SkiWelt, AT: 03/03/26

jamesdeluxe

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My wife and I landed early Tuesday morning yesterday in Munich, picked up our rental car, drove 90 minutes south, and were on the lifts by 10 am at the SkiWelt to start our Indy Pass visit of Tirol. The car rental joint at the airport reminded us that we had to buy a ten-day digital pass (a "vignette") to drive Austrian highways for €12 at gas stations near the border, similar to an EZ-Pass. It's allegedly enforced by cameras that scan license plates and the fine is €200 -- charged to the rental car company who then put the charge on your credit card -- so not worth the headache not to purchase one.

I mentioned before that we were at the SkiWelt in March of 2003. It was our first ski trip to the Alps and we were overwhelmed by how much bigger and dramatic the mountains were than the Rockies, but given how new we were to the sport (it was the end of our third season) we weren't aware at the time that the SkiWelt was at low elevation for the range:
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Once on-mountain, we were reminded how big it is: seven miles by eight miles as the crow flies with 165 miles of marked runs trails linking nine villages. Apparently, Ski Arlberg has a bit more piste miles (along with piles of offpiste acres) so the SkiWelt is now #2 in the country but still very big, which they call out in their branding. They use the Austrian-German word "irrsinnig" as an adjective and adverb (insane and insanely) to make taglines that you'll see on various surfaces like here: insanely big, insanely fast, insanely fun, etc.
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The SkiWelt's bread and butter is casual skiers, families, and retirees rather hard-charging experts, as you can see on the trail map:
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Most of the terrain consists of wide intermediate cruising trails that roll through below-treeline slopes. Here are a few shots of my wife doing what the SkiWelt is built for: travelling big distances between villages connected by high-speed lifts:
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It’s all about "piste-bashing":
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Snowmaking obviously does a lot of the heavy lifting here. especially in a season where Austria got the short end of the frozen precipitation stick. Conditions were all over the map -- usually a mixture of sugar and corn covering rock-hard boilerplate, and by early afternoon brutal mashed potatoes.
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Here's Hohe Salve, the highest point in the circuit at a modest 1,800 meters:
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While conditions were good, bad, and ugly depending on where and when you were in a particular place, the one thing that SkiWelt delivers in spades no matter the surface is F&B, with more than 80 atmospheric mountain restaurants, cafes, and bars scattered throughout the circuit. It's typical at so many places in the Alps but the Austrians have it down to a science.
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We decided not to gorge and split a lunch of boiled spinach dumplings (Knödel), salad, apple strudel, and she had a macchiato: $22
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The day becomes a series of hut stops mixed in with skiing. Here's one of the places we had a beer:
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There's lots of signage around the circuit but a few times we ended up taking a wrong turn, ended up somewhere we hadn't planned, and had to take two or three lifts to get back to where we intended:
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It's always interesting to observe ski fashion at a resort with a mainstream demographic. You'll still see a fair number of body bags on non-powder days:
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But even more prevalent are matching coats and pants. I'd guestimate than more than a third of the skiers had something like these two guys in the middle:
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And this:
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Mid-afternoon:
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Given the above, it's odd that SkiWelt has become part of the Indy Pass portfolio, which is mainly smaller independent mountains with local character. The resort sits at the opposite end of the spectrum: huge and efficient in moving large numbers of casual skiers across vast distances. If you want to check out a French variant, the equally extensive Portes du Soleil is also part of the pass.
 
Thank you, James — wonderful pictures!
Fun fact: my first (and so far only) visit there was also in March 2003 😃 We were staying in Kitzbühel at the time. Since my companion had back issues that day, we didn’t ski much, so I’m still missing more than 70 lifts from that ski area.

Allow me to add, you can buy the ticket for the toll online in Austria https://www.asfinag.at/ and Switzerland https://via.admin.ch/shop/dashboard
and in contrast to EZ Pass they also accept international credit cards here (can you hear the hazzle it was for me to pay the der in the US 😉?)
 
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the equally extensive Portes du Soleil is also part of the pass.
I did not know that. Portes du Soleil has far more interesting skiing. Liz' summation of SkiWelt as 5x (Killington+Sugarbush) remains accurate from this TR IMHO.
It’s all about "piste-bashing"
Yes, Liz and I skied 60K vertical in our 2 days at SkiWelt, part of my 6-day record of 184,900. But we probably had better snow in January of a good year vs. March of a mediocre one.
 
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Portes du Soleil has far more interesting skiing.
I can't argue with that.

Liz' summation of SkiWelt as 5x (Killington+Sugarbush) remains accurate from this TR IMHO.
I meant to bring this up earlier -- I know that it's tempting to fixate on a pithy analogy or thought bubble and then repeatedly double down on it (similar to the Worldskitraveller brouhaha or the "western Catskills don't get lake effect"). While I don't deny that the Skiwelt is in several ways similar to a northeastern industrial resort experience, it's not a perfect analogy. Do these pix with the wide open expanses on the upper mountain look like Killington?

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The summit of Hohe Salve (pic below, marginally skiable when were were there in 2017, but not during James' visit) is the only skiing above tree line in the original and largest Ski Welt complex north of the road into Kitzbuhel.
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On the south side of that road, Westendorf and Kitzbuhel have 1,000+ vertical above tree line, thus much more of an Alps ambience.

My original comment was that SkiWelt resembled the Summit counties in Utah and Colorado. Liz made the Northeast analogy.
Conditions were all over the map -- usually a mixture of sugar and corn covering rock-hard boilerplate, and by early afternoon brutal mashed potatoes.
Based upon the above quote from the horse's mouth, that sounds more typical Northeast to me. This season it's been a more accurate description of the Summit Counties. On the positive side, SkiWelt has much more comprehensive snowmaking coverage than anywhere in the American West, also an analogy to the Northeast.

I'm not critiquing James' decision to ski there: it was his arrival day and on his pass. However the Indy Pass commitment forced James to forgo the usual Alps strategy of flexibility. We are leaving for the Alps in 9 days and Fraser is telling me still not to commit to a specific place upon arrival. There is some new snow expected this weekend after a 2+ week dry spell and he would like to see how it turns out.
 
I'm not critiquing James' decision to ski there: it was his arrival day and on his pass. However the Indy Pass commitment forced James to forgo the usual Alps strategy of flexibility
Fair enough. My wife wanted to go to a German-speaking country; I'd been in Switzerland the last few years; and having an Indy Pass made it both affordable and less flexible. It offers three glacier areas so that's good.
 
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