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Val Gardena and the Sella Ronda?

 Poster: A snowHead
Poster: A snowHead
I'm interested in a weeks holiday probably in Selva having heard good things and loving the look of the Val Gardena lift maps. But I'm a little confused.

Does the Val Gardena lift pass cover all lifts on the sella ronda?

Is it worth getting the Dolomite superski pass for a week for a good intermediate (Val Gardena looks pretty big!)

If I were not to stay in one of the other areas on the circute say Arrabba which pass would I need then?


Puzzled
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 Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
I would definately get the Superski pass-it's a massive ski area and a good intermediate will want to access all areas.There are lots of day trips you can take on the Sella Ronda from each area ie Hidden Valley,etc
Iain
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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?
jakemanc, you can't do the Sella Ronda without a Superski pass as you leave Val Gardena and pass through Alta Badia, Arabba/Marmolada and Val di Fassa areas.

I would recommend a good intermediate to spend the little bit extra (€15-€17 on a 6 day pass) and get the Superski pass as you will be able to make the most all the available skiing, you'll be blown away by how far you can travel on skis! Marmolada, Hidden Valley, Cinque Torri all become possible.

There is in theory enough (175km is claimed) to keep you occupied in Val Gardena, but a lot is up on the Alpe di Siusi which is very tame and gets a bit too much sun. Maybe if you were staying down in Ortisei, it might make sense to stick with the Val Gardena pass, as you have easy access to the Alpe di Siusi and Seceda and it's a trek up the valley to get over to the other valleys. But from Selva it's so easy, one gondola ride and you can ski down to Colfosco and Corvara in Alta Badia.

If you stay in Arabba, I would also say get the Superski, as there's even less km on the local pass.
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jakemanc, I found this nice little photo tour of some of what's available on the Superski pass:

http://www.satoshi.de/skiing/sella_ronda/index.html
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 Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do.
Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do.
jakemanc, another vote for getting the Dolomiti Superski pass - as a good intermediate you'll def want to get out and explore the other areas linked around the Sella Ronda.
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Val Gardena is one of the 12 areas of Dolomites. The Dolomites Super ski pass covers the entire 12 areas.

A skier can purchase only one local area and stay within that area. The Val Gardena pass covers Santa Cristina as well as Ortisei (which includes Alps Du Siusi). It has its own loop big enough to ski the wholw day round it.

Sella Ronda is formed by linking 4 separated areas of Val Gardena, Alta Badia, Arabba and Canazei so a Super ski pass is required.

Depending on the area I seem to remember the day pass of a Super Ski was only 1.5 Euro more expensive than skiing Cortina D'Ampezzo.

The Super Ski Pass also covers the shuttle buses between areas which exist at leaste between Kronplatz and Alta Badia, Arabba and Civetta. It is probably one of the cheapest ski passes per number of lifts or per km piste.
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 Then you can post your own questions or snow reports...
Then you can post your own questions or snow reports...
Thanks all, it seems like a no brainer, the superski it is. The resort/s and pics look fantastic hope to be there soon.
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 After all it is free Go on u know u want to!
After all it is free Go on u know u want to!
I'm off in January with my daughter, she will be in ski school in the mornings and with me in the afternoon. I was wondering about getting only the Val Gardena pass for her and doing an upgrade on a daily basis for when we have time to do the Sella Ronda. Do daily extensions exist or should I get here a Dolomite Super Ski Pass?
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stevew, it's €15 (€10 for a junior) extra in January (after the 9th). It might be tricky to do the Sella Ronda after ski school in the afternoon unless you go quickly with no stops (please don't get caught in the wrong valley when the lifts close), but you may want to stray out of the valley to Colfosco and the Edelweiss valley or across to Belvedere above Canazei. Only you can decide whether it's worth saving €10-15 and not have the possibility, perhaps depends on daughter's ability. AFAIK you can't do a daily upgrade.
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luigi, thanks for that - really helpful. Hannah has a day without ski school at the end of the holiday so I was thinking of doing it them with her is she's up for it, hopefully I'll be able to have done it before then to make out there are no surprises.
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stevew, the Sella Ronda is all blues and reds, I did it on my 3rd week on skis, tired but satisfied.

Most people agree that the clockwise route is marginally more difficult because of a steep red pitch off the Porta Vescovo above Arabba that gets busy and cut up as the day progresses.

If Hannah can parallel and cope with the steepness of the reds off the Ciampinoi above Selva and has stamina for 26km of skiing, she'll be OK.
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