Savognin, CH: 12/16/23

jamesdeluxe

Administrator
On my way back from St. Moritz, the obvious suspects for Saturday without an extensive detour were:
a) Arosa/Lenzerheide
b) Flims/Laax
c) Bivio
d) Savognin

The latter two were preferable due to being directly alongside my driving route. I ultimately decided on Savognin, keeping in mind the excellent day I had there in March 2019. I remember being impressed by its significant size for a local's hill (at 4.5 miles x 3 miles, a bigger footprint than Breckenridge) and how much they could expand the lift-served terrain both inside and outside the current perimeter, if fiscally and environmentally feasible.

Due to a family medical emergency in NJ that had me on the phone getting regular updates, I wasn't able to go to their operations page, where I would've learned that they were still in early-season ops mode, even on a weekend in mid-December. None of its four t-bars were in operations, which resulted in areas in red below being earned-turns-only and for the huge sector in blue you had to circle all the way back to the base after every run for lift access: a first-world problem but obviously not optimal.

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Check out this ridgeline on the looker's right -- all of that beautiful terrain in the sun is not part of the ski area:
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After taking a cat track around the peak, you end up on the left half of the mountain. Buttery-soft on-piste conditions:
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Skiing under the t-bar bridge:
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Three days after the midweek storm, there was plenty of low-angle-pow alongside groomed trails, which was all my early-season legs were capable of skiing. You can see from the untouched snow all the way up the t-bar on the far looker's left that it hasn't been running this season:
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Reverse shot:
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The ungroomed snow stiffened up on this facet while approaching mid-mountain. It didn't bother this guy though.
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Ski jumping on the big screen:
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I walked a few yards further to a more sedate outdoor deck: Spätzle with a view:
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As mentioned, with the t-bars not in operation, the only way to access lifts from the left half of the ski area was to cut through a small group of barns to a long but scenic cat track back to the base. I managed four laps total.
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The sign on the door: "Home Is Where The Mountains Are"
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While I got far from the full Savognin experience, it confirmed to me that FTOers should make a point of stopping there on the way to/from St. Moritz. It's a small component of why many consider Graubünden to be the premier Swiss canton for skiing (obviously debatable!).
 
I'm guessing Savognin is deep enough into the Alps to have escaped the heavy rain Dec. 12-14. Was there any sign of it even at the 1200 meter base? I'm guessing all good from that 1600 meter Tigignas gondola on up.
 
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