I’ve read about some of the ski areas on this pass on this forum. Seems incredible value to me.
I don't know the snowfall or even elevation stats but unrestricted visits for the season, even if there are only a handful of decent hills, has to be attractive.Most of these areas must not be reliable because 50 of them are currently closed on March 13. 18 of the 21 that are open are in Wallis, including the three I have skied.
With my ski season done and a few more weeks until I'm cleared for mountain biking and golf, I finally finished the Alps trip-report map that I'd started many moons ago. It underscored that in addition to the ski areas in Valais/Wallis that Tony and I have enjoyed, the Magic Pass would be useful for two lower-elevation regions in western Switzerland that I've been tracking for more than a decade but never managed to visit: the Fribourg Alps and Vaud.Magic Pass. I’ve read about some of the ski areas on this pass on this forum. Seems incredible value to me.
St. Anton probably gets MORE snow. But it has bad exposure and mediocre elevation range. So if EMSC's group is going in our usual time frame late January before school holidays, it's probably the best choice. But if the trip is after the school holidays in March, no. With advance committing in Nov/Dec. for March, you have to choose a place with high altitude and decent amount of north exposure.I think St. Anton gets better snow, but if it snows in Val d'Ivoire/Meribel/Val Thorens, you have it for a week.
Recall I went through that list and 50 of places were already closed mid-March. A lot of seasons like this one you'll be using that pass nearly all in Wallis/Valais because most of the other places are low altitude. We all have our eyes on some of the lower places. One of these years it will work out, but I wouldn't want to be committed to them in advance.Not the type of places that you'd schedule for a short destination trip booked months in advance, but definitely worthwhile if I can pick and choose my days across several weeks in early mid-season.
I can't comment on the suitability of the Arlberg at that time but if Tony says it's not ideal.......Reviving this thread quickly. The group leader of our guys trip is pushing for early March (approx March 5-9ish maybe a few days longer).
I note Tony thinks St anton might not be good exposure that late. Meribel or Val d'Isere better?
Any others for a mixed group that time of year?
This conventional wisdom makes sense if you're unable to be flexible for whatever reason, which seems to be the case here. You can see in my 3 Valleys March 2023 report -- the same week that Tony is recommending -- how good conditions were. Similar to this season's stay at Val d'Isere, there were a few mega-resort moments that rubbed me the wrong way; however, getting away from the crowds wasn't overly difficult and EMSC, accustomed to Copper and the other Colorado Ikon joints, should feel at home there.Val d'Isere and Val Thorens are conservative choices with lowest odds of poor conditions. These are definitely the places I would book in spring. For second week of March you might take more of a chance on a resort that strongly appeals to you with a more average reliability record. I'd still avoid very low altitude places like Saalbach, Portes du Soleil, etc. Those are the places to take a chance on the other side of the school holidays in late January.
I note Tony thinks St anton might not be good exposure that late. Meribel or Val d'Isere better?
Val d'Isere or Val Thorens. Meribel looks central to Trois Vallees, but Val Thorens/Les Menuires is much more expansive, especially it you add in Orelle. You can still get out early and cross over to Courchevel for a day.
As for the Arlberg, it's probably still worth consideration if you can base in Lech/Zurs vs. St. Anton. Not only is the exposure issue worse in St. Anton, I recall that EMSC's group has mixed abilities and St. Anton is not often pleasant for intermediates, especially if they have to ski into its base at the end of the day. I know Sbooker and spouse can vouch for this
This conventional wisdom makes sense if you're unable to be flexible for whatever reason, which seems to be the case here. You can see in my 3 Valleys March 2023 report -- the same week that Tony is recommending -- how good conditions were. Similar to this season's stay at Val d'Isere, there were a few mega-resort moments that rubbed me the wrong way; however, getting away from the crowds wasn't overly difficult and EMSC, accustomed to Copper and the other Colorado Ikon joints, should feel at home there.
early March (approx March 5-9ish maybe a few days longer)
I believe ChrisC has commented that in a significant number of seasons Zermatt's prime Hohtalli terrain never gets adequately covered. I know 2022 was one of those because that's where we would have gone our first week in late March before our Val Thorens reservation. I think the conclusion of that discussion is that Zermatt should not be advance booked for experts until snow is on the ground. If that happens early, a booking for late season is still OK because snow preservation is among the very best in the Alps.You could add Zermatt to the list—it might be prime time for its expert terrain to be well-covered with snow.
I would not argue with any of this. The chalet setup might be great for EMSC's group. At the end of March 2022 there had been a 3-week dry spell, Mottaret and Le Menuires were sloppy, so we never ventured lower into Meribel.Meanwhile, Meribel is one lift to Courchevel, one lift to Les Menuires or base of La Masse, or two lifts to Val Thorens. It takes 5-15 minutes to access any place in the 3 Vallees. Also, Meribel has trees for storm skiing and connects well to Courchevel's lower-elevation trees. More importantly, Meribel is a more charming village than Val Thorens and has tons of Chalets, a foreign concept to most Americans. Chalets are generally larger homes with multiple bedrooms/hot tubs/decks/etc. that can be pretty nice - along with communal dining/chef for breakfast and dinner -"Chalet Girls." Great for a group!!!! It is a much better value than traditional lodging with meals out. Staff commonly has Wednesdays off - so you can go out midweek for dinner. But I highly recommend you look into the concept! Also found in Val d'Isere. Sometimes, airfare and transfers are included ( most likely from London - might need to remove this cost/option coming from the US).
You shouldn't be. There are some years Jackson gets a run of sustained snowy weather and powder in late February/early March, but that's generously 15% of seasons and obviously not predictable.If you are comfortable booking a trip to Jackson with expected conditions in early March,
If many in your group are using Piste-to-Powder for a majority of days, I agree that's an overriding factor. In 2013 I had to catch a bus at 8:06AM in Lech to meet Piste-to-Powder in time, plus take another bus back at the end of the day.My only complaint about Lech is that it is pretty far from St. Anton, Stuben, and Rendl, and you will not get to ski these prime areas in depth. Also, from a guiding perspective - there is nothing similar to Piste-to-Powder.