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.............have an unforgetable skiing or snowboarding vacation in Europe

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Do You Dream of a French Ski Vacation?

Ever dreamed of skiing the famous resorts of Europe? From Wengen, St. Moritz and Verbier in Switzerland, Courchevel, Val d'Isère and Chamonix in France through to the traditional resorts of Austria such as St. Anton and Innsbruck, a ski vacation in Europe can be cheaper than you think!

Find out more about your dream resort here in our resort profile section.

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Compare the costs:

Check out resorts like these....

Look at a ski vacation closely. A number of key elements determine the cost: transportation (usually air plus a ground transfer), accommodation, meals, lift ticket, local taxes and tips, and, for many skiers, equipment rental and ski instruction.

Learn the bottom line

All these together, plus some discretionary spending for drinks, a little souvenir shopping and some postcards, make up the bottom-line price.

The "lead" price can mislead

As most skiers buy their vacations in packaged form, the lead price of the package tends to influence perception: "Aspen from $425" clearly sounds like a better deal than "Kitzbühel from $900".

Unwrap the package

It takes careful unwrapping of the package to find that it isn't necessarily so: The American package just doesn't contain the same things the European package does. The two regions traditionally include different services and elements in their packaging.

What is included?

Both packages: There are some items both packages have in common. Both usually include air transportation and the room. Both usually exclude equipment rental, ski instruction and lunch (except perhaps during special sale periods). Here the similarity ends.

American packages: Only rarely do American packages provide what is considered pretty much standard in European packages: arrival and departure transfers between the airport and the resort; a welcome drink; breakfast each day; the daily dinner if chosen; a special farewell dinner; local taxes and gratuities.

European packages: The other way round, there is one feature of American ski packages that is not customarily part of European arrangements: the lift ticket.

Get a free quote and see what great value skiing in Europe can be!

Austria: Bad Gastein, Innsbruck,Ischgl/Galtür, Kitzbühel/Kirchberg, Lech, Mayrhofen, Obergurgl, Obertauern, Saalbach, Schladming, Sölden, Söll, St Anton, Zürs, Zell am See

France: Brides-les-Bains, Chamonix, Courchevel, Les Deux Alpes, Les Menuires, Méribel, Megève, Morzine, Tignes, Val d'Isère, Val Thorens

Italy: Bormio, Bressanone/Brixen, Cervinia, Cortina d'Ampezzo, Courmayeur, Madonna di Campiglio, Sestriere, Val Gardena

Switzerland : Brig, Crans-Montana, Davos, Engelberg, Flims/Laax, Grindlewald, Gstaad, Interlaken, Mürren, Saas Fee, St. Moritz, Verbier, Villars, Wengen, Zermatt

Germany: Garmisch-Partenkirchen

 

 

  Resort Profiles

 

 


Language?

Am I Good Enough?

Slope Grooming

Resort staff generally speak English

People who work full time in tourism jobs study more English in schools and hotel colleges, or go abroad to perfect their languages.

Signs are pictorial or multi-language

Signs on the mountain are either pictorial (no language problem there) or multi-lingual. The standard avalanche sign, for example, warns in German, English, French, and Italian). Orientation boards generally use English and French in addition to the local German.

Resort brochures and trail maps have English versions

Area trail maps and safety information is usually contain several languages, one of them always English. Alternatively, they may available from the local tourist office, or lift ticket windows in a separate English version.

 

 Even top-name European resorts have plenty of easier terrain

Ski resorts appearing in the datelines of World Cup reports, such as Kitzbühel, St. Anton, Wengen, Zermatt and Val d'Isère, all range from at least 35% to as much as 60% of their total mountain area which is suitable for beginning and intermediate skiers. When you consider how many square miles of mountainside these famous places have in their networks of lifts and runs, you understand how much good skiing there really is for the less-experienced skier.

Find out more about your destination before you decide..

 

Careful grooming with state-of-the-art equipment

European resorts certainly groom their runs, although they leave some of them in a natural state for the powder hounds. It is a common sight to see a conga line of six or eight big snowcats systematically packing down new snow, grading a run, or planing down the bumps. From lift closing time until, well into the night, a string of headlights shimmer, and the growl of the big machines can be heard, from high up the mountainsides.

 

 

I want to Ski!

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Vertical drop, not elevation, is the key to good skiing

What matters most to a skier is vertical drop, the difference in altitude between the highest lift-served point and the bottom of the ski run, in Europe usually the village. Big verticals mean long runs, people widely spread out over the mountain, uncrowded lifts, and overall a better ratio between time on the lift and time on the run. A few figures say it best:

Vertical Drop

Innsbruck

1,700 ft.

Ischgl

4,000 ft.

Kitzbuhel

4,000 ft.

Mayrhofen

4,400 ft.

Montafon

5,000 ft.

St. Anton

4,500 ft.

Solden

5,500 ft.

Alta

2,050 ft.

Aspen

3,000 ft.

Crested Butte

2,150 ft.

Heavenly

4,000 ft.

Park City

3,100 ft.

Snowbird

3,000 ft.

Vail

3,000 ft.

Winter Park

1,650 ft.

In the eastern USA, many ski areas are in the 1,500 foot vertical drop range. Places like Stratton, Stowe and Waterville Valley have about 2,000 feet. Sugarbush, Smugglers Notch, and Sugarloaf reach about 2,600 feet. The biggie in the bunch, Killington, is a hair over 3,000 feet.

 

Comfortable elevations in European Alps

In the other aspect, plain altitude, Europe's Alps are small enough to be comfortable. If you're a skier who pushes a desk at sea level all year long, when you get to a high altitude ski resort, it takes three and five days (most of your ski week!) for the body to adjust to the altitude. Until that adjustment is complete, insomnia, headaches, a high pulse rate, shortness of breath, excessive fatigue, and low tolerance to alcohol are common symptoms.

No long stressful adjustment to high altitude

In this context, the resort elevation, at which you live, eat, party, and sleep, is much more important than the mountain elevation at which you ski. Here are a few comfort examples:

Resort Elevation

Innsbruck

1,883 ft.

Ischgl

4,517 ft.

Kitzbuhel

2,503 ft.

Lech

4,746 ft.

St. Anton

4,277 ft.

Schruns

2,260 ft.

Solden

4,517 ft.

Zell am See

2,486 ft.

Zurs

5,655 ft.

Alta

8,550 ft.

Aspen

7,912 ft.

Copper Mtn.

9,600 ft.

Crested Butte

9,100 ft.

Heavenly

6,550 ft.

Park City

6,900 ft.

Steamboat

6,900 ft.

Vail

8,200 ft.

Winter Park

9,000 ft.

 

European snow

The snow on the ground is powdery, fluffy well into spring. Packed powder prevails on the groomed runs, deep powder off-piste. East coast skiers may want to detune their skis a bit before going (so they don't have to surreptitiously rub the edges on some rock or concrete in Europe). Overly sharp edges catch easily in the softer stuff of the Alps. Western skiers can count on just a touch more humidity in the air and in the snow than they would find under champagne conditions.

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The online booking system list flights numbers and times at all major airports. You can then access the booking system to review your booking details, modify any details up to 3 days prior to the transfer, or even cancel.

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