Bargain basement skiing – how, where and when to track it down
October 7th, 2010 | Published in Features, Info & Advice | 6 Comments
Grenoble Life ski reporter Christa Gimblett gives the lowdown on budget skiing options in good time for the upcoming season.
If you’ve moved to Grenoble, chances are you’ve done so for the unparalleled skiing opportunities. Come on, admit it. You don’t have to pretend to me. And unless you won the lottery recently, you’re probably making sacrifices for the sake of the white stuff.
Brits tend to think of winter sports as being the preserve of wealthy middle-class Tarquins spending Daddy’s money (and if you only ski the Tarentaise you’d be forgiven for believing it). I’m not about to claim that you can ski on a shoestring, but there are ways of maximizing quality mountain time without breaking the bank.
Understand resort pricing
A day pass bought from the ticket window is sold at the equivalent of what hotels call rack rate. It’s the full top whack price used to calculate all the resort’s discounts. Don’t pay it if you don’t have to. Discounts are routinely available for all kinds of reasons, including (but not limited to) being young/old/a student/disabled/a big family; buying on the web; buying multiple days at once; bringing a huge group … you get the picture. Do your research – even the smallest resort has a website with pricing policies listed for all to see.
Bring your documents with you!
You’d be amazed how many people don’t do this and still expect to get a cheap ticket. You might well be old/young/a student etc etc, but no-one is going to take your word for it. Resorts suffer increasing levels of fraud, and their staff are suspicious and cynical. If you can’t produce your valid student ID, disability certificate, whatever, then you’re going to be out of luck.
Buy online in advance
You know you’re going skiing a week on Sunday. Why waste valuable hill time lining up at the ticket window with the hoi polloi? Most resorts sell online and will post your pass to you. They also offer discounted web-only rates – last season you could ski 2Alpes on a Saturday for over 10€ less than window price just because you bought the pass in the comfort of your own home. Bargain!
Join a club
Student members of the university’s Ecole de Glisse ski at 2Alpes for under 15€ when everyone else is paying nearly 40€. Check out local clubs and see what they offer. As well as financial advantage, you’ll find skiing friends who know the local resorts.
Surf the web
Sites like www.vente-privee.com sometimes offer reduced ski passes; Transisere do a bus-ticket-plus-lift-pass deal, which means cheap skiing with the bonus of being able to have a snooze on the way home; the Pass Cinésnowcard costs 10€ and offers some whopping ski discounts. An evening’s Googling can pay dividends in bargain ski time.
Get a season ticket
If you do enough skiing, a season pass can offer a huge reduction on the full day rate, but you need to do the sums carefully because they’re expensive in the first place. Check what discounts are available on the season ticket – for buying early, or owning an apartment in resort, for example. Consider how many days you’re likely to ski, then work out how much the pass will cost you per day’s skiing, and bear in mind any other discount you’re entitled to. If you’re disabled, for example, you can claim a big reduction on a day pass, so a season ticket has to work that bit harder to be worthwhile.
The other big advantage of a season pass is that you stick to one resort and get to know it well. After a few weekends you’ll begin to know where to find powder stashes a week after the last snowfall, which pistes are boiler plate ice in the mornings, where the decent snow is when everything else has turned to porridge on an April afternoon … etc. This won’t save you any money per se, but it means you will wring the maximum value out of your pass in terms of quality slide time.
Choose when you ski
Hotels and holiday apartments change over on a Saturday. This means that on Saturday mornings everyone is packing, cleaning, stressing about where the car keys are and trying to make the kids go for a wee before they get in the car. Most pertinently, they are not on the slopes. Get yourself out of bed early on a Saturday morning to hit first lifts, and you’ll have the place to yourself until lunchtime even in the big resorts in February. Again, this may not save you money (though there are web discounts for Saturday precisely because it’s quiet) but you certainly get the best value for your cash.
Don’t follow the herd …..
I know the British think Val d’Isere is the only resort worth talking about, but I’m here to tell you that they are dead wrong. I suppose you could get up at five in the morning to drive the necessary 170km, then pay 50€ to queue for half an hour and then find that the resort’s seasonnaires have tracked all the powder, but why would you? Particularly when, as a Grenoblois, you practically trip over a ski area every time you leave the house. The city is ringed by small to medium sized resorts where 40 minutes drive gets you a day out at half the price of the usines de ski and you can have steak frites and a beer on the mountain without taking out a mortgage. This is where your French friends and colleagues are going every weekend. And what’s more, these resorts are not infested with seasonnaires who think they’re off-piste gods, which seriously ups your chances of getting fresh tracks even if the last snowfall was on Wednesday morning when you were stuck in that meeting. Check out www.skifrance.fr – you’re spolit for choice.
And finally, my apologies …
…. to all of you who snowboard. I know you do. I do it as well. It’s just cumbersome to say ‘ski and/or board’ all the time. Sorry.
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Christa Gimblett left the UK for a seasonal job in Europe in the recession of the early 90s and forgot to go home again, spending nearly 15 years working for UK tour operators up various mountains. Now living in Bourg d’Oisans with no cash, two cats, a man with a broken foot and a car which looks like a frog.
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October 8th, 2010 at 10:31 am (#)
I would just like to say that while I live half the year in Grenoble I have not the slightest interest in skiing!Amazing I know and difficult to believe Im sure! I was wondering if anyone else was suffering from this snow immune affliction,Is there any other human who doesnt break out in a sweat of raw excitement at the thought of ski slopes? furry boots,etc,?I would be interested in any feedback and would Grenoble life move away from the everlasting piste watch sometime to check out the sports the rest of us mere mortals are into,like running, triathalon, etc the amount of people into high level amateur athletics is amazing!anyone being out to the park lately, and if anyone says its only in the summer this can be done they are sadly mistaken
October 9th, 2010 at 10:41 am (#)
Hi Gerry,
I’m sure there are plenty of people in Grenoble, like you, who do not take an interest in skiing. I myself am not found regularly on the slopes.
However, your request that “Grenoble life move away from the everlasting piste watch” will be met with indifference by me as this is only the second article to my memory that has offered advice on possibilities for local skiing while we have published our fair share of posts on walks in the region. There have also been posts on cycling, gym membership and trekking I can direct you to.
For the “mere mortals” like yourself who are into “running and triathalon” – I suggest you submit some constructive advice for publication rather than post negative comments on other peoples’.
October 9th, 2010 at 10:46 am (#)
Looking forward to your piece on triathlon then, Gerry. ;-)
October 11th, 2010 at 9:40 am (#)
Oh touchy touchy James,I thought you knew what tongue slightly in cheek means huh? I was just trying to make a point,?Yesterday there were over a thousand people in the small village of St Pierre DeNTREMONT for a trail run and half marathon! not a snowflake in sight.9 am the place was jammed, You should have been there james I would have run you into the ground
October 11th, 2010 at 12:16 pm (#)
Ha!
Thanks Gerry but I’m not sure a trail run and half marathon is my idea of fun either … you’d be welcome to tell us more about it however …
October 12th, 2011 at 1:02 pm (#)
[...] being surrounded by mountains, the site has not neglected to mention skiing, particularly the bargain basement variety, while the city itself has been treated as both a travel destination in itself (for once) and the [...]