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Ultimate Skiing Adventures takes you on a skiing voyage around the planet's biggest, best and most unusual ski destinations – from the huge mega-resorts of the French Alps to sailing along Iceland's north coast in search of great snow, there are exciting adventures that will appeal to everyone from novice to expert. The inspirational descriptions of 100 locations combine Alf Alderson's personal experience with the input of experts in all aspects of skiing and mountain sports and are accompanied by stunning full-page photography from some of the world's foremost ski photographers. Published in a year of great uncertainty for ski travel, this book allows you to escape onto the slopes in your own home. Perfect for indulging in some armchair skiing of slopes that only the most adventurous will tackle and for planning your next ski trip. And it's not just about skiing – the contents cover avalanche rescue techniques, snow science, road trips, the work of ski patrollers and resorts so remote and obscure that you may never have heard of them. The book is divided into sections on Western Europe, Eastern Europe, North America, Scandinavia and the Rest of the World. Discover where you will ski next – in reality or in your imagination.
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2020
‘Skiing’ has never been as diverse as it is today – the term covers pootling down easy, manicured pistes in ski resorts, the wild freedom of backcountry freeriding, the rewarding if hard work of schlepping uphill on touring skis, cat- and heli-skiing for the fat of wallet and even, in a roundabout way, snowboarding.
Which means that one skier’s ‘amazing ski experience’ may not be another’s; if you’re just getting into this marvellous sport then your first blue run (see, for example, Les Arcs, page 34) will probably and quite rightly be an amazing experience, whereas if you’ve been at it for decades it may require a helicopter drop on some remote Kamchatkan volcano (see page 182) for you to describe your ski experience as ‘amazing’.
What you’ll find amongst these pages are ski experiences to suit just about everyone who enjoys clipping into a pair of bindings. I’ve been fortunate enough to visit the majority of the destinations featured here whilst working as a ski journalist for the last couple of decades, and I’ve tried to include a good global spread, although obviously the well-established ski resorts of the European Alps and North American Rockies get the bulk of the coverage; and I have to admit to a tiny amount of favouritism – those regions where I’ve skied most, such as France and British Columbia, probably get more than their fair share of coverage, but then again, they both have world-class ski resorts by the bucketful.
That said, the book also features plenty of ski experiences in lesser-known mountain ranges, from the un-named peaks of Iceland’s north coast to the spectacular volcanoes of Kamchatka.
Hopefully a few of them will inspire you to dust down your skis and hit the slopes, because when all is said and done, reading about skiing is one thing, but doing it – well, that’s amazing.
Alf Alderson
Les Arcs, French Alps
Autumn 2020
The author skiing at Les Arcs
Western Europe
Soldeu, Andorra
St Anton, Austria
Lech-Zürs Am Arlberg, Austria
Kitzbühel, Austria
Saalbach-Hinterglemm, Austria
Ischgl, Austria
Mayrhofen, Austria
Schladming, Austria
Sölden, Austria
Stubai Valley, Austria
Obergurgl, Austria
Chamonix, France
Les Trois Vallées, France
Val d’Isère, France
Les Arcs / La Plagne (Paradiski), France
La Rosiére, France
Les Sybelles, France
Bonneval-Sur-Arc, France
La Grave, France
The Haute Route, French - Swiss Alps
Les Deux Alpes, France
Les Carroz, France
La Mongie, French Pyrenees
St Lary-Soulan, French Pyrenees
Monterosa Ski, Italy
Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy
Courmayeur, Italy
Livigno, Italy
Madonna di Campiglio, Italy
Cervinia, Italy
Sella Ronda, Italy
Baqueira-Beret, Spanish Pyrenees
Sierra Nevada, Spain
Andermatt, Switzerland
Davos-Klosters, Switzerland
Verbier, Switzerland
Mürren, Switzerland
Grindelwald, Switzerland
Zermatt, Switzerland
Saas-Fee, Switzerland
Champéry, Switzerland
Scuol, Switzerland
Disentis, Switzerland
Arosa Lenzerheide, Switzerland
The Susten Derby, Bernese Oberland
St Moritz, Switzerland
Val d’Anniviers, Switzerland
Nevis Range, Scotland
Eastern Europe
Bansko, Bulgaria
Gudauri, Georgia
Tetnuldi, Georgia
Mount Parnassos, Greece
North Macedonia
Poiana Brasov, Romania
Jasná, Slovakia
Kanin and Co, Slovenia
Palandöken, Turkey
Scandinavia
Ylläs, Finland
Í Fjörðum, Iceland
Voss, Norway
Senja Island, Norway
Riksgransen, Sweden
Åre, Sweden
North America
Alyeska, Alaska, USA
Mount Bachelor, Oregon, USA
McCall, Idaho, USA
Big Sky, Montana, USA
Grand Targhee, Wyoming, USA
Utah Interconnect, Utah, USA
Powder Mountain, Utah, USA
Breckenridge, Colorado, USA
Crested Butte, Colorado, USA
Silverton, Colorado, USA
On The Road, USA
Telluride, Colorado, USA
Schweitzer Mountain, Idaho, USA
Whitefish Mountain, Montana, USA
Castle Mountain, Alberta, Canada
Clyde River, Baffin Island, Canada
Fernie, British Columbia, Canada
Selkirk Snowcat, British Columbia, Canada
Red Mountain, British Columbia, Canada
Revelstoke, British Columbia, Canada
Kicking Horse, British Columbia, Canada
Lake Louise, Alberta, Canada
Whitewater, British Columbia, Canada
Last Frontier Heliskiing, Bell 2 Lodge, British Columbia, Canada
Panorama, British Columbia, Canada
Rest Of The World
Kamchatka, Russia
Cerro Castor, Argentina
Portillo, Chile
Valle Nevado, Chile
Greenland
Manali, Himachal Pradesh, India
Honshu Island, Japan
Hokkaido, Japan
Dizin, Alborz Mountains, Iran
Craigieburn, Southern Alps, New Zealand
Lake Baikal, Siberia
Olympus Mons, Mars
PHOTO CREDITS
WESTERN EUROPE
Access
Nearest airport:
Toulouse Innsbruck (175km)
Train station in L’Hospitalet-Près-L’Andorre (20km)
Ability Level
Beginner – expert
Season
Nov/Dec – Apr
Other Local Activities
Heli-skiing, snowshoeing, cross-country skiing, snowmobiling, dogsledding
Resort Stats
Top: 2,560m
Bottom: 1,710m
Vertical: 850m
Lifts: 64
Pistes: 210km
www.grandvalira.com
No sign of the Sun God today © Daniele Molineris
Skiing with the Sun God
The wisdom of calling a ski resort ‘Sun God’ is questionable (surely ‘Snow God’ would work far better in promotional terms?) but despite the name, Soldeu actually has pretty reliable snow, which along with generally north-facing slopes, good grooming and extensive snowmaking means the sun for which the resort is also renowned isn’t necessarily going to put a dampener on the skiing.
And said skiing is pretty good, particularly since the Grandvalira ski pass that’s required to ski here covers the entire 210km network of slopes that make up Soldeu and neighbouring linked resorts such as Pas de la Casa and El Tarter, along with access to Ordino-Arcalis at no additional cost (but you need transport to get there), and you may even score discounts if you book in advance online.
Soldeu is best-known for its novice and early intermediate terrain, with lots of fun blue and red pistes spread across the entire ski area, whilst the ski school – which is made up primarily of native English-speaking instructors – is renowned throughout the ski world for the quality of its teaching, and not just for beginners but for any level of ability. Freeride and freestyle lessons are also available for more advanced skiers, and there are three terrain parks, with a ‘park only’ pass available and one of them, Snowpark Xavi, is dedicated specifically to beginners and intermediates.
Whilst the resort (and Andorra in general) has long been a favourite with intermediate and beginner skiers looking for a fun week on the slopes, this can prove to be of benefit to those skiers in search of something a little more challenging, since it means that the off-piste terrain gets tracked out far less quickly than in those ski areas which are renowned for their freeriding. There’s even a snowcat tow to the lift-free bowl between Riba Escorxada and El Forn, whilst these two areas also have ski itineraries that are marked on the piste map; in recent years Soldeu has featured on the Freeride World Tour, which says much about the quality of the off-piste terrain.
Of course, it’s not all perfect – no one would describe Soldeu as a particularly attractive settlement, spread out as it is in a ribbon development along a busy road, and the mountain scenery is pleasant enough but not as dramatic as many other ski areas, but as they say in Yorkshire, “You don’t look at the mantelpiece when you’re poking the fire” – and if you’re just here to ski, whether to improve your technique or check out some of the underrated off-piste terrain, the Sun God may well provide you with what you’re after.
WESTERN EUROPE
Access
Nearest airports:
Innsbruck (95km), Friedrichshafen (130km)
Train station in resort
Ability Level
Beginner – expert
Season
Nov/Dec – Apr
Other Local Activities
Snowshoeing, cross-country skiing, tobogganing, outdoor pool, ice skating, sleigh rides, hiking
Resort Stats
Top: 2,650m
Bottom: 1,305m
Vertical: 1,345m
Lifts: 38
Pistes: 160km
(includes itineraires)
www.stantonamarlberg.com
Modern-day take on the ‘Arlberg technique’ © Hermann-Meier.de / Tourist Association St Anton am Arlberg
Burning the candle at both ends
If you ski – which presumably you do since you’re reading this book – it’s highly likely that you owe a debt of gratitude to St Anton, even if you’ve never been there. For it is here in the resort that calls itself the ‘Cradle of Alpine Skiing’ that the ‘Arlberg technique’ of ski teaching was developed by local instructor Hannes Schneider in the 1920s, and whilst it has obviously been updated and largely superseded over the intervening hundred years, elements of it still feature in some ski lessons, and the older you are the more likely it is you’ll have learnt to ski using some derivative of the Arlberg technique.
And good technique is a useful thing to have if you take on some of the more serious slopes of this quintessential Austrian ski resort. St Anton is one of the world’s prime destinations for experienced skiers looking for deep snow, steep slopes and challenging off-piste terrain.
Famed backcountry runs include the North Face, accessed from the Gampberg chair, the spectacular tree-skiing of the Langen Forest and the vertiginous Valhalla Couloir, which is accessed by rope and offers 1,200 metres of thrilling ‘vert’.
Not all the fun is away from the lifts by any means, however. St Anton has some tremendous bump fields if that’s your kind of thing, and because of its size, there is a huge selection of red and blue runs that will appeal to strong intermediate skiers (be warned, however, that many of these reds and blues are steeper than they would be in most other resorts).
The St Anton ski pass also covers Lech, Zürs (see page 10) and the Sonnenkopf area above nearby Klösterle, so there’s more skiing here than you can go at in a season, let alone a week or two.
Like many of the world’s classic ski resorts St Anton isn’t just about skiing. The attractive, bustling ski town is famed for its nightlife, with many visitors coming here to party just as hard as they ski – from the infamous Moosewirt and its oompah-based action to the raucous Krazy Kanguruh and Underground on the Piste on the resort’s lower slopes and the likes of ‘Bar Cuba’ in town, where the action will continue until long after midnight, this is a ski resort where burning the candle at both ends is a way of life for many.
WESTERN EUROPE
Access
Nearest airports:
Innsbruck (115km), Friedrichshafen (130km)
Ability Level
Beginner – expert
Season
Nov/Dec – Apr
Other Local Activities
Snowshoeing, cross-country skiing, tobogganing, paragliding, ice skating, sleigh rides, hiking
Resort Stats
Top: 2,450m
Bottom: 1,450m
Vertical: 1,000m
Lifts: 47
Pistes: 180km (includes ‘ski routes’)
www.lechzuers.com
Last blast of the day © Sepp Mallaun / Lech Zurs Tourismus
Something for everyone – and plenty of it
Lech and Zürs occasionally have a problem that most other ski resorts would welcome, and most skiers would consider not to be a problem at all – the snowfall here can be so heavy at times that both of the villages can be cut off from the outside world.
Lech averages 8 metres of snowfall per winter, Zürs even more, and the linked resort of Warth boasts a massive 11 metres. Of course such heavy snowfall may put many of the slopes out of bounds for some time due to avalanche danger – the more so since most of the slopes are above the treeline – but the chances are that there will still be some decent skiing to be had somewhere even when it’s dumping, and when the weather and snow conditions settle down you’ll find masses more skiing to go at (it’s also worth noting that the Lech-Zürs ski pass also allows you to ski in St Anton (page 8) although you have to get there on the free ski bus or the paid-for post bus).
Lech-Zürs is a ski area that is big enough and varied enough to appeal to all levels of skier. Warth, which was only linked in to the ski area a few years ago, has predominantly north-facing slopes which can hold excellent powder.
Zürs is one of the most historic ski areas in Austria, with the country’s first ‘proper’ ski lift being built here in 1937, and Lech gets lots of sunshine (not always a good thing, of course).
For more advanced skiers the mix of off-piste terrain such as that from the top of the Steinmähder chair is excellent, and there are several exciting ‘ski routes’, which are essentially marked, avalanche controlled routes which are neither groomed nor patrolled.
Lech-Zürs is also the only place in Austria to offer heli-skiing – experienced skiers are dropped on the summit of Mehlsack for their powder experience whilst first-timers can give it a go on the Schneetäli-Orgelscharte where conditions are less challenging.
And any visiting skier of intermediate level and above will almost certainly want to take on the famed ‘White Ring’, a ski circuit of 5,500 vertical metres and 22km that harks back to the origins of the ski area in the 1930s and 40s. If you’re not too bothered about trying to beat records for completing the circuit it’s well worth taking time out to enjoy a picnic at one of the two viewing platforms at Rüfikopf and Madloch – the panoramas are sensational.
Fast, modern lifts – several with heated seats – allow you to access the terrain quickly and easily, and whether you want to blast the pow, cruise the reds, practise technique on the blues or simply learn on the nursery slopes there’s plenty of everything for everyone here in what is one of Austria’s most historic ski regions.
WESTERN EUROPE
Access
Nearest airports:
Salzburg (75km), Innsbruck (95km)
Mainline railway station in resort
Ability Level
Beginner – expert
Season
Dec – Apr
Other Local Activities
Snowshoeing, cross-country skiing, tobogganing, paragliding, ice skating, hiking
Resort Stats
Top: 2,000m
Bottom: 760m
Vertical: 1,240m
Lifts: 57
Pistes: 230km
(includes ‘ski routes’)
www.kitzbuehel.com
Cold air inversion at dawn in Kitzbuhel © lightsandsquares / shutterstock.com
The tolling of the bell
Skiing is Austria’s national sport, and perhaps nowhere is this more apparent than every January when the infamous Hahnenkamm Downhill ski race comes to Kitzbühel. It seems like every ski racing fan in the country – as well as a good number from further afield – have descended on this beautiful old medieval town to bang away at cow bells as they watch the fastest men and women in the world hurl themselves down the hideously steep ‘Streif’ at speeds well in excess of 100kph.
The Hahnenkamm (German: ‘rooster’s comb’) is actually the name of a mountain above Kitzbühel, which hosts Super-G, Downhill and Slalom races over a long weekend in mid- to late-January, with the ‘Streif’ (‘streak’ or ‘stripe’) being the route of the downhill race, generally regarded as the most demanding on the World Cup circuit.
The course features highly technical, ‘fall-away’ turns and is often plagued with bad light, snow or rain and limited visibility – so much so that in the last twenty years around half of the races have had to be shortened or even cancelled due to weather conditions, and at the time of writing the course record dates back as far as 1997 (Austrian Fritz Strobl in 1:51:58).
You’ll be pleased to know you can actually tackle the 3.3km Streif (which featured in the vintage 1969 ski movie Downhill Racer) yourself when the races are over – if you decide to do so expect to encounter slopes as steep as 85 percent, with an average gradient of 27 percent.
If, on the other hand, you’d prefer not to compare yourself with the world’s best ski racers (something that rarely works in your favour…), Kitzbühel offers plenty of alternatives. Over 80 percent of the ski area’s 230km of slopes are graded red or blue, making it a perfect destination for intermediate skiers, whilst more advanced skiers will find plenty of challenging terrain – for instance, check out the steep Direttissima and the long ‘ski routes’ from the top of 1,935-metre Pengelstein towards Jochberg and Hechenmoos over a thousand metres below. There are also some very acceptable off-piste options.
Add to all this a great system of fast lifts (with a glass floor in one of the ‘3S’ gondolas which connect Wurzhöhe and Pengelstein, the two main ski areas), a banging nightlife even if you’re not here for the Hahnenkamm weekend and bucket-loads of Austrian alpine charm and it’s easy to see why Kitzbühel has become synonymous with skiing.
WESTERN EUROPE
Access
Nearest airports:
Salzburg (85km), Innsbruck (150km)
Ability Level
Beginner – expert
Season
Nov/Dec – Apr
Other Local Activities
Snowshoeing, cross-country skiing, tobogganing, hiking
Resort Stats
Top: 2,095m
Bottom: 830m
Vertical: 1,265m
Lifts: 70
Pistes: 270km
www.saalbach.com
The coolest ski resort in the Alps? © YuriKo / shutterstock.com
Laying down a challenge
No one could say that the ski area of Saalbach-Hinterglemm doesn’t like to lay down a challenge. Marketing yourself as ‘the coolest ski resort of the Alps’, describing your area as a ‘ski circus’ and offering the biggest ski area in Austria along with the biggest ski circuit in the Alps are not the actions of a shy and retiring ski resort.
And whilst it’s probably best left for others to judge just how ‘cool’ the place is since proclaiming yourself as such isn’t really all that cool at all, the other claims made by the area’s marketing bods are pretty indisputable; and that’s without even mentioning that around 95 percent of Saalbach-Hinterglemm’s ski lifts are ‘fast’ chairs and gondolas – the highest proportion of any major ski area in the world.
It’s largely thanks to this latter fact that you can whizz around the resorts with ease – if you’re the kind of skier who loves getting in the mileage you’ll be in ski heaven and may even decide to take on the challenge of the area’s ‘ski circuit’.
This involves 65km of pistes, 32 ski lifts, 12,400 metres of vertical and, according to the resort’s website, should be do-able in around seven hours by ‘ambitious skiers’. The piste map has the route marked on it, which can be started at any ski lift along the way.
Skiers who complete the circuit can log their route and times online, with some fancy prizes (ski holidays, for example – in Saalbach-Hinterglemm, of course) for the fastest and there are badges and small prizes for everyone who successfully completes the route.
The downside to all this hooning around at maximum velocity is that you don’t really get to see the attractive, broad shouldered, forested mountains that make up the ski area in great detail – but you can save that for another day.
Those forests can come in handy on bad weather days, of course, whilst another feature that more chilled out skiers will enjoy is the region’s plethora of rustic mountain huts – all marked on the piste map – where you can stop for coffee or lunch. Excellent, friendly service is a feature of pretty much all of them, and stand-outs include the Ellmaualm for its great views and the two huts above Leogang – the Alte Schmeide which has live music and the AsitzBräu, which for good measure is also Europe’s highest brewing museum.
Back down in the valley at day’s end, don’t expect to sit back and relax – another boast of Saalbach-Hinterglemm is that it has the best après-ski in the Alps, and there’s no doubt that the place goes mad once everyone has unclipped from their bindings for the day. Spots such as the Hinterhag Alm in Saalbach and the Goasstall in Hinterglemm are classic Austrian après-ski venues where the music is loud, the beer flows freely and the table tops are the place to dance – in your ski boots of course.
WESTERN EUROPE
Access
Nearest airport:
Innsbruck (100km)
Ability Level
Beginner – expert
Season
Nov – May
Other Local Activities
Snowshoeing, cross-country skiing, tobogganing, ice skating, hiking
Resort Stats
Top: 2,870m
Bottom: 1,377m
Vertical: 1,497m
Lifts: 45
Pistes: 253km
(includes ‘ski routes’)
www.ischgl.com
Getting high in Ischgl Snowpark © Paznaun – Ischgl Snowpark
Time to party
Many resorts tout themselves as party capital of the Alps, and it has to be said that Ischgl has a big claim to be top of that list. However, this presents a serious problem for any visitor – the après-ski is so vibrant that it’s virtually impossible to avoid overdoing it in the bars and clubs every night. Combine that with a week of skiing and it takes some stamina to make the most of all that’s on offer.
For full-on party animals the opening and closing weekends of the season are the time to visit, when Ischgl throws on free concerts which have in the past included the likes of Lenny Kravitz, The Killers, Sir Elton John, Robbie Williams, Tina Turner, etc., etc.
The opening party is in the town and the closing event upon the slopes, and when a top-rated band ain’t belting it out for free Ischgl can offer the likes of the manic, booming Trofana Alm, the Hotel Elisabeth with its dirndl-clad dancing girls grinding it out atop the tables and the legendary Nikis’s Stadl to “… entertain you” as Mr Williams might croon…
There are few better ways to shift any hangover you may inadvertently contract than swooshing down Ischgl’s wide, user-friendly pistes the morning after the night before – and you can even organise your late afternoon skiing around a little ‘light entertainment’ should you be in need of a bit of hair of the dog.
As the day draws down take a drink at the Pardorama restaurant high on the mountain above Ischgl town – it’s the best place to watch the sun going down. Then take the Number 4 black run home – it’s not a tricky black, just pleasantly steepish and sweeping, with fabulous views. And it will be virtually deserted for you at that time of day. Magic.
The Paznauner Thaya restaurant on the opposite side of the ski area is also a great spot on a sunny afternoon – but not for peacefully watching the sun set, more for raucous on-the-slopes après-ski with a rocking open-air disco. The atmosphere is great – but if you’ve had a drink or two, it’s maybe sensible just to take the easy run down to the Silvrettabahn middle station and then hop aboard the gondola back to the village.
Or, if you’re up for a more adrenaline-fuelled end to the day rather than one that’s alcohol-fuelled, try to time things so you take a ride to the summit of 2,872-metre Greitspitze, Ischgl’s highest point, on the Lange Wandbahn lift just before it closes, then take run Number 13 home. Going down via Idalp you have a fabulous 11-kilometre descent, and by taking the last lift up you’ll avoid the worst of the crowds and enjoy the sun setting across the mountains with just your mates in tow.
Then you can pop into the Trofana Alms for a quick one – just the one mind, there’s skiing to be done tomorrow. Yeah, yeah…
WESTERN EUROPE
Access
Nearest airports:
Innsbruck (70km), Salzburg (170km), Munich (195km)
Ability Level
Beginner – expert
Season
Dec – Apr
Other Local Activities
Snowshoeing, cross-country skiing, paragliding, hiking
Resort Stats
Top: 2,500m
Bottom: 630m
Vertical: 1,870m
Lifts: 58
Pistes: 142km
www.mayrhofen.at
You want steep, you’ve got it at Mayrhofen’s legendary Harakiri © mayrhofen.at
Are you ready for Austria’s steepest piste?
So, do you possess ‘Physical fitness and perfect body control; skiing skills that are above average; excellent, sophisticated skiing technique’? If so, you may be ready to tackle Mayrhofen’s infamous ‘Harakiri’ according to the resort website.
Touted as the steepest pisted run in Austria, the Harakiri is said to have an average gradient of 78 percent (38 degrees), so depending on the level of your ‘sophisticated skiing technique’ it will be either challenging or exciting, and possibly both.
Also known somewhat more prosaically as ‘Piste 34’, the run opened in the 2003-04 season and is, understandably, a draw for most competent skiers visiting Mayrhofen. The entire run is some 2km in length with the steepest section being around 400 metres long and conveniently located within view of the Knorren Chairlift for the amusement of those passing overhead.
The Harakiri is made more difficult by the fact that it’s often very icy – this is not necessarily due to poor snow cover (in fact Mayrhofen is relatively snow-sure) but because grooming the slope is difficult due to its gradient, with any artificial snow that’s added tending to simply slide down the slope (as a matter of passing interest grooming is only possible with a winch and a special snow groomer that has a 430-horsepower engine, a weight of nine tons, and a pulling force of four tons).
If the idea of skiing the Harakiri fills you with trepidation, you could try hitting Piste 12, aka the ‘Devil’s Run’. It isn’t as steep as the Harakiri, but the most vertiginous section, at the end of the run, is known as the ‘Harakiri Test’, with locals reckoning that if you can handle this, you’re ready to take on its big brother.
Of course, there’s a lot more to Mayrhofen than the Harakiri. The town itself is attractive and has a pleasant bustle about it, whilst the rest of the slopes offer some great piste skiing for stronger intermediates (steepness seems to be a theme of much of the skiing here), and plenty of decent off-piste for those looking for more of a challenge, whilst free buses and trains link several neighbouring resorts as well as allowing access to the nearby Hintertux Glacier.
This has year-round snow cover, of course, as well as extensive and interesting skiing for everyone from expert to relative novice, and as such it’s well worth taking a day away from Mayrhofen to explore what is some of Europe’s finest glacier skiing.
WESTERN EUROPE
Access
Nearest airports:
Salzburg (90km), Munich (260km)
Mainline station in resort
Ability Level
Beginner – expert
Season
Nov/Dec – Apr
Other Local Activities
Snowshoeing, crosscountry skiing, fat biking, ice skating, paragliding, hiking, sleigh rides, ski yoga
Resort Stats
Top: 2,015m
Bottom: 745m
Vertical: 1,270m
Lifts: 44
Pistes: 123km
www.schladming-dachstein.at
Schladming all lit up for the night races © Tomasz Koryl /shutterstock.com
All things in moderation – almost
Whilst many ski areas promote the ‘extreme’ nature of their terrain in a bid to attract visitors, Schladming has a more practical and, you might argue, a more sensible approach; it doesn’t bang on about how you can risk life and limb taking on its challenging slopes, it simply offers an excellent array of mainly intermediate terrain that will appeal to – well, intermediate skiers, which let’s face it are the majority (this doesn’t mean you should shy away if you regard yourself above this standard though – read on).
The welcoming town of Schladming lies beneath Planai, one of four linked mountains that provide keen intermediate skiers with a real sense of covering the ground as they flit from one peak to the other. If you manage to ski all four in four days or less, you’ll be entitled to a small ‘prize’ from the tourist information office at the foot of Planai.
The scenery is never less than delightful as you zoom around, with all four mountains (Hauser Kaibling, Planai, Hochwurzen and Reiteralm) having forests almost all the way to their summits; the pistes run between them, of course, and because most are north-facing they tend to hold the snow well and remain skiable in bad weather. From the various summits you can enjoy lovely views down the Ennstal valley and of the spectacular Dachstein mountains.
The town itself also has a strong connection with ski racing, hosting the spectacular Schladming Night Race every winter as well as having been the venue for the 2013 World Championships, and skiers looking to emulate their heroes can clock their speed for free on the GUL speed run on Reiteralm.
But if you want to experience the real thing, make sure you’re here for the annual World Cup Night Race in January, when a crowd of around 50,000 fans line the slalom course on Planai as the best skiers in the world hurtle between the gates.
The atmosphere is a cross between the FA Cup Final and Ben Hur; crowds roar, cowbells dong, national flags flutter, flares flare and the whole mad shebang is lit up by floodlights which glare off the snow more brightly than the sun; British competitor Dave Ryding has described approaching the start gate as “… like walking out at Anfield” (he is a Liverpool fan, mind).
Most of us will never see the slopes at Schladming from the same perspective as the likes of Ryding or Austria’s own local ski hero Marcel Hirscher, of course, but we can always hit the GUL speed run and scare ourselves at high speed – or simply dream of ski superstardom as we cruise around Schladming’s welcoming pistes.
