|
   
Winter Sports
Alpine Skiing and Boarding
This attractive small spa town has been a resort ever since the first
tourists arrived here to take the waters in 1806. It lies at the head of a
dramatic river gorge midway between Chamonix and Megève and serves as the
gateway to two important ski areas encompassing the villlages of Le Fayet, Le
Bettex and Saint-Nicolas-de-Véroce. The main skiing to the east of the town,
reached by a fast 20-person gondola from the outskirts, is linked across the
slopes of Mont d'Arbois to Megève. The area has a terrain park and a half-pipe.
On the other side of town, the venerable Mont Blanc Tramway, a rack-and-pinion
railway dating back to 1904, takes you to the top of the neighbouring ski area
of Les Houches. Superb for all levels and on sunny days the best views of Mont
Blanc!
Cross Country Skiing
More and more people are looking to give cross country skiing a go. It's a
great way of exploring the beautiful winter landscapes away from the crowds -
you really can experience the wilderness and get in touch with nature just a few
kilometres out of the resort. It's a relatively easy sport to pick up as long as
you are reasonably fit. Skis and boots are lighter with your heels free to push
yourself along. The majority of cross-country takes place on prepared and signed
trails called "Loipe", and these are graded from blue to black, easy to
difficult, the harder trails having more ascent and descent. But overall, most
of the skiing takes places on relatively flat terrain, therefore takes place in
valley bottoms, or high mountain plateaux. This is superb sport for those who
want to get outside in the mountain air, burn some calories but not necessarily
adhere to the descents of alpine skiing! You can hire your equipment from most
shops. You can also book yourself lessons to get yourself going quicker. There are 75km of trails across the
Saint Gervais area. Some are at altitude, making
lunchtime meetings with Alpine skiers simple. Known as "Ski de Fond" in French.
Snow Shoeing
This is a means of travelling through
the snowy mountains on foot at either low or high altitudes. Another brilliant
sport for those who do not wish to ski. One has to be fit, comfortable with snow
and competent in the mountains particularly in winter conditions. It is very
enjoyable though since you get away from the crowded pistes and get to see the
local wild life such as chamois and marmottes. From St gervais you just get the
most magnificent views of Mont Blanc from the Gouter side up along the
Bionnassay glacier! Known as "Raquettes" in French.
Ski Touring
The Domaine Evasion is an excellent area for ski touring - from easy to
difficult routes. Along the valley in Les Contamines there are some amazing
places to ski tour plus winter refuges (unmanned) to stay in for over night
excursions. Ski
touring is a great way to access nature as it was intended to be seen. The
Mont Blanc Massif offers amazing views from this pocket of skiing. The lifts provide
easy access to the mountain wilderness that make this region special. With the
necessary equipment and a bit of hard work, riders will be able to escape the
crowds on the slopes and find some great skiing.
Known as "Ski de Randonee" in French.
Ski Areas
Domaine Evasion
The Evasion Mont-Blanc ski domaine (ski pass Evasion) - 113 lifts, 445km of
pistes - covers the large area and pistes of Saint-Gervais/ Le Bettex, Combloux,
Jaillet, Les Contamines, Megève/ Mont d'Arbois, Megève/ Rochebrune, Mont Joly/
Mont Joux/ Saint Nicolas de Véroce. Choose your ski area opposite Mont Blanc and
vary skiing pleasures during your stay. All areas are easily accessible, for
beginners to advanced skiers. The ski area is open from December to April. The biggest
highest and most varied sector is Mont Arbois. It offers woody slopes but is
mainly open especially higher up. Most of the slopes face west, but there are
north-east-facing slopes to Le Bettex and on down to Saint Gervais. You can work
your way over to Mont Joux and up to the Mont Joly area - Evasion ski area
highest slopes. From there you can descend to the backwater village of St
Nicholas-de-Véroce (there is a splendid red run along the ridge with spectacular
views of Mont Blanc and mile upon mile of rolling peaks on both sides. From Mont
d'Arbois lift base you can get to the valley of Rochebrune (Alpette the
starting point of the historic downhill course). A network of gentle wooded,
north-east-facing slopes, served by drags and chair-lifts, lead to the high
point of Cote 2000. Another area Le Jaillet was revitalised in 2005. In one
direction the new system will take you almost to La Clusaz and in the other,
gentle tree lined runs go down to Combloux. The different ski areas in the
Domaine Evasion are Saint Gervais/ Le Bettex - Mont Joux, Combloux, Jaillet, Les
Contamines, Megeve/ Mont d'Arbois - Princesse, Megeve/ Rochebrune - Cote 2000,
Saint-Nicholas de Véroce - Mont Joly. One of the main attractions of the Evasion domaine, is that it does not
attract that many expert off piste skiers who are lured to Chamonix steeper
descents 45 minutes away. As a result you can often make first tracks on
challenging slopes many days after a fresh dump. The Mont Joly and Mont Joux ski
areas off the steepest slopes. Down to St Nicholas offers some more challenging
runs. Cote 2000 has a small section of steep runs, including good off-piste.
For beginners, there are a good choice of nursery slopes in the Evasion domaine - in Megeve
at valley level and more snow sured ones at altitude on each of the main
mountains. There are also plenty of very easy green runs to progress to -
particularly in Combloux.
For intermediates, they will enjoy the Evasion ski area. The black runs are
perfectly manageable and the runs between Mont d'Arbois and Le Bettex are
also interesting. The new link in La Giettaz is expected to mean access to
steeper slopes there too. It is a great area of the less confident.
For advanced, the 4810m summit of Mont Blanc rises on the communal
territory of Saint Gervais. The village thus disposes of the most extreme
difference in altitude in Europe: from 580 to 4810 metres. Saint Gervais offers
numerous skiing possibilities between villages and eternal snow. In hiking
boots, on a mountain bike, with crampons or seal skins, discover the numerous
facets of the mountains.
For snowboarders - to your boards - the Mont Joux Snow Park, at the heart of the
Evasion Mont Blanc Ski area is one of the top spots in the region. A superb half
pipe that hosted, in March 2002, the French Snowboard Championships. original
modules (try snowskating!), music, animation and… BBQs! The Mont Joux also
offers 4 varied slopes for your skiing pleasure, 2 slalom stadiums, and a mogul
run. The Mont Joux snow park is accessible with both the Evasion and Saint
Gervais ski passes.
Other Ski Areas
Chamonix - Vallee Blanche
Chamonix is dominated by the 3842m Aiguille du Midi, reached by cable-car
from the southern side of town. This is the starting point for the famous Vallée
Blanche, a glorious 22km descent past yawning crevasses and house-sized séracs
(ice boulders) all the way back to Chamonix. Anyone who can ski parallel and who
is not afraid of heights can tackle the easiest of the four main routes, but you
must take a guide. At the start you have to negotiate the ice steps cut into the
spine of the ridge leading down from the cable-car station. They are not
difficult, but the 2000m sheer drop to your left can have an unsettling
psychological effect. The return to Chamonix is by rack-and-pinion railway from
Montenvers or via a short climb and a long descent down a narrow path and piste
to a cowbell factory on the outskirts of Chamonix.
Chamonix - Les Houches (1010m) green blue red black
Les Houches is included on the Mont Blanc Unlimited ski pass but not Chamonix
Le Pass. The slopes are a little more sheltered than the rest of the valley making it a good
option on bad weather days plus why not have a go and the Kandahar - the world
cup downhill run! Les Houches has amazing south-east views of Mont Blanc!
Italy - Courmayeur green blue red black
You can also go for a day through the Mont Blanc tunnel to the Italian resort
of Courmayeur. It takes half an hour to drive to the ski areas of Val Veny
through the Mont Blanc tunnel. The skiing there is varied but not as difficult usually as in the Chamonix valley.
You will also find the restaurants far cheaper!
|