Hochzeiger, AT: 03/08/26

jamesdeluxe

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It would've been nice to check out more of the 12 Innsbruck areas; however, the entire region counts as one ski area covered under the "Ski Plus City Pass," so you only get two days there on the Indy Pass. That's why we decided to drive an hour west for our final day of the week at Hochzeiger above the Pitztal (Pitz Valley), one of Tirol’s quiet side valleys that has a string of small villages and farms while the high-altitude skiing is another 20–25 minutes farther up the road at the Pitztal Glacier.

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Hochzeiger sits on the sunny side above the village of Jerzens and functions as the valley’s family-oriented ski mountain exemplified by the resort’s cartoon mascot Pitzi, who appears on signs and kids’ zones around the mountain.
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Per the weather theme for our entire week, the spring thaw/refreeze cycle left things pretty bulletproof until late morning. Our first two runs were on rock-hard corduroy; however as we've noted, Austrians seem to thrive in a setting more appropriate for racers:
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... so we decided to pass the next hour in a more productive manner and headed over to the cute Stalder Hut for pastries and coffee. Like most Austrian ski huts, it’s not a quick snack stop but rather a social hub with a wooden deck, a nice view, and a full menu.
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At 11:15, we headed back out and spent the next few hours following the sun on increasingly smooth sugar with wide views down the green Pitztal. Most of the haze from the Sahara dust that had blown over Europe the previous three days had cleared out.
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The lift-served terrain on the upper half of the mountain spreads horizontally across roughly two miles of ridgeline terrain. It’s not tall by Alps standards — about 1,500 to 1,800 vertical feet depending on which runs you connect — but the layout makes efficient use of that vertical. The sector to the upper looker's right had nice steeper terrain; however it was facing mostly north and never softened up so we didn't go over there.
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And that’s it from my 2026 visit to the Alps. Conditions could've been better, but the overall experience was great and I enjoyed skiing a number of new-to-me areas that I wouldn't have even considered if not for the Indy Pass.
 
Wasn't the Pitztal Glacier on your Indy Pass? In late March 2022 it was still all winter snow after a sustained dry spell at least as long as the current one. And Rifflsee which is on the same ticket had great late morning corn
The Pitztal Glacier is on the Indy Pass and was under consideration for our final day but the additional 25 minutes of driving meant 1.5 hours in each direction. If it had been a powder day, we would've happily driven the additional time; however, we don't have the car stamina of you, @tseeb, or @Worldskitraveller. The almost three hours of soft conditions, empty trails, and ski-on lifts at Hochzeiger were good enough for us.
 
Tony Crocker said:
he won't drive an extra hour to ski better snow at Rifflsee and the Pitztal Glacier instead of the spring mush and manmade boilerplate he had been skiing the majority of his week.
As mentioned, each day had 2-3 hours of nice spring conditions, usually between 11 am to 2 pm. Before that was hardscrabble (similar to what Tony mentioned encountering at Alta) and after that often turned sloppy if we were caught on the wrong facet.

The final ski day -- when we could've gone to the Pitztal Glacier but decided on Hochzeiger -- my wife had to be back in our hotel by 3:15 for a Zoom meeting and didn't want to chance missing it. This trip was for her after eight years of virtually no skiing so she made the calls, including taking Day #5 off.
 
Yes that was an unfortunate schedule constraint. Pitztal and Stubai should have been scheduled when full days were available. I think Kaunertaler Glacier is on Indy too but I don’t know any details about that one.

James has it right about the 11AM AltaBird starts after the time change and melt/freeze. When does Europe go on daylight time? A couple of weeks after the US I think from 2022?
 
Pitztal and Stubai should have been scheduled when full days were available.
We were on the snow at Stubai from 9:30 to 1:30 with only a ten-minute break. That was sufficient to get an overview of the ski area without going into areas above our skills paygrade where we would need a guide.

I think Kaunertaler Glacier is on Indy too but I don’t know any details about that one.
Yes, Kaunertal Glacier is on the Indy Pass. It doesn't score a lot of reports on the German forums but here's a convincing one from three years ago, looking good for late April. If you keep going further right on the trail map from Fendels (to the west), you'd be at Serfaus-Fiss.

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