Europe 2025/26

Andermatt Ski Guides (andermatt-guides.ch) posted a video showing current conditions. Below, they summarize: not great, but some pockets.

"A Great Friend, a Classic Line, and epic snow (in the couliour😉) makes a great Day! Although conditions are not amazing, there is some great skiing to do!"

This is a good example of some of the types of off-piste terrain found in Andermatt. Half of it is open faces/bowls that connect to couloirs for 5k vertical. The other half is more open faces. I think @skiandgolfnut was interested. Conversely, Engelberg's famed Big 5 does not really have tight couloirs unless you seek them out; more open faces or glaciers.

You can see write-ups
Engelberg, CH, Jan. 24, 2019
Andermatt, Switzerland: March 6, 7 and 8, 2020


 
Both WePowder and Luke Stone of OpenSnow mention the possibility of that big dump from the west 5 days out, but don’t quote anything specific until it gets closer.

Looks like models are converging on the forecast for the coming week. However, the snow seems heavily NW focused (French Alps, Switzerland - till about Interlaken/Engelberg/Andermatt/Zermatt) and these areas have a decent base, especially at altitude. Unfortunately, Eastern Switzerland and Austria - about 50-75% less.

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Not sure Vallee Blanche will be open this early. You should inquire before committing as many as 5 days, in view of the fact that the Grands-Montets upper tram is still not rebuilt. I'd say 2-3 days, mainly to check out the mind blowing scenery, best viewed from Brevant-Flegere

Chamonix is a beautiful area (Chamonix, Zermatt, Jungfrau, Saas Fee are most impressive IMHO), but it can be a bit of a PITA.

One really needs to take advantage of 'unique' Chamonix experiences for the benefits to outweigh difficulties. What is special about Chamonix:
  • Vallee Blanche. The Aguille du Midi Cable Car is an engineering marvel, ascending to 12.8k ft (same as the highest in North America). The Vallee Blanche is over 20km long and a vertical drop of 9k+ and you are skiing the most unique glaciated terrain possible. You can sometimes ski to town or take a gondola to a train. It is more ski mountaineering than a ski resort, and nothing else is like it. Also, it is approachable for intermediates.
  • Grand Montets. It's Jackson Hole that faces due north, a 6k vertical, and some glacier routes. It kills me that the cable car has taken forever to rebuild, but next year 26/27, a new gondola and S3 gondola with a rebuilt summit house. It's still OK without the summit, but I have avoided Chamonix, specifically Gands Montets, without this lift.
  • Views of Mont Blanc/Mer de Glace from Brevent-Flegere. Brevent-Flegere offers solid skiing, a series of south-facing bowls. I really like it, but it can get cooked on a sunny day. In mid-winter, they will hold new powdery snow for about 48 hours.
  • Domaine de Balme. I hesitate a bit to put this on here, since some might say - it's a bunch of surface lifts and mellow terrain. However, I like it since you are at the head of the Chamonix Valley, with great views, easy off-piste skiing, 360-degree exposure, relatively high and good snow preservation.
  • Chamonix town. It's the global mountaineering center! There are often more ice axes and ropes than skis around town. There is a unique vibe, and it's a big place with all types of restaurants/lodging. It's almost the antithesis of Verbier, Val d'Isere, etc.
Chamonix has quite a few downsides that can make it highly unpleasant for casual skiers used to 'ski resorts' - especially if they do not value what makes Chamonix unique. Downsides include:
  • Only Brevent is accessible from Chamonix proper - and that is up a hill at the edge of town. Not easy. A 10-20 minute schlep depending on where you stay.
  • Otherwise, it's get in your car or try to get on a bus.
  • I found out in 2024 that on weekdays in late January, buses around 9 am do not guarantee a spot and will not stop since they are full. In short, you are traveling a bit every day, and the Chamonix Valley is quite large.
  • Chamonix town is at a low altitude (1000m), and sometimes there is no snow. Typically, one needs to take a gondola up to the skiing.
  • Skiing is not interconnected, and most areas are medium-sized.
  • Lifts. Chamonix, for some reason, does not invest in its lift system. There are still lots of slow lifts and/or surface lifts at Domaine de Balme, Les Houches, and parts of Brevent-Flegere.
  • Crowding. Sometimes crowds can appear, especially on weekends, and overwhelm infrastructure.

Currently, without the Grand Montets tram, Chamonix is maybe a 3-day place (one visit to Grand Montets, one or two to Brevent-Flegere, one to Balme) unless you add the Vallee Blanche. Also, one should travel to the neighboring mountains from Chamonix. The most obvious choice is Courmayeur (sunny side of Mt Blanc & cheaper, better Italian food). The best storm day mountain is really Megeve (over Les Houches). It has beautiful, tree-lined runs and is huge! And for a mega-Alps experience, Verbier is just over the pass. These are all 30-60 minutes away. When I skied in the 2000s, they were all part of the Chamonix Unlimited Pass. However, people tire of the constant grind of the car ride every morning.


I was last in Chamonix in 2024 with my partner after 1 week+ in Val d'Isere. Getting to Brevent was a bit of a pain in the AM, but skiing was good. We just visited the Aiguille du Midi complex vs. skiing the Vallee Blanche. The Vallee Blanche used to require a 30-minute+ hike out (this would have been a non-starter), but in 2025, there is now a new gondola that goes down to the Mer de Glace glacier/end of run. No more hikes required! If I had to do it again, I would have likely gone skiing in the 3 Vallees (Courchevel or Meribel) for 2-3 days after Val d'Isere for convenience/resort experience. And maybe one night in Chamonix to ride the Aguille du Midi cable car. Again, Chamonix - while beautiful - is not for everyone, and it can be 'challenging' logistically.

Is it a favorite? Yes. I have been in 2004/5, 2006, 2018 (2x), and 2024. Also, 2025 skiing over from Courmayeur on a unique Vallee Blanche variation (Vallee Noir from Pt. Helbronner). To expend the effort to ski it 6x - that's a really large number for me, who wants to try lots of places, and indicates the quality of the experience. It also speaks to how easily accessible it is, being just one hour from Geneva.

Aiguille du Midi / Vallée Blanche
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Grands Montets - without its summit tram!!

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More positivity and models are matching up.

Interesting Note: It's cold, and lots of valley snow is forecasted. Lower resorts around Geneva (La Clusaz, Megeve, Morzine, Gstaad, Jungfrau) could be excellent too - if things pan out.

Austria?

I spoke to Guide Offices in Val d'Isere. They said no powder now (as expected), however, their couloirs have stabilized and have a lot of chalky fun snow, so that's where they have been taking clients if interested. Sounds good to me.

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Jimk needs to be heeding the advice ChrisC is posting now. Wherever Jimk goes, he also should hire guides for the first couple of days at least.
 
I'm busy traveling. Now back East for memorial services for family member, return to Utah soon
But it was very kind for @ChrisC to provide his input. I did pull the trigger and depart for Alps, Jan 19-31. Using Geneva as gateway. Likely 4-5 ski days in Chamonix including Vallee Blanche, Brevent, Grand Montet, etc. Will spend some non-ski days in Bern for family-social-business requirements involving my travel party of four. Likely to also ski a couple days in Jungfrau region. I think for both Cham and Grindelwald I may want center-town locations to facilitate activities for both skiing and non-skiing travel companions.
 
I think for both Cham and Grindelwald
Among consensus top 3 for scenery in the Alps (with Zermatt, though Liz among many would also cite the Dolomites). For skiing both deserve no more than 3 days under likely conditions. FYI 3 ski days in the Jungfrau will get you that Jungfraujoch train up to 11,000+ feet for 1/3 the price a scenic rider only pays. Your ski plan is likely to keep you nearly all on-piste, which given Jimk's (and presumably his Snowbird son instructor's) ability means you're missing out on the best of skiing the Alps.

Driving between Cham and the Jungfrau you could visit Verbier and/or a couple of the mom-and-pop places out of the Upper Rhone Valley. With limited time in those places for off-piste a guide is essential. Both the Jungfrau and the Upper Rhone should be conditional on next week's dump materializing as forecast. The Jungfrau ski terrain is at relatively low altitude and without a major dump resurfacing will resemble your mid-Atlantic in terms of manmade scraped frozen granular.

ChrisC loves Verbier. He can opine after this week whether there is enough snow for the off piste routes from Mont Fort and Mont Gele.
 
I did pull the trigger and depart for Alps, Jan 19-31. Using Geneva as gateway. Likely 4-5 ski days in Chamonix including Vallee Blanche, Brevent, Grand Montet, etc.

You should reach out to a Guide in the next week or so, and see what the outlook might be for the Vallee Blanche. Wait to after this next storm system.

Mid/Late January would be considered an 'earlier' opening for the Vallee Blanche. It takes longer than would think. Despite a ton of snow up high, it takes a while to cover the crevasses and allow necessary snow bridges to form. Some years, it is not ready until early February.

Also, guides will not take clients up there until ski patrol/pisteurs equip the arete with ropes (pic below) for ovious safety reasons. That really denotes whether the Vallee Blanche is open or closed.

My experience - I have skied the Vallee Blanche or variants three different times:
  • Late Jan/early Feb 2006. Joined a guided group. Skied Vraie Vallee Blanche variant. Could ski to Chamonix - no train.
  • Late Jan 2018. Private Guide for myself and brother. Skied Petit & Grand Envers combo. Could ski to Chamonix - no train.
  • Early Feb 2025. Private Guide for myself only. Skied Vallee Noir from Courmayeur/Pt. Helbronner (after other runs). Gondola and train to Chamonix. Bus back to Courmayeur.
  • Also, Heli-skied 2x (Jan 2018 (brother) & Jan 2023 (friends)) with Heli Courmayeur and skiing the backside of Mont Blanc off a subpeak.
Since you might have a decent sized group, I would look into getting a private guide. Since the Vallee Blanche is maybe 4-5 hours max, rates are reasonable. I often use the local town Guide Office. Chamonix Compagnie des Guides LINK. See the Private Booking Tab - It would cost perhaps less than joining a group for 3-4 people. Also, it allows you to go at your own pace: Tour the top of the Aiguille du Midi complex LINK, slowly go down the Arete without pressure, take your time on the Vallee Blanche Classic, perhaps stop for lunch at Refuge du Requin (cash-only) LINK, take it easy on the flats of the Mer de Glace, stop and go in a glacier cave, and then take gondola & Montenvers Train back to Chamonix.

If someone in your group is not comfortable with everything (especially heights), they should at least go to the summit with all you and take the calbe car back down. Typically, guides like an early start - 8/8:30am - mostly for the weather window in the morning. Clear or partly cloudy weather is a must due to vertigo. And winds will close the cable car, so by definition you will not be up there in extreme weather.

FYI: The Aiguille du Midi cable car is not included with the Ikon Pass. It's not on basic Chamonix multi-day tickets either. It's always been a separate add-on that requires a reservation time - especially since so many pedestrians/tourists visit it. Summer and nice Spring days (March/April for Vallee Blanche) are very busy!

Arete - Path is wider than it looks. Also, you are wearing crampons.
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Refuge du Requin

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Aiguille du Midi Summit Complex
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Some good resources about the Vallee Blanche:





Vallee Blanche Classique and Variants. They get steeper from left to right.

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Rendering of the new Gondola from Mer de Glace
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FYI 3 ski days in the Jungfrau will get you that Jungfraujoch train up to 11,000+ feet for 1/3 the price a scenic rider only pays.

I have never paid to go up to the Jungfraujoch. It's pricey, and I have seen lots of glaciated summit stations (Zermatt, Chamonix, Courmayeur, Engelberg, etc.) which are included in the price of a standard lift pass. The discount with a 3-day pass is a very good deal.

Your ski plan is likely to keep you nearly all on-piste

Chamonix will offer some off-piste opportunities. Brevent has couloirs under its main lift, and some open faces served by the Brevent cable car;
Flegere has nice bowls. Of course, this could be a refrozen mess. Grands Montets should be straight-forward off-piste: under the Hese 6-pack or the upper Gondola. And the Combe de La Pendant is a huge north-facing bowl the can hold powder on its edges.

given Jimk's (and presumably his Snowbird son instructor's) ability means you're missing out on the best of skiing the Alps

I am not sure his son is going. If so, they should try to stop by Verbier on the way out of Chamonix (if snow materializes). Maybe sign up for a guided group day in Chamonix. And if in Grindelwald, Engelberg is only 1.5 hours away and one should try to join a guided group to ski some of its 'Big 5' lines. Engelberg is in a pretty decent snowfall region - I am sure something will materialize.

ChrisC loves Verbier. He can opine after this week whether there is enough snow for the off piste routes from Mont Fort and Mont Gele.

Verbier looks quite boney right now / not ready for prime time. Looking at its Live Map, Mount Gele is closed and the Chassoure-Tortin, Vallon d'Arbi, Col des Mines itineraries are all closed. Currently, it's a skip for off-piste.
 
JimK and his son could join a group to ski the scenic Petit Envers through the scenic icefalls as I did with NASJA in 2004. I suspect much of his entourage is non-skiers, which is no doubt the reason for resisting some of ChrisC's and my suggestions.

Late Jan 2018.
Liz and I skied the Classic Route a few days after ChrisC was there. With the big snowpack that season, we also hiked up about 20 minutes, then skied into Chamonix, no train. ChrisC is correct that you need to be inquiring about Vallee Blanche soon, as you need an above average snowpack for it to be skiable in late January. If it's not, that's a reason to trim the number of days in Chamonix in favor of somewhere with more/better skiing available.
 
JimK and his son could join a group to ski the scenic Petit Envers through the scenic icefalls as I did with NASJA in 2004. I suspect much of his entourage is non-skiers, which is no doubt the reason for resisting some of ChrisC's and my suggestions.

I am surprised they took your group down Petit Envers - although depending on how you put the route together, it's not that intense. Sometimes guides resist because they do not know the group's abilities, or because it can be a bit wind-affected.

In 2018, we avoided the top of Grand Envers because the guide said it was wind-affected by the intense storms and quickly traversed to the lower, steeper, more sheltered 75% of the route. You miss the big Geant Seracs, and exit via couloir near the Refuge du Requin - and then continue from the hut via another couloir, missing a bit of the Mer de Glace. A lot of the itinerary was a 'no-fall' zone, so not many pictures.

Looking at your 2004 photos of the Mer de Glace, our guide said about 20 ft of ice was lost from the early 2000s to the late 2010s, on the lowest portion of the glacier.

ChrisC is correct that you need to be inquiring about Vallee Blanche soon, as you need an above average snowpack for it to be skiable in late January. If it's not, that's a reason to trim the number of days in Chamonix in favor of somewhere with more/better skiing available.

They might be OK since November snowfall was well above average, and maybe Mt. Blanc got some snow from the Italian storms. But they will need these storms with snowfall in meters to start the Vallee Blanche season.

In 2006, I skied the Vallee Blanche right around February 1st, and it was only an average snow year at best.

I suspect much of his entourage is non-skiers, which is no doubt the reason for resisting some of ChrisC's and my suggestions.

If he needs to be in Bern, the French Tarentaise resorts are a bit of a trek. And if you have non-skiers, there is more to do in Chamonix, Zermatt, Interlaken/Jungfrau, etc.
 
Update:

Looks like most are forecasting .75 to 1.5 meters of snow this weekend. Questionable storm track afterwards.

Heavy snowfall in the Western Alps starting Thursday
It will be interesting if Western Austria - specifically the Arlberg shares in this storm. Everywhere else in Eastern Switzerland/Austria is <50cm.

Summary from OpenSnow
The northwestern Alps are going to get slammed next week, with .75 to 1.5 m for much of the northern French and western Swiss Alps. The second potential storm potential is fading fast, but this will still be a significant storm for areas that need it badly. After a brief period of ridging next week, the storm track shifts west of the Alps, with some chances for snow during this setup.



Again, the valley snowfalls are very healthy! As well as the high alpine!

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WePowder issued a Powder Alert for the upcoming storm (PA #3). Generally, these Alerts are pretty helpful in discussing the storm's phasing, winds, avalanche potential, overall snowfall, and recommended ski resorts. Overall, I find them more useful than anything/anyone else covering Europe (i.e. Luke Stone @OpenSnow, Snow Forecast, etc).

You can sign up for them on the right-hand side of the link below. It's generally less than 10 emails per winter.

PA#3 with many caveats

It was a lengthy report, so that means it gets dumped into AI.


Here’s a clear, concise summary of the post:

Summary

A major snowfall event (PowderAlert #3) is expected to impact the Northwestern Alps over the coming days, driven by three Atlantic low-pressure systems. While significant snow is forecast, especially from Friday into Saturday, conditions come with important caveats.
  • Timeline & snowfall
    • A weak front brings light snow on Wednesday.
    • A rapidly deepening low on Thursday–Saturday delivers the main snowfall.
    • 30–70 cm is expected across the French Northern Alps, western Valais, and Bernese Oberland, with up to ~1 m at higher elevations, especially near Mont Blanc.
    • Snowfall continues into Friday night/Saturday, then tapers.
  • Key caveats
    1. Rising snow line early: Warmer air on Thursday may temporarily raise the snow line to ~1500 m in outer Alpine ranges (lower in inner valleys).
    2. Very strong winds: Storm-force winds (100–150 km/h) on Thursday–Friday will cause whiteouts, transport snow, and likely lift closures.
    3. Uneven distribution: Snowfall confidence drops east of central Switzerland and especially east of the Arlberg.
    4. Weak base: Coverage remains thin on many slopes, especially south-facing terrain.
    5. High avalanche danger: Danger level 4 is expected at higher elevations due to heavy snow, wind loading, and a mediocre base.
  • Advice
    • This is not a must-chase storm. Let it build the base rather than pushing into risky terrain.
    • If skiing, focus on lower-elevation north- and west-facing slopes with grass or thin bases.
  • Where conditions look best
    • Areas like Haute-Savoie, Savoie, western Valais, Bernese Oberland, with examples including Arêches-Beaufort, Megève, Balme-Vallorcine, and Gstaad.
  • Outlook
    • Some clearing is possible on Sunday.
    • Early next week may bring temporary warming from a southwesterly flow, making higher elevations preferable and keeping avalanche risk in focus.

Bottom line: Big snow is coming to the Northwestern Alps, but wind, a brief warm phase, avalanche danger, and an inconsistent base mean caution is essential.
 
There was an addendum to the wePowder Alert #3 clarifying some storm-related details.

In short, there might be a warm-up at the end. On a positive note, Engelberg was recommended as a place to powder ski, as it has a base and received 30cm (12 in) of snow last week. Negatively, not much snow for Eastern Switzerland and Austria outside of the Arlberg.

PA#3 update: large temperature fluctuations


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First front mainly brings snow in Benelux and France​

From today onward, disturbances from the west attempt to push into Europe. Initially, this happens somewhat hesitantly — and after a cold spell, mainly as snow. In the Benelux and France, snowfall has caused significant traffic disruption, but of course also plenty of snow fun.

On the Waaldijk in my “backyard,” I experienced firsthand how quickly wind slabs or snow drifts can form. About 4 cm of fresh snow at temperatures around -1°C (so truly dry snow which is rare here nowadays), combined with wind gusts of around 45 km/h, were enough to create snow accumulations of up to 35 cm in the lee of the dike. Fascinating — and at the same time a reminder of how quickly fresh wind-drifted snow can form in the Alps as well. Dry snow is often present at higher elevations, and 40–50 km/h winds are easily reached there too.

PA#3 on track – the latest insights​

A first “thaw” front often dissapates over the European continent — and that’s exactly what’s happening this time. This evening, the precipitation zone reaches the Western Alps in a weakening state, producing at most a few centimeters of snow.

Our focus then shifts to the next low-pressure system, which will deliver PA#3. It is currently barely visible on the weather charts but will develop very rapidly over the next 24 hours. While central pressure is still around 1020 hPa, it is expected to drop sharply to around 970 hPa by Friday morning as the system moves across the Channel and over the Netherlands. This storm depression will bring severe storms to western France, snow to the Alps (with rain temporarily up to 1500 m), and strong winds. Below are the latest insights regarding PA#3 precipitation, divided into three phases.

The warm front​

The warm front reaches the Alps from the west on Thursday morning, allowing temperatures to rise moderately. Precipitation focuses on the French Northern Alps and the western Valais. The Écrins form the southwestern boundary; along the main Alpine ridge, amounts gradually decrease eastward into Switzerland, and east of the Arlberg it remains largely dry. Precipitation initially falls as snow down to the valleys but will turn to rain below 1200–1700 m. In the most precipitation-rich regions (around Chamonix), the snow line generally stays below 1500 m. Maximum snowfall totals of 30–40 cm are expected around the Mont Blanc tunnel.

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Snow fall warm front Thursday

The cold front​

The cold front reaches the French Alps late Thursday evening. There will be little to no break in precipitation before activity increases again toward Friday morning, as colder air flows in. The snow line drops toward 700 m on Friday.
The cold front crashes into the Alps, driven by a jet stream aimed directly at the Alpine arc. As a result, precipitation penetrates deep into the massif, given the west–southwesterly flow. Regions such as Vars, Risoul, and Abriès (FR), as well as Zermatt and Saas-Fee (CH), can expect significant snowfall. Expect wind peaking >100km/h on ridges and peaks.

Total snowfall amounts may reach up to 80 cm where both warm and cold fronts are active, 30–50 cm in many other areas, and less in regions lying further south and east in the rain shadow. Temporary snowfall is also possible on the Italian side (e.g. Via Lattea). Around the Arlberg, up to 20 cm may fall by Friday morning — with less further east. Still not much snow for Austria overall…
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Push from the west, later northwest​

On Friday, the jet stream continues to blast into the Western Alps, sustaining snowfall even after the cold front has passed. Moist air and orographic lift produce prolonged snowfall, with snow lines around 1000 m, extending far south in the French Alps up to the Swiss main ridge and the Zermatt/Saas-Fee border region.

By Saturday, the flow shifts more toward the northwest, shifting the focus of precipitation to the north-facing stau regions of the French, Swiss, and later also Austrian Northern Alps. An additional 20–40 cm is expected in the French Northern Alps and along the Swiss main ridge, and 10–20 cm in the Austrian Northern Alps, with snow falling down to valley level. Austria should turn dry last, by Sunday morning.

Estimated totals for PA#3:

  • 60–100 cm in the French Alps between Écrins and Les Marécottes, locally more
  • 15–40 cm in French areas such as Vars and Abriès, possibly also Sestriere (IT)
  • 40–80 cm in Valais (including IT border areas) and along the Swiss main ridge
  • 30–50 cm in the Arlberg region (AT)
  • 10–25 cm in the Austrian Northern Alps, eastward from Tyrol

Warming and precipitation on Monday​

By Sunday morning, the last snow showers move out of Austria, while elsewhere conditions are already dry and cold. Strong winds are still expected (especially in the east), along with residual cloud near the northern ridge and increasing high cloud in the west during the day. These clouds are the first signs of a new, more intense warm front, which currently looks set to cross the Alps early on Monday. It will again bring precipitation to the same preferred regions as PA#3 — but unfortunately with a much higher snow line. Especially in the west, prolonged precipitation on Monday with the snow line rising to 2000 m or higher. Further east, precipitation remains snow below 1500 m for longer. Fresh snowfall amounts of around 25 cm are possible at higher elevations. The warmer air does not appear to be pushed out quickly again, although model output becomes highly volatile from mid-next week onward.


Caution advised​

Earlier in this update, we already discussed how easily wind slabs formed in the Netherlands. As Henri also wrote yesterday, the combination of strong winds, a thin and weak base, and a significant fresh snowfall is a dangerous one.
There is a considerable chance that avalanche danger will be rated high (level 4) on Friday/Saturday across the entire region between the Écrins and the Arlberg. Already by Thursday evening, avalanche danger in the French Alps rises to level 3.
> Début de l’offensive neigeuse. En fin de journée, les cumuls de neige fraîche associés au vent fort (et aux gobelets en surface) induisent une importante hausse du risque.

Keep a close eye on official avalanche bulletins, e.g. for France and Switzerland
The wePowder Guide also addresses avalanche hazards and wind slabs. If you don’t have it yet, you can order it here

Preferred regions to go?​

The obvious question for anyone planning a trip to the Alps is: where to go? My first thoughts go to tree runs and solid base depth. Looking at the last two snowfall events — late December (Piemonte, Monte Rosa) and early January (cold northerly 10–40 cm) — certain regions seem to overlap the current PA#3. These include the French Queyras (Abriès), the Swiss side of the Monte Rosa massif (Saas-Fee) which received snow around Christmas, possibly Via Lattea, and Swiss areas such as Engelberg, which picked up 10–30 cm in early January. Arlberg region might also be a fit but the real dump arrives later and is less certain.

Given the approaching warm front on Monday, areas that receive sufficient snowfall from the cold front on Friday seem preferable, allowing Saturday and Sunday as ski days without warm-front influence. Wherever you go: choose defensive lines <30 degrees, stay in forested terrain where possible, especially on west- and north-facing slopes with a base, and don’t be surprised if lifts remain closed due to wind and/or avalanche danger.

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Total expected snow PA#3 with areas overlapping recent snow events

Also more snow Belgium and German regions​

After today’s snowfall, the deepening storm system brings a gradual warming over the next two days. Toward Friday, a narrow warm sector introduces rain in the Benelux countries and parts of Germany, but from Friday afternoon onward, temperatures drop again and precipitation may quickly turn back to snow.

The low mountain ranges in Germany and Belgium already have a decent snowpack. After some rain and melting on Friday, the weekend could turn out surprisingly well. I expect melting to remain limited in places like the Sauerland, while especially in the Ardennes, areas above 300–400 m could pick up another 10–25 cm of fresh snow Friday. And cold temperatures will hold until after the weekend following this snow spell. We’ll keep a close eye on this in upcoming updates.
 
I spoke/chatted with Luke Stone from OpenSnow, who often powder-chases. He was heading to Chamonix and/or the 3 Vallees for a long weekend.

Was looking for storm-proof mountains for Saturday. I suggested Megeve, since it is heavily forested compared to most Alps resorts, and I have skied it twice on storm days with 10" and 18" of new snow. Most lifts operated. What Megever lacks in steepness is made up for by the sheer quantity of terrain available. There are a few short pitches scattered about.

Some other possibilities (but never storm-day skied them):
  • Grand Massif/Flaine (Samoens/Morillon/etc) is tree-lined/not the Flaine bowl.
  • Courmayer? high tree line, but near Mt. Blanc, so likely stormy/windy
  • Morzine/Les Gets
I am sure James knows other French candidates in the Geneva area.


I was a bit surprised he chose the French Alps, since Japan and/or British Columbia look so good right now. He said those will come/be visited later this month. Assuming with the new snow (100cm+) and winds, the Alps avalanche levels will be 4+ and will take some days to settle.
 
The OpenSnow model and reporting are practically useless for Europe (as well as South America).

The model forecasts snowfall amounts with inaccuracy, and mostly bases everything on elevation. It will tell you whether it will snow in general, but that's about it. And then, to compound the issue, historical snowfall is entirely based on the model. So it almost just spits out its forecast and moves it over to historical snowfall. Great - garbage in, garbage out. Almost no improvements from its so-called summer 2025 upgrades warranting a price increase.

Today: Saalbach reports 10 cm. OpenSnow reports 0.

It would be too easy to go screen scrape the reported snowfall total from the Saalbach website. And this is a basic resort to report since it is one of the 3 Largest in Austria.

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What I recommend is Bergfex. It's an Austrian-based outdoor site that specializes in winter sports/skiing.

It has excellent reporting of snowfall, snow bases, weather, and lift/piste operations. I am tempted to subscribe to its "Pro" version for $9 for its weather models. Its reporting is much stronger for Germanic countries/regions (Austria, Switzerland, Germany, & Sud Tyrol, Italy). France is OK.

Again, everything below is accurate for ski day decisions.

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I have been writing a few Guide Offices in the Alps (Switzerland and France) regarding current conditions and potential February ski dates.

Again, it's difficult for me to justify skiing in Austria after visiting Engelberg when I do not currently see any game-changing storms (1 meter of snow); we will see the results of the current storms. Also, I am not interested in the Arlberg because I have skied for 7 days (1 day in Ischgl) under optimal conditions: Cold Temps, late Jan/Early Feb sun, 1.5 meters of snow during the week, a nearly 2-meter (village) to 4-meter (summit) snow base. This will not be improved upon.

I am surprised that there will likely be such a significant difference in snowfall between the Eastern and Western Alps. Typically, the Northern Alps from Austria to France, and the Northwestern Alps (France, maybe Courmayeur/La Thuile) receive similar snow totals and snowfall.

I'd like to ski more of Austria, but for the 2nd year in a row, it looks very marginal. Even the glacier resorts are confined to more traditional pistes. Reports indicate there is no freeride/off-piste at Saalbach, Kitzbuhel, SkiWelt, or Mayrhofen. Solden looks really sad at its base with just WROD going into town. And Obergurgl is maybe only 75%+ open.

Anyway, it's not like I am on some journalistic assignment to see Austria. I would rather piss away my Epic Ski Pass and ski meters of snow in the French Alps. (I'll break even in other ways). Add Gstaad and Glacier3000 in Switzerland, and add La Clusaz and Ste Foy in France, combined with a couple of days in Val d'Isere. Possibly a free Epic Pass day at Courchevel.
 
I wrote Compagnie des Guides de Chamonix to see if Chamonix could be a worthwhile stopover on the way to Val d'Isere.

In short, it's a 'No'. Also, the Aiguille du Midi/Vallee Blanche Arete might not be roped equipped until late January. JimK's visit might be too early, regardless of how much snow the current storms bring. If the ropes are not installed, guides will not bring clients up there. I would not be comfortable with a January 20th visit - maybe. Late January/Feb 1st is likely safer.

Without the Vallee Blanche and a Summit Tram-less Les Grans Montets, Chamonix loses a lot of what makes it unique. I might agree more with Tony that Chamonix is reduced to more of a 3-day mountain with pain-in-the-ass logistics than most Euro resorts. One might need to add Courmayeur (very short 30-minute Mont Blanc drive (round-trip toll same as one-way), Ikon Pass, scenic, nice day area, or other nearby areas like Megeve (Ikon), Flaine, Verbier, etc.


From today, Thursday, January 8th.

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From Wednesday, January 7th. Standard FYI regarding Vallee Blanche.

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Here is my old reservation, Aigulle du Midi/Vallee Blanche, from Winter / January 2018. You can see old, pre-inflation prices that include private guide and cable car lift passes.

Also note that I did not pull the trigger until I verified the weather window. And the ski date was January 31st. I had sent previous emails and knew they had midweek guide availability. Most function like private contractors; they will work if there is business. Also, Americans are trained to tip (vs. Euros only buying a meal/lunch).

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