill on a bike. Even a runner can have more fun on a berm versus not, right? Work with the terrain, and get the job done as fast as you can.”
That isn’t to say that all the trails around Park City were planned, designed, and carefully executed. In fact, a good portion of the core Park City trails were either illegally carved out and later legitimized, or not made by humans at all.
“It started that way, back in 1985, in an effort to find more areas to go. We started looking at the old mining trails, the ore cart paths that were put in, anything that was used, any migration path, any place the elk or deer were going through on a regular basis. Even some areas, it was agricultural. Big herds of cattle moving from one meadow to another would leave this track through the woods. We’d just keep tying them together. Keep doing that. That’s where a lot of those early trails were from. And again, no machines were used. Just hand tools, grubbing it out, and riding it in. What we refer to as the Old Town area, a lot of the hand built stuff, we refer to as the spaghetti bowl. It’s all stuff that was done by hand. A lot of it was done illegally, in one sense. It was all those mining claims. No one was really out there caring about it. They’ve been legitimized since, but all those really old trails were nothing more than grubbed out by a bunch of guys just out there in the woods, clipping stuff out of the way. And they are still fun to ride.”
The job isn’t over once the trail is finished. Maintenance occupies the majority of the Mountain Trail Foundation’s efforts. Man and nature take their toll on these winding paths, and it is up to Charlie’s brigade to make sure they stay fit for use by the thousands of feet, wheels, and hooves that traverse them every year. That maintenance is no easy feat.
“You know, a lot of our trails-it sounds funny at times, when you think about it-are really old. So they require a fair amount of maintenance. And, on some of them that have been eroded to a really high level, this year we will be doing a whole lot of rehab. So we’ll be doing complete reroutes. So we’ll be taking a bad, what we call blown-out corner, that’s blown out over the years from too much water and snow melt, and erosion from bikes and runners, we’ll go back and now start redoing those corners, and try making them a bit more sustainable than maybe the original build.
“We certainly know if we did something they didn’t like. Sometimes, when you go fix a trail, a person might think, ‘that was my technical challenge, and they eliminated it.’ They say, ‘you know, I didn’t really like that change.’ But they’ve been riding for 40 years and are used to this older style, but someone who is newer in town might appreciate stuff that is a little more buffed, is a little easier and safer. Most of our goal in rehab is to put the trail back to the character in which it was originally built. It isn’t to try and alter the nature of the original trail, but to try and go back to 25 years ago and say, ‘this was the intent of the trail building at the time, and this is where we think we should be with it.'”

As it turns out, the actual rehabilitation of the terrain isn’t as hard as selling the changes to locals, who can be very vocal about their trail preferences.
“The biggest challenge with rehab is just getting people used to the idea that this is going to be changed, and that, ultimately, this is ultimately going to be for the better, and that the new trail too should last another last 25 years. A lot of people don’t realize that a lot of the trails are as old as they are, and that they get ridden as hard as they do and used as much as they do. All those things affect the age of the trail. It is just getting people to know that, you know, we’re not really trying to change things.”
When it comes to communication, Sturgis has an upbeat, optimistic message he wants to send to the community. His mission is about more than just lines of dirt all over the mountains. He calls it PLC, and it drives his work with the Mountain Trails Foundation.
“We create Positive Lifestyle Choices. We create access so that you can go out and do something healthy. And all those things add up to a healthier community and a healthier environment. All those opportunities out here, tons of trailheads, like we’ve talked about, in every neighborhood. You don’t have a really good excuse for not really getting out, or your dog, or just taking that casual after-work walk. All those things are healthy. They are just the things that we should do. We make that real easy to have that happen here.”
One of the triumphs of the foundation is the accessibility and ease that Park City enjoys when it comes to trail access.

“Everything is free to the public. So there is no financial barrier. It isn’t like skiing. It’s not like you have to buy a bike. There are a lot of sports that are really expensive to participate in. But if you can go out there and just take a walk and there is no cost, and you take your dog out, and so forth, so there’s really not a good excuse for not going.”
Charlie paints a vivid picture of the benefits of an active and widespread trail system. He’s proud of what Park City has accomplished, and wishes that more cities would get involved.
“I truly believe that, when most municipalities look at trail building they think about it as an expense, but they ultimately ought to think about it as an investment, not because you’ve maybe changed the value of homes and whatnot, but, ultimately, if you can reduce the healthcare costs of a community and all the things that go with it like absenteeism from work. All these things add up. There is a significant return on investment when you build areas where people can recreate.”
In the end, he makes it all sound like a lot of fun.
“It’s fun to talk about work, I’m psyched; my staff is psyched about what we do. We’re proud to be doing it for almost 25 years now. It’s fun, and you can see all the impact and all the success out there. It’s pretty cool to look at. You don’t have to look very far out here to find a trail.”
When asked what he wants to do about the organization’s 25 year anniversary, he isn’t quite sure yet.
“Well, we’re always a little behind the eight ball, but we’re thinking about it already. But we don’t really, you know, but we’re talking about some things. But, major plans? I don’t know yet. We’ll have to see. Giant party?”
Sounds good. Count us in. Until then, we’ll see you on the trails.
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