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#1
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Andorra
pushes aside tumbleweed and taps mike
Er, hello, is this thing on? Andorra: I've always thought of it as being somewhere I wouldn't bother going, but I might be skiing with friends who've had a premiminary look at what's available and seen details of a resort here (I didn't ask exactly which resort), so I thought I'd do some research. This would be a family group with children aged four to about twelve, whth all except one person pretty much absolute beginners. Is the snow reliable and is the resort likely to be both beginner- friendly and have enough to do for a reasonably good skier/snowboarder for a week? Is there much to do for part-time skiers? Ski schools - any horror stories? Thanks. |
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#2
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Andorra
On 2 Oct 2011 20:49:05 GMT, PipL alter ego
wrote: pushes aside tumbleweed and taps mike Er, hello, is this thing on? blows cobwebs aside Did somebody say something? Andorra: I've always thought of it as being somewhere I wouldn't bother going, but I might be skiing with friends who've had a premiminary look at what's available and seen details of a resort here (I didn't ask exactly which resort), so I thought I'd do some research. Quite right too. Which resort you thinking of, or haven't you got that far yet? This would be a family group with children aged four to about twelve, whth all except one person pretty much absolute beginners. Good English-speaking instruction is a positive factor there - none of your ESF 'just follow me' nonsense. So yes, a good place to start. Is the snow reliable and is the resort likely to be both beginner- friendly and have enough to do for a reasonably good skier/snowboarder for a week? Probably, which resort? and Yes, respectively. Is there much to do for part-time skiers? Lots of places to drink. Other than that, not a lot. Oh, some bits, notably Pas de la Casa (which are, IMO, best avoided) are full of brash 'cheap' shops and bars, sort of like duty-free Magalouf a la Montagne. The so-called duty-free shops always manage to have models of stuff that you've never heard of, and therefore can't compare prices on. Often last year's model, sorta thing. Ski schools - any horror stories? Nope. But what else? The only time I've been there was for three weeks (Ski Club repping) over xmas and new year. As it happened that particular season had a very poor start in the Alpes, but there was so much snow in Andorra that they had to close the roads at times. My experience was of the Granvalira area, which at that time was only just renamed, rather than the seperately run areas of PdlC and Soldeu up till that point. It's really quite an extensive area, with some variety too. Some tree skiing, some higher and more exposed. Quite a bit of off-piste potential too, particularly one part which was only served by a Cat-tow which didn't always run, and gave onto at least four obvious descents otherwise unreachable. Great, it was. Nightlife (in Soldeu and it's little hamlet of el Tartar) is quite lively, with many brit tour groups going on organised bar crawls and suchlike, and the noise and litter levels are consistent with that, so best to avoid the more central hotels if you want more peace and quiet. Also note that most of the hotels do buffet service, which was OK, but raraely good. They don't seem to have the focus on keeping food hot hot like we do. We were eating around on a weekly rota, different hoptel each night, and some were better than others, but TBH I can't remember which were which, plus it's five years or more ago, so has probably changed. But if I were going I'd choose somewhere that did't do buffet dinners. YMMV. Anthing else you want to know? -- Ace Ski Club of Great Britain http://www.skiclub.co.uk/ All opinions expressed are those of the poster and in no way reflect those of the Ski Club or its members |
#3
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Andorra
On Mon, 03 Oct 2011 10:28:38 +0200, Ace wrote:
snip useful stuff Anthing else you want to know? Well, there was, but it turns out that under-sixes can't go into ski school in that resort. So that's an end. We're currently looking at Are & hemsedal: Are's the favourite as it's both cheaper and the nearest lift's only 75m from the apartment. Unfortunately it's in the Duved area, which appears to be isolated from the main ski area. One problem is the dates: our friends can only ski from 26th December to 2nd January, which is rather a serious limit. I looked at the Chalet Cascades in Flaine, which I seem to recall you saying was flexible in dates, is that right? I'm not sure how easy it is for novice skiers to get out of, though I guess they could walk up the hill 100m to (I think) a green run that runs down to the ski school area. -- Pip |
#4
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Andorra
On Thu, 06 Oct 2011 22:44:48 +0100, PipL wrote:
I looked at the Chalet Cascades in Flaine, which I seem to recall you saying was flexible in dates, is that right? Certainly used to be. Where flexible=prepared to accept bookings that aren't exclusively Saturday-Saturday. I'm not sure how easy it is for novice skiers to get out of, though I guess they could walk up the hill 100m to (I think) a green run that runs down to the ski school area. Yes, a short walk up gets you to the top of a baby drag and a beginners area, or lets you ski round and down to the DMS via the green run round past the restaurant Epicia. Perhaps not perfect for beginners, but it wouldn't worry me overly if I were in your position. Or to put it another way, it's only the same walk you have to do if you're going out on the **** after dinner, so it must be OK, right? -- Ace Ski Club of Great Britain http://www.skiclub.co.uk/ All opinions expressed are those of the poster and in no way reflect those of the Ski Club or its members |
#5
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Andorra
On Fri, 07 Oct 2011 10:35:02 +0200, Ace wrote:
On Thu, 06 Oct 2011 22:44:48 +0100, PipL wrote: I looked at the Chalet Cascades in Flaine, which I seem to recall you saying was flexible in dates, is that right? Certainly used to be. Where flexible=prepared to accept bookings that aren't exclusively Saturday-Saturday. Yep, that's what I meant. I'm not sure how easy it is for novice skiers to get out of, though I guess they could walk up the hill 100m to (I think) a green run that runs down to the ski school area. Yes, a short walk up gets you to the top of a baby drag and a beginners area, or lets you ski round and down to the DMS via the green run round past the restaurant Epicia. Perhaps not perfect for beginners, but it wouldn't worry me overly if I were in your position. Good-oh. I'm trying to sell thidea but there is some resistance locally. Or to put it another way, it's only the same walk you have to do if you're going out on the **** after dinner, so it must be OK, right? Heh. This is a family group of sensible aspiring pillar-of-the-community types. Well, the others are. -- Pip |
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