I’ll be in Europe for planned spring hiking in a few weeks. Prior to a trip I’m usually hoping for cold and precipitation. This time I’m hoping for warm and sunny.
We’ve skied Cervinia and Zermatt. The plan was not to take skis or do any novelty skiing but because winter is really hanging on I’m flirting with the thoughts of skiing at Duex Alpes again.I don't know where you are going, but obviously glacier skiing could be in the mix. Zermatt can be accessed from Switzerland on the north side, and Cervinia from the south and west - especially from France once the passes open. Besides, the best summer skiing (until July) in Zermatt is actually --> Cervinia! By far! This is never written about and neglected by winter/ski writers. Cervinia had advanced intermediate/low expert terrain open with accessible couloirs till early summer. Zermatt had the classic Matterhorn views, some OK intermediate pitches, but lots of flats.
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How did you route this trip?
It looks like the premier carriers of the Middle East are no longer reliable for the near future: Emirates, Etihad, and Qatar.
I have flown Turkish Airlines, and it's a steal for Europe! Especially skiing (they need to preserve (summer) year-round capacity, so winter seats are unfilled).
Coach (trans-Atlantic portion) includes Large Seats/Pitch (industry-leading), a Lacoste amenities bag (Economy Plus-like), 2 free checked bags at base fare (do not need to pull a James and argue ski bag and boot bag are one!), and get 1 or 2 free nights in Istanbul (if you want. It's definitely one of Europe's or Asia's Top 10 Cities, not a Dubai (i.e. Miami/Dallas/Houston) Shopping Mall!). More importantly, its winter passenger occupancy rate is so low that you get a full row or an empty middle seat to yourself. Food is excellent, much above average.
We’ve skied Cervinia and Zermatt. The plan was not to take skis or do any novelty skiing but because winter is really hanging on
I do recommend taking your ski boots though.
I’ll be in the Alps on Sunday. There has been a rapid change from an unusually cold spring in the French alps to normal temps now. By next week it’s predicted to be about 85 degrees in the valleys. Hopefully the south faces in the alpine are walkable.
Tempting but all that extra gear for a day on what could be sticky snow…..The Alps have had a very snowy May!
I would strongly consider skiing over hiking for a day.
Les Deux Alpes looks especially worthwhile: glaciers (2 sectors) and the Signal Lift. The NEWer 2-Stage Jandri S3 services this, another lift marvel. And snow bases ar 40-150 inches / 110-360 cm. Curerntly, over 3000ft+/1000m of vertical is open.
The Signal lift sector faces north, and has very good expert terrain to skier's right and left!
Overall, Les 2 Alpes likely offers skiing equivalent to Zermatt/Cervinia.
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Ouverture des pistes de ski – État des pistes | Les 2 Alpes
Pour une journée de ski parfaite, consultez les ouvertures de pistes et remontées mécaniques, la météo par secteur, les hauteurs de neige, les risqueswww.les2alpes.com
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I’m going to turn 64Tempting but all that extra gear for a day on what could be sticky snow…..
And I’m about to turn 54 and I’ve never gone on an overseas trip without skiing. The time is right to break that one dimensional streak.![]()
Tempting but all that extra gear for a day on what could be sticky snow…..
Extra points for honesty!How many Francophone afternoons are you realistically going to have, struggling with the French language to converse with the shopkeeper at the fromagerie?
I agree with ChrisC's sell to Sbooker here. Surely Sbooker has read enough of my late season Mammoth reports (including this week!) to see the upside of late spring skiing in right places (meaning not Australia!). Recall that on one of those trips I forgot my ski boots and had to rent.Again, your summer ski day is a small window, not a full day. Start early so you find the 2-4 hours that are worthwhile, then call it a day. You don't need gear for every scenario. Also, if the weather sucks, just cancel entirely and do something else (maybe better weather down low, next valley, indoors, etc).
Corn snow is my favorite condition to ski groomers. And steep terrain can be more forgiving in well timed spring conditions also.French is Sbooker's wife Kylie's hobby of the past several years. That's one of the reasons they lean toward French ski areas.How many Francophone afternoons are you realistically going to have, struggling with the French language to converse with the shopkeeper at the fromagerie?
We’ll be hiking with a little bit of biking. We have clothing that could suit summer skiing.There is no extra gear! Rent! Assuming you will pack for outdoor activities in France/Alps (and expect some rain/inclement weather), you are not really bringing extra gear.
Expect you have a shell and a hat. You really just need maybe some light gloves and pants (even hiking can suffice). You just re-use layers.
How many Francophone afternoons are you realistically going to have, struggling with the French language to converse with the shopkeeper at the fromagerie? After a few days, enough! Even Rick Steves advocates getting out.
I have skied the following on rental gear (USA ski areas on business-related trips when not living in the Northwest):
- Zermatt/Crevinia - June
- Crystal Mountain WA - June and July
- Whistler/Blackcomb - June
- Timbeline Lodge OR - August
Again, your summer ski day is a small window, not a full day. Start early so you find the 2-4 hours that are worthwhile, then call it a day. You don't need gear for every scenario. Also, if the weather sucks, just cancel entirely and do something else (maybe better weather down low, next valley, indoors, etc).
We’ll be hiking with a little bit of biking. We have clothing that could suit summer skiing.