Poster: A snowHead
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Looking like the chosen destination for next year is Italy
Cervinia, staying at the Hotel Petit Parlais
Leaving first week in Feb
Going with 4 snowboarders and 3 skiers (inc me)
Anybody have any experiences from that part of the world.
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Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
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Usually very snowsure.
Wide open easy pistes cervinia side.
More challenging stuff over in Zermatt, but a bit of a trek.
Would go there again.
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Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see?
Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see?
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Skiied over there whilst staying in Zermatt a couple of years back. Yes, indeed, lots of long runs, above the tree line including a 14 klms run down to Valtourneche. Worth going over to Zermat for a day, as it has very good skiing, but make sure that you get back to the top lift before it closes otherwise a very expensive taxi ride back to Cervinia. Also take your passport.
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Be very very careful coming back into Cervinia from the top lift at the end of the day if there's a white-out ... or you'll end up like me... happily skiing out of the white-out and thinking "uh-oh... this looks like Zermatt, *not* Italy"... ski like a total loony back down to the cable car... ooops last one of the day missed... don't want to pay for a taxi, don't want to stay overnight in Zermatt because I was on holiday with my mother and she'd only spend the whole night panicking... so your only option is to take the drag lift... I forget how long this is - 3km? 4km? wow! thigh burner!
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Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do.
Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do.
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Renry, am going as well in January and the comments above some it up from my research. I am going to start another thread as I need to get myself to the hotel (not same as yours) from geneva and the hotel has quoted 337 euros....one way!
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You'll need to Register first of course.
You'll need to Register first of course.
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Peter Leuzzi, you can hire a car for far less for a whole week.
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Helen Beaumont, thats what I am thinking too, hence the idea of driving and leaving the car. we are only away for 4 days. It just gets down to how long is the journey?
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Peter Leuzzi, I wouldn't worry too much. www.viamichelin.com puts it at 2.5hrs throught the Mont Blanc Tunnel. We use this site all the time for directions. and it is usually fairly accurate with it's journey times. You can also change the date of travel to take account of winter weather, planned roadworks etc. Hire the car, and drive to the resort, it won't be that bad. I wouldn't feel happy leaving a car somewhere that I couldn't keep an eye on it.
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You'll get to see more forums and be part of the best ski club on the net.
You'll get to see more forums and be part of the best ski club on the net.
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I stayed at the Petit Palias back in 2003.
Nice enough hotel excellently placed right by the gondala station.
Its a Crystal Club hotel and as a result all of the staff are British which took away the Italian feel from the holiday for me. Nice enough food i seem to remember but the afternoon cakes were fabulous!
We also did the Snowmobile excersion which was great fun.
Anythink alse specifically you wanting to know?
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My recollection of a day there many years ago is very flattering motorways with excellent snow and trying to use a squat in ski boots and salopettes.
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snowHeads are a friendly bunch.
snowHeads are a friendly bunch.
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We went to Cervinia this easter and stayed at the Petit Palais. Really good location, a couple of hundred metres downhill to the gandola/cable car station and you can ski back at night via a small track.
just a couple of points though, the transfer coach will probably drop you off in the car park in the cantre of Cervinia (your bags go up to the hotel in a van, you walk) and the food this year was variable. Not bad, but I think they were just trying too hard to do a 'fancy' menu and it just didn't quite work.
A good hotel though and a great place to ski with some good mountain restaurants. We would definately go back again.
ps try the Tea Room in the village for cakes, coffee and drinks.
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And love to help out and answer questions and of course, read each other's snow reports.
And love to help out and answer questions and of course, read each other's snow reports.
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I've been a few times to Cervinia. LOADS of runs which if the weather's ok will take you an age to explore (incuding Zermatt and the glacier). Looks like they're building a further chair lift from Cretaz at village level. Anyone got any info on this? There's a few pics on www.cervinia.it
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Its a great venue, enjoy..i
f the weather turns and you're on the Zermatt side then get you back bottom up the lifts pronto, they have a habit of shutting the cable car upto the kleine matterhorn, which means that the only way home is the drags..these are a mare if you are a boarder and dont do drags, but note if you fall of about 1/2 the way upt the upper one you can ski down and turn left and go over the theodolpass and bob's you're uncle. Likewise the only route out of the valtourneche valley involves a drag which is a bummer.
tips
The black off the back of furg down to furi can be quite amusing / tough depending on the snow conditions and number of punters.
As you come down to Furi the second restaurant on the left is wicked - one with the 'traditional unifoms' does great rotti
restaturants on the swiss side will aceept euros but pay you back in swiss francs, pain in the back bottom on the last day..
The italian bars a now "smoking forbidden" which rocks and actually seemed to be followed by the Italians..(no chance in france!)
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You know it makes sense.
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Liked the skiing and the apres (on the one day I was there so dont take this as any informed comment) but there seemed to be an hell of a lot of stairs in the base building to get to the gondola and it was a long way up. On mountain food was v good as I recall. The Italian clientele had a very relaxed approach to the skiing day. The deck chairs went out about 11, lunch was later and the ski down was about 3-3.30. I dont remember the slopes being that busy between 12 and 3.
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Otherwise you'll just go on seeing the one name:
Otherwise you'll just go on seeing the one name:
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Colin wrote: |
Liked the skiing and the apres (on the one day I was there so dont take this as any informed comment) but there seemed to be an hell of a lot of stairs in the base building to get to the gondola and it was a long way up. On mountain food was v good as I recall. The Italian clientele had a very relaxed approach to the skiing day. The deck chairs went out about 11, lunch was later and the ski down was about 3-3.30. I dont remember the slopes being that busy between 12 and 3. |
Renry..... The hotel you are staying at is right next to and just above the Gondala station so dont worry about the steps too much. (as you can see in this pic)
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Poster: A snowHead
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Thats the hotel in the photo above. You come out the front door, turn left, walk down the road about 100m, go down some steps and you are at the gondola station. We usually took the gondola up as opposed to the cable car although that was more timing than anything else. If I remember, you can leave your skis and boots at the top station if you dont want to ski back down.
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Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
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Helen Beaumont wrote: |
Peter Leuzzi, I wouldn't worry too much. www.viamichelin.com puts it at 2.5hrs throught the Mont Blanc Tunnel. We use this site all the time for directions. and it is usually fairly accurate with it's journey times. You can also change the date of travel to take account of winter weather, planned roadworks etc. Hire the car, and drive to the resort, it won't be that bad. I wouldn't feel happy leaving a car somewhere that I couldn't keep an eye on it. |
Check on the weather though. If there's a lot of snow on the French side, the traffic can back-up from the tunnel road considerably. Just depends as a *lot* of lorries use the tunnel.
Since they ran the Autostrada up to the tunnel, you can get down to the Cervinia road very quickly now, and after that it's a windy mountain road. My sister puts it at aboyt 40 mins from Courmayeur, but she's starting from the town, not the main road, so it might be slightly less.
If you have a car, then if it's windy and much of the resort is closed, you can nip down to Aosta and get a gondola up to Pila, which is much lower.
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Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see?
Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see?
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You need to Login to know who's really who.
You need to Login to know who's really who.
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The new lift from Furi to Riffelberg looks very useful if you're staying in Cervinia. It means you can get over to the Gornergrat/Sunnegga/Rothorn areas of Zermatt without having to go down to the village and take the bus to the Sunnegga Express. Particularly since the international pass from Cervnia now covers all the Zermatt skiiing, not just the Klein Matterhorn area as it used to. We were in Cervinia in late December last year and I spent most of my time on the Zermatt side, since most of the Cervinia pistes were closed from lack of snow and you couldn't even get over to Valtournenche. This was, however, the worst snow I've seen there in 15 years or so: usually it's pretty good, though wind can be a problem (that's lift-closing wind, not flatus (though I suppose that could close lifts too)).
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Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do.
Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do.
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I was there in early December a couple of years ago, and even though the town was empty and the snow was non-existent down there, the high-altitude stuff was fab - especially the runs over the top just going onto the Swiss side of the map
We did a long weekend from Turin airport - sensational stuff
you'll have a blast!
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You'll need to Register first of course.
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I was there in a big group in March. The slopes on the Cervinia side are pretty easy, but still great fun - try the long run down to Valtournach - superb. Without doubt the better skiing is out of Zermatt, so I'd recommend you try out those slopes early on the holiday and leave the easy stuff for when you're knackered at the end of the week. As Alexandra notes... look out for the very long drag in white-out conditions... scary stuff! Enjoy your trip, you'll love it (Copa Pan for drinks in the evening).
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I have to say I'm amazed at the positive views on here about Cervinia ,, I've been there 3 or 4 times for weekends (don't ask me why) and I am not in a hurry to go back .... the town is pretty boring and the skiing is distinctly average - kind of high and windswept like some of the French resorts without the variety or amount of runs. Zermat seems better but the ski areas that side are a bit separated and they're along trip back to Cervinia.
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Cervinia is pretty sunny, has wide swooping runs, and pretty good vertical.
I found some of the lifts (and drags) to be a little old fashioned, particularly
on the Valtourneche loop. Some of the runs there can not be skiied out of
without taking a tiresome Poma, which is not obvious when you started
down the run.
It is a great place for fast skiing and mid level skiiers. Better skiiers can
try Zermatt for a day, but it really uses up a lot of travel time, and is more
of a thing to try to say you did it, rather than something to really enjoy.
Zermatt's skiing is hard to get to (except for Klein Matterhorn) from Cervinia.
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