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St Anton

 

stantonamarlberg.com

 

Where is it? Tirol, Austria

Why go? Serious off piste and serious partying

Resort 1305m

Slopes 1305m to 2650m

Lifts 42

Pistes 127km

Six-day lift pass €235

 

St Anton is a big name resort, and there’s nowhere quite like it for those who like to ski hard, party hard and burn the candle at both ends. The place gets prodigious amounts of snow and usually has much better conditions than other resorts of a similar height. A bonus is that the resort is traditional in style and an attractive place to spend time off the slopes.

 

The area boasts countless powder opportunities. The runs in the huge bowl beneath the summit of the Valluga are justifiably world-famous, and in good snow this whole area is an off-piste delight for experts. There’s more great backcountry in the Stuben sector and on the separate Rendl mountain (accessed from the town centre by a gondola). Descents of 1000m vertical are possible, including some on north-facing slopes where the powder stays deep and light. Piste to Powder is a specialist off-piste guiding school run by British guide Graham Austick, and the local St Anton and Arlberg ski schools also have excellent off-piste guides.

 

WTSS---St-Anton-bi_2717146a.jpg

The neighbouring resorts of Lech and Zurs which are linked to each other – and to Warth and Schröcken (see p138) for the first time this winter – are all covered by the Arlberg lift pass, and can be easily reached by regular buses. There’s good off piste in Lech and Zurs, and they get even more snow than St Anton does. Plus there’s much more intermediate cruising than there is in St Anton.

St Anton’s bars rock right through from mid-afternoon until the early hours. Après starts in a collection of bars on the slopes above the village. The Krazy Kanguruh and the Mooserwirt fill up with revellers as soon as the lunch trade finishes (the latter reputedly dispensing more beer than any other bar in Austria). The Heustadl and Sennhütte are also popular. All the partying is followed by a slide down the piste in the dark.

The bars in town are in full swing by 4pm too. Most are lively with loud music – sophisticates looking for a quieter time are less well provided for. Underground on the Piste has a great party atmosphere, and Base Camp is a lot of fun and attracts many of the local instructors. Later on, Piccadilly and Bar Cuba are popular clubs, and there are plenty more, including Scotty’s (in the Mark Warner chalet hotel Rosanna), Kandahar (which shows sport on TV and hosts live music) and, in the suburb of Nasserein, the Fang House.

Although it is crowded, commercialised and sprawling, St Anton is full of character and its traffic-free main street is lined with traditional-style buildings. It also has a splendid leisure centre (arlberg-well.com) with pools, saunas and a steam room.

But…

Slopes don’t suit beginners or timid intermediates; pistes can get very crowded, sometimes dangerously so; most of the tough stuff is off piste; main slopes get a lot of sun, which can affect snow conditions; resort is spread out, with long treks from some lodgings to key lifts and bars.

Chamonix

 

chamonix.com

Where is it? Haute Savoie, France

Why go? Stunning views, traditional mountain town

Resort 1035m

Slopes 1035m to 3840m

Lifts 44

Pistes 155km

Six-day lift pass €230

WTSS---Chamonix-Er_2717148a.jpg

Chamonix is renowned as an extreme sports mecca, with some of the best powder fields in the world, and there’s plenty for those looking for their first off-piste experience too. But it’s not just the varied terrain that makes Chamonix a stand-out resort – it’s worth visiting just for the stunning views and year-round mountain town.

Chamonix is world-famous for the extent and variety of its off piste. A classic excursion is the Vallée Blanche, a mind-blowing 24km run through stunning glacial scenery. It is perfectly within the capability of a fit (and brave) intermediate, and is easily reached by the Aiguille du Midi cable car in town, though the walk down a ridge to the start is scary. The Grands Montets area, reached by lifts from Argentière (about 10km up the valley from town), has huge amounts of easily accessible off piste, while the Vallée Blanche and Grands Montets areas have very high north-facing slopes. If the weather’s bad you can head to Les Houches for powder among the trees. Here and the Balme area have ideal terrain for trying powder for the first time. There’s plenty of easier off piste in the vast bowls served by the Herse chair and Bochard bubble on the Grands Montets too.

The Chamonix valley cuts deeply through Europe’s highest mountains and glaciers. Views of the towering, jagged peaks and tumbling glaciers are stunning, both from the mountains and the town. The best place to see Mont Blanc, the Alps’ highest peak, is from the Brévent ski area across the valley. And no one should miss a trip up the Aiguille du Midi cable car for the stunning views.

As there are several separate ski areas, unless you are based next to one and stick to it, you have to drive or take a bus or train each day (free with a guest card). The Chamonix Le Pass ticket covers most of the lifts in four of the local areas, but a six-day Mont Blanc Unlimited pass, about an extra €50, covers these plus Les Houches, the Aiguille du Midi, unlimited use of the cable car to the top of the Grand Montets, Courmayeur in Italy and Verbier in Switzerland.

Chamonix could not be more different from the typical purpose-built French resort. It’s a bustling town, busy with climbers in summer as well as skiers and boarders in winter. The car-free centre is full of atmosphere, with cobbled streets and squares, beautiful old buildings and pavement cafés, and a wide choice of accommodation.

But…

Several separate mountains; pistes in each area are quite limited; bad weather can shut the best runs; still some old lifts and queues; few good mountain restaurants; busy town with lots of road traffic.

Verbier

 

verbier-st-bernrd.ch

Where is it? Valais, Switzerland

Why go? Steep slopes and lively nightlife

Resort 1500m

Slopes 1500m to 3330m

Lifts 89

Pistes 410km

Six-day lift pass CHF355

WTSS---Verbier_2717138a.jpg

For serious off-piste powder and long mogul fields, Verbier is one of the world’s cult resorts. It’s difficult to beat for vibrant nightlife too. It’s a sprawling, chalet-style resort with lots of second homes and luxurious places to stay, set on a sunny shelf facing spectacular peaks.

Verbier has some superb tough slopes, many of them off piste. The run off the back of Mont Fort, the high point of the ski area, is a highlight – a huge bowl with lots of ways down through untracked powder, giving a feeling of splendid isolation. The Stairway to Heaven run starts with a steep climb before you drop into a deserted valley, which usually has excellent snow. And there are plenty of other options.

Most runs that would be black in many resorts are classed as itineraries here, meaning they’re marked but not maintained or controlled, but they are used as if they were normal pistes. Two of them, from Chassoure and Col de Gentianes down to Tortin, become huge mogul fields from top to bottom. Vallon d’Arby, from Lac des Vaux to La Tzoumaz, is less popular but still quite an adventure, with patches of untracked powder several days after a snowfall. Heliskiing is available too. Powder Extreme specialises in off-piste guiding and coaching, and the British-run New Generation ski school offers all-day Off Piste Experience groups.

Bruson is a small north-facing ski area covered by the lift pass and reached until now by catching the gondola from town down to Le Châble in the valley, then a bus, then a slow old chairlift. But from this season you can step out of the gondola at Le Châble into a brand new one that whisks you to the middle of the Bruson ski area. It’s well worth the trip for great tree runs that resemble Canadian heliskiing, with well-spaced trees and steep slopes. Snow is usually excellent thanks to the northerly aspect. The trees mean Bruson is a good place to be when it’s snowing and a whiteout on Verbier’s main slopes.

At first glance, with its 410km of pistes, Verbier seems to rank alongside the French mega-networks as a dream resort for keen piste bashers. But the ski area is an inconveniently sprawling affair, with lots of tedious links and traversing before you get to the excellent intermediate slopes of Veysonnaz and Thyon 2000 at the far end. The intermediate pistes in Verbier’s main ski area are rather limited and can get very crowded. Better to head for the under-used Savoleyres area, where the slopes suit intermediates and are often delightfully quiet. Bruson also offers some good intermediate pistes.

Verbier is as famous for its après scene as it is for its slopes. There are lots of bars and clubs, from the British-dominated Pub Mont Fort to the sophisticated Crock No Name, or the seriously expensive Farm Club.

But…

Snow quality can be poor on sunny lower slopes; intermediates may want to take lifts down to avoid steep intineraries; eating and drinking can be costly; piste map and piste naming could be improved.

Whistler

 

whistlerblackcomb.com, tourismwhistler.com

Where is it? British Columbia, Canada

Why go? North America's biggest mountain, with terrain to suit all

Resort 675m

Slopes 650m to 2285m

Lifts 37

Pistes 8171 acres

Six-day lift pass from C$391

WTSS-whistler---pa_2717157a.jpg

Whistler and Blackcomb Mountains together form the biggest ski area, with the longest runs and greatest vertical, in North America. They're linked at resort level and at mid-mountain by the spectacular 28-person Peak 2 Peak gondola. Both mountains have lots of excellent terrain for every standard from beginner through to real expert. And most lifts are gondolas or high-speed chairlifts, with the first six-person chair being introduced this season.

Whistler gets an average of over 9m of snow a year, and in three of the last four years it has had over 12m. On the upper slopes, this usually falls as light, dry powder, which makes the place a dream for powder hounds. Experts will love the endless variation in the vast, go-anywhere terrain of Whistler Mountain’s top bowls with their couloirs, gullies and cliffs, as well as open bowls. Blackcomb’s steep slopes are not as extensive but equally satisfying. For intermediates, there is mile after mile of groomed cruising – plus in Whistler’s most recently opened area, Symphony, there are lovely gentle slopes among widely spaced trees.

The Whistler-Blackcomb ski school is one of the world’s best. It now limits adult group lessons to a maximum of four people, and runs special four-day camps that polish your skills while showing you around the mountains with the same instructor every day, a rare thing in North America. Extremely Canadian specialises in guiding around the resort’s steep and deep terrain, and offers two-day camps three times a week. Extremely Canadian also started backcountry guiding last season, and Whistler Heli-skiing organises great heli-days.

Whistler started as a locals’ ski area in 1966, with a lift up Whistler mountain from what is now the smartly revamped Creekside. Whistler Village proper, a 10-minute bus ride away, has been developed since the late 1970s and is now a huge car-free area of streets lined with shops, condos and restaurants. Spreading out from the foot of Whistler Mountain, it has gondolas to both Whistler and Blackcomb. There is yet more development spread around the base of Blackcomb Mountain, a 10-minute walk from central Whistler Village and with chairlifts up the mountain. The village centres are all traffic free.

The resort offers a wide range of accommodation, including top-end places such as the Fairmont Chateau Whistler, Westin Resort & Spa, Four Seasons and Pan Pacific Mountainside, as well as plenty of cheaper options. Similarly, there’s a wide range of places to eat and drink, although the restaurants get very busy, so it’s best to book well in advance or face long queues at those that don’t take bookings.

But…

Rain at village level is not unusual; lift queues and crowded runs can be a problem; mountain restaurants are mostly functional and overcrowded.

Snowbird/Alta

 

alta.com, snowbird.com

Where is it? Utah, USA

Why go? Fabulous steep and deep

Resort 2470m to 2600m

Slopes 2365m to 3350m

Lifts 24

Pistes 4700 acres

Six-day lift pass $630

WTSS-Snowbirs-fema_2717132a.jpg

There can be few places where nature has combined the steep with the deep better than at Snowbird and next-door Alta. The two resorts’ linked area is one of the top powder paradises in the world. Note that both resorts offer their own lift passes as well as a combined pass – and that Alta is one of the few resorts in the world that still does not allow snowboarding on its slopes. Although the two ski areas have been linked for well over 10 years now, a lot of locals remain fiercely loyal to one resort or the other and just buy a season pass for a single area – very odd to European eyes.

Both Snowbird and Alta receive an average of over 12m of snow a year – around 50 per cent more than the nearby Park City area and twice as much as some Colorado resorts.

There is every type of expert terrain in Snowbird/Alta, from open bowls to trees and couloirs. It’s worth hiring a guide, as many of the best and most adventurous runs are reached by traverses that are far from obvious if you don’t know the terrain. And, unlike most North American resorts, Alta doesn’t discriminate on its piste map between single and the more challenging double black diamond terrain – so you don’t know what you’re letting yourself in for. Snowbird does differentiate between double and single black diamond runs, and there are some seriously steep couloirs on its front face.

Both resorts have ski schools that run special sessions in the steep and deep terrain. Alta has Off-Trail Workshops every afternoon, which guide you round the whole mountain and show you the parts normally only discovered by locals. There are also four-day Powder Tracks clinics, run by the Alta Lodge chalet, which are aimed at teaching powder skiing and include accommodation. Snowbird runs half-day Mountain Workshops for skiers and snowboarders, which include powder skills, and occasional two-day Sidecountry Camps for skiers, described as “backcountry skiing without all the hard work”.

Snowbird is a compact place and most buildings are 1960s concrete. The Cliff Lodge is the best hotel, with a rooftop pool and spa that costs extra on top of the room rate. Alta is made up of more appealing low-rise lodges, including the atmospheric Alta Lodge, opened in 1940. Salt Lake City, 40km away, is worth considering as a base for its amenities and thriving arts scene.

But…

Limited groomed intermediate runs; tiny resort villages; very quiet at night.

Tignes

 

tignes.net

Where is it? Savoie, France

Why go? A long and snowsure season

Resort 1550m to 2100m

Espace Killy Slopes 1550m to 3455m

Lifts 79

Pistes 300km

Six-day lift pass €252.50

Tignes and neighbouring Val d’Isère share the vast Espace Killy ski area, which is one of the best in the world for lift-served off piste. Tignes in particular is one of the most snowsure resorts in the world. Its main season lasts from November till May, and the glacier opens again from mid-June till early August for summer skiing and boarding. The off-piste possibilities are almost endless. The British-run New Generation ski school offers all-day off-piste courses for between three and six experienced skiers.

But…

Resort centres have some ugly block-like buildings; treeless setting means lifts can close in bad weather.

Warth Schröcken

 

warth-schroecken.com

Where is it? Vorarlberg, Austria

Why go? The snowiest place in Europe

Resorts 1260m to 1495m

Slopes 1260m to 2050m

Lifts 47

Pistes 190km

Six-day lift pass €201

WTSS---WarthCuemme_2717190a.jpg

If you’ve never heard of Warth and Schröcken you will soon, because a new gondola for this season is linking these two neighbouring resorts to better-known and more fashionable Lech and Zurs over the hill. Warth gets an astonishing (for Europe) 11m of snow a year – almost as much as North America’s snowiest resorts. North-facing slopes mean lovely powdery pistes and acres of fabulous off-piste powder. Warth makes a more convenient base – it’s a drive or bus ride to the lifts from Schröcken, although there are slopes back down to the resort.

But…

It’s quiet – too quiet for many; little to do off-slopes.

Revelstoke

 

revelstokemountainresort.com

Where is it? British Columbia, Canada

Why go? Challenging resort acquiring cult status

Resort 510m

Slopes 510m to 2225m

Lifts 5

Pistes 3121 acres

Six-day lift pass C$455

Until six years ago Revelstoke was a small hill for locals served by one short lift. But a gondola and two fast chairs have transformed it into a resort with the biggest vertical in North America, and it gets huge amounts of powder. Terrain is mostly ungroomed and steep. The ski school runs Inside Tracks sessions where they show you around the steep and deep, and cat-skiing and heliskiing are also available. If you enjoy adventure, put it on your shortlist. You can stay in Revelstoke town, or the developing new resort village, part of which is now complete.

But…

Very remote; not much intermediate terrain.

Val d'Anniviers

 

sierre-anniviers.ch

Where is it? Valais, Switzerland

Why go? Rustic villages, uncrowded slopes Resorts 1340m to 2000m

Slopes 1340m to 3000m

Lifts 45

Pistes 220km

Six-day lift pass CHF280

If you like ancient, unspoilt mountain villages with small, varied ski areas attached, get to Val d’Anniviers before the big tour operators catch on. The slopes are limited but uncrowded, with a good snow record and fabulous off piste to explore. The resorts of Grimentz and Zinal have the best backcountry in the area, and the two are linked from 2013/14 by a new cable car. A long black run, Piste du Chamois, goes back to Grimentz from the top of the cable car and there are lots of off-piste options on the way. Guiding company Mountain Tracks runs five-day courses in the area.

But…

Very quiet resorts; lots of draglifts and slow chairs.

Fernie

 

skifernie.com

Where is it? British Columbia, Canada

Why go? Sheltered steeps, expert terrain

Resort 1065m

Slopes 1065m to 2135m

Lifts 10

Pistes 2504 acres

Six-day lift pass C$504

Fernie has long had cult status thanks to reliable snowfall (9m a year, on average) and steep, ungroomed terrain. It’s a superb resort for experts, as long as you know where you’re going – a lot of runs are difficult to find and involve long traverses. To get the most out of the terrain, it’s best to get a guided tour. The ski school runs two-day Steep and Deep Camps, and there’s great cat-skiing on offer. The resort village is convenient but small. Fernie town is an alternative base.

But…

Some slow lifts and lots of traversing; not much for less confident intermediates.

Monterosa

 

monterosa-ski.com/en

Where is it? Aosta Valley, Italy

Why go? Great off piste, unspoilt resorts

Resorts 1200m to 1640m

Slopes 1200m to 3275m

Lifts 23

Pistes 73km

Six-day lift pass €210

WTSS--Monterosa-Po_2717191a.jpg

Monterosa’s three resorts (Champoluc, Gressoney and Alagna, each in a different valley) retain a friendly, low-key Italian ambience and share a three-valley network of lifts and pistes which are often deserted mid-week. For adventurous experts and intermediates, powder is the main attraction. There are varied runs from the high points of the lift system in all three valleys, some excellent heli-drops and great tree slopes lower down. A huge area of fabulous off piste is served by a cable car from Passo Salati to Punta Indren, with runs down towards Gressoney and Alagna. Local guides have a deservedly high reputation.

But…

High winds can close links; limited après.

La Grave

 

lagrave-lameije.com

Where is it? Hautes Alps, France

Why go? Hardcore off-piste terrain

Resort 1450m

Slopes 1450m to 3550m

Lifts 4

Pistes 5km

Six-day lift pass €234

La Grave enjoys cult status among experts. It is a small, characterful old village with around 500 visitor beds and only one serious lift, an ancient gondola that takes you up to 3200m. This serves an almost entirely off-piste mountainside that is often coated in glorious powder. This is wild territory with glaciated terrain, narrow couloirs, cliffs, steep slopes and places where, if you fall, you may die. There are no pistes back down and only experts should contemplate a stay here. The Bureau des Guides runs daily off-piste groups.

But…

Poor weather means lift closure; nothing to do off the slopes.

Montgenènevre

 

montgenevre.com

Where is it? Haute Alps, France

Why go? Big ski area, linked to Italy

Resort 1850m

Milky Way Slopes 1390m to 2825m

Lifts 72

Pistes 400km

Six-day lift pass €231

Set on a pass close to the Italian border, Montgenèvre has a very good snow record and receives big dumps of snow from westerly storms which are funnelled up the valley. It’s not renowned as a resort for powder hounds and is all the better for it, because the off piste here remains untracked long after a storm. As well as great terrain to be explored with a guide, there’s an avalanche-controlled freeride zone of ungroomed slopes. The resort is at one end of the huge Milky Way ski area on the French-Italian border.

But…

Lots of slow lifts and mainly short runs locally; Italian Milky Way resorts are time-consuming to reach.

Niseko

 

nisekotourism.com

Where is it? Hokkaido, Japan

Why go? Light powder, fantastic food and friendly people

Resort 280m

Slopes 235m to 1210m

Lifts 30

Pistes 48km

Six-day lift pass ¥31,500 (£199.50)

Niseko is the biggest resort on Japan’s north island, Hokkaido. It’s one of the snowiest resorts in the world, receiving an average of 15m of usually dry, light powder every year. Storm after storm comes in from Siberia and dumps day after day – it’s not unusual for snow to fall almost constantly from early December until the end of February. Niseko is one of the few resorts in Japan to allow off-piste access within the ski area, and there are also gates to allow you out into the backcountry.

But…

A long journey including a change of planes; small ski area by Alpine standards.

Big White

 

bigwhite.com

Where is it? British Columbia, Canada

Why go? Easy powder slopes, great for families

Resort 1755m

Slopes 1510m to 2320m

Lifts 16

Pistes 2765 acres

Six-day lift pass C$424

WTSS-Big-White-Ski_2717193a.jpg

“It’s the snow.” That’s Big White’s slogan, and snow is what you can expect here. Even when the surrounding plains are sunny, Big White is often covered by snow clouds. These snowfalls, combined with the resort’s mostly gentle slopes, make it ideal for learning powder. The village is purpose built, with most accommodation ski-in/ski-out and an excellent Kids’ Centre. There’s also a lovely area below the main village known as Happy Valley, where you can try winter activities from snowmobiling to dog sledding. All this makes Big White ideal for families.

But…

Visibility can be poor; limited après.

 

Πηγη - telegraph.co.uk

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"...the monarch of mountains: they crowned him long time ago οn a throne of rocks, in a robe of clouds, with a diadem of snow''

(Lord Byron about Mont Blanc)

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Χεχεχεχε. Μόλις κανόνισα ταξίδι σε 5-6 από δαύτα :shuriken:

 

Δώστε πούδρα στο λαό :animier:

  • Like 4

Ευθεία μη φοβάσαι βρε

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Hokkaido !!!!

 

Θα έπρεπε να είναι μόνο του σε μια δική του λίστα.

 

Το σκι εκεί μάλλον είναι ένα τελείως διαφορετικό

πράγμα από αυτό που ξέρουμε.

 

7ψυχος

  • Like 1

Όλα τα βουνά είναι καλά. Όλοι οι skier είναι καλοί. Μόνο μερικοί άτυχοι στη ζωή άνθρωποι υπάρχουν.

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εχει την καλυτερη πουδρα στον κοσμο το Hokkaido - μονο 7% υγρασια...κατι σαν το αλευρι δηλαδη


"...the monarch of mountains: they crowned him long time ago οn a throne of rocks, in a robe of clouds, with a diadem of snow''

(Lord Byron about Mont Blanc)

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Στρατηγικό Σχέδιο:

Φάση 1η: Δημιουργούμε τις προϋποθέσεις να γίνει (αν δεν είναι ήδη) ο MIL powder-maniac.

Φάση 2η: Βάζουμε για 1-2 σεζόν video από το Hokkaido σαν αυτό του Θάνου και σιγουρευόμαστε ότι τα βλέπει ο MIL.

Φάση 3η: Ψηφίζεται ο MIL υπεύθυνος της ομάδας εκδρομών-εκδηλώσεων

 

ΣΤΟΧΟΣ: Εκδρομή του Συλλόγου στο Hokkaido με κόστος γύρω στο 1000άρικο.

  • Like 3

Όλα τα βουνά είναι καλά. Όλοι οι skier είναι καλοί. Μόνο μερικοί άτυχοι στη ζωή άνθρωποι υπάρχουν.

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Μου εχει ξεφυγει το Hokaido και τα Καναδεζικα ....

 

Ενταξει ακομη παιδι ειμαι , εχω χρονο :thumbup:

 

Επισης και το Grimentz - Zinal τα ζαχαρωνω εδω και χρονια. Αν βρεθει η ευκαιρια ειναι στη λιστα μου ..

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εχει την καλυτερη πουδρα στον κοσμο το Hokkaido - μονο 7% υγρασια...κατι σαν το αλευρι δηλαδη

 

πφφ σιγα μωρε σα τις ανορεξικες μοντελες θα ειναι. Αν δεν εχει η πουδρα τα πιασιματα της δεν το ευχαριστιεσαι.

Σα το Παρνασσου δεν εχει :hehe:

  • Like 3

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ΣΤΟΧΟΣ: Εκδρομή του Συλλόγου στο Hokkaido με κόστος γύρω στο 1000άρικο.

 

Εσένα θα σου φέρω και ρέστα!


53439599_2068663559920176_2642105202932449280_o.jpg?_nc_cat=108&_nc_ht=scontent.fath7-1.fna&oh=949ee377df86ea39cb0241879a9b002b&oe=5D132E68

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Επισης και το Grimentz - Zinal τα ζαχαρωνω εδω και χρονια. Αν βρεθει η ευκαιρια ειναι στη λιστα μου ..

Φοβερό μέρος με απέραντο, για το μεγεθός του, πεδίο εκτός. Νομίζω ότι από φέτος Zinal-Grimentz συνδέονται με γόνδολα που ξεκινάει μέσα από το χωριό Grimentz που καταλήγει στο χιονοδρομικό πάνω από το Zinal. Οι διαδρομές από κορυφή ZInal πίσω στο Grimentz είναι ο λόγος που το μέρος αυτό πραγματικά αξίζει.

Μου έχουν μεταφέρει τα εξής:

BIG + : ελάχιστος κόσμος ακόμα και μετά από χιονόπτωση

BIG - : Βρίσκεται στην Ελβετία και τα χωριά έχουν από 3άστερα (και πάνω) καταλύματα.

 

Φιλικά

 


Όλα τα βουνά είναι καλά. Όλοι οι skier είναι καλοί. Μόνο μερικοί άτυχοι στη ζωή άνθρωποι υπάρχουν.

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οντως....πετυχαμε μια μερα σε ενα μαγαζι με αθλητικα ενα stand απο το St. Moritz....μας ειπανε οτι αν κλεισεις απο 2 βραδια και πανω, η καρτα λιφτ για οσες μερες θα εισαι παει στα 20 Ευρω ανα ατομο !!!

Το θεμα ειναι οτι στον καταλαγο που μου δωσανε με τα συνεργαζομενα ξενοδοχεια κλπ το φθηνοτερο ητανε καπου 80 ευρω το ατομο για δωματιο με πρωινο....ενταξει ισως οχι ακριβο για το μερος αυτο αλλα...


Snow is on my D.N.A.

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αν ειδατε το into the mind φαινεται καθαρα η διαφορα στην ποιότητα της πουδρας – σχεδον ολο είναι γυρισμενο στην BC με ένα γυρισμα στο Zermatt. είναι τοσο καλη η εικονα που βλεπεις κατευθείαν την διαφορα. τελικα η καλυτερη μερα με πουδρα στην Ευρωπη δεν φτανει την χειρότερη στον Καναδα η στην Ιαπωνίας

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"...the monarch of mountains: they crowned him long time ago οn a throne of rocks, in a robe of clouds, with a diadem of snow''

(Lord Byron about Mont Blanc)

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BIG - : Βρίσκεται στην Ελβετία και τα χωριά έχουν από 3άστερα (και πάνω) καταλύματα

 

Διακοπες σκι πάντα σε ενοικιαζόμενο διαμέρισμα. Πολυ φθηνότερο και πολύ πιο χαλαρό .

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καλα στην ελβετια δεν ξερω...εκει υπαρχει αλλος θεος


Snow is on my D.N.A.

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αν ειδατε το into the mind φαινεται καθαρα η διαφορα στην ποιότητα της πουδρας – σχεδον ολο είναι γυρισμενο στην BC με ένα γυρισμα στο Zermatt. είναι τοσο καλη η εικονα που βλεπεις κατευθείαν την διαφορα. τελικα η καλυτερη μερα με πουδρα στην Ευρωπη δεν φτανει την χειρότερη στον Καναδα η στην Ιαπωνίας

 

έχουν ωκεανό δίπλα ;)

οχι θαλασσα ;)

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