Patrick
Well-known member
Can you send me the cliff notes? Limited wifi here.I ran across this 26-minute review of Oz skiing from a North American POV, posted yesterday.

Can you send me the cliff notes? Limited wifi here.I ran across this 26-minute review of Oz skiing from a North American POV, posted yesterday.
I agree; it takes almost as long to read that novella-length transcript as to watch the video. Still (and we've discussed this before), it's much more efficient to read the content of a documentary-style clip than to sit through it. We've used former admin's Grand Adventure travel series as Exhibit A -- they're really well done and he puts a ton of work into them but I'm not going to spend 45-60 minutes watching the whole thing. I prefer an article with photos and a short youtube clip.Can you send me the cliff notes?
Isn't ChrisC the one who expressed skepticism about isolated volcanic peaks with chronic wind, rime icing and lift shutdowns? Ruapehu is Exhibit A of all of those. Like Bachelor, I think those places are best skied in spring. But the Ruapehu areas don't get as much snow, and my understanding is that neither has opened yet this season.
I'm surprised to see wipeout seasons with marginal coverage at Ruapehu. I would think average snowfall would be higher (brochure quotes say so) as they are not shadowed by mountains farther west (like nearly all on South Island) and latitude is still 39, a touch more than Melbourne.Would it be a better decision to forgo the North Island of New Zealand and the Mount Ruapehu ski areas, since they shut down so often
Probably, but not vs. North Island overall (Rotorua, Bay of Islands, etc.). And if the weather cooperates the Ruapehu ski areas are much larger scale than Victoria's.Imagine Melbourne is more interesting than Auckland, but similar.
Definitely a different vibe in Melbourne. There is also the Great Ocean Drive (?) driving away from the mountains and along the southern coast west. Spent one day driving west instead of towards the mountain.Would it be a better decision to forgo the North Island of New Zealand and the Mount Ruapehu ski areas, since they shut down so often, and instead go to Melbourne (lots of reasonable direct flights from Queenstown to Melbourne) and ski the (somewhat?) nearby ski areas such as Mount Hotham and Mount Buller? Note: I have visited Sydney before for multiple days, but not Melbourne.
There are not that many to ski. I skied all the resorts with 200m+ vertical drop in 2018. The total is 6Given all the hidden fees, high lodging costs, and large distances, I see no reason to commit the time & money to ski all of the Australian resorts.
Air Canada doesn't fly direct to NZ, so flying with them had me connect in Brisbane on my way to Auckland in 2016. It was a connection in Sydney prior to a direct flight to Christchurch. Return journey was via Brisbane.Flying from North America to Christchurch or Queenstown, you are usually going through Auckland anyway.
As noted above there are scenarios where cost/logistics of Auckland vs. Sydney or Melbourne are similar. So it would come down to what are your overall interests and/or where have you not been before.