Ski Austria
Skiing Articles about Austria

ski austria articles

What's the best resort in Austria for a family ski vacation? Where do I find the best powder in the Tyrol? Which resorts are the closest to local airports? Where do the experts ski in Austria? What about ski resorts with facilities for non-skiers?

Plenty of questions - and over the summer Ski-Austria.com is planning to answer at least some of them so that you have an unbiased viewpoint on which to base your ski vacation choices.

And if you would like Ski-Austria.com to cover any particular subject, please feel free to contact us at .

snow conditions in Austria

It can be difficult to get an honest up-to-date idea about what is happening in any country when it comes to the snow conditions - unless you have a good friend who has just returned from the same resort.

And, even then, their information can be wildly out-of-date.

Tourist offices and lift operators want to show their resorts in the best light - and don't forget that they are in competition with other resorts in their region - so their own reports can sometimes err on the, umm, optimistic side. Tour operators, travel agents and accommodation suppliers all have their own agendas as well.

On the other hand, newspapers want to sell copies, and reports which say "skiing OK in Austria" sell less than "tourists have to ski on grass" or "blizzards bury Brits".

Take recent winters past, for example. Most visitors to Austria have been pleasantly surprised by the quality of skiing they have encountered, despite the fact that there have been no major snowfalls for long periods over the winter.

Much depends on whether a resort has been high enough for the temperatures to drop below freezing at night, which allows it to make snow, or whether it has adequate snow-making equipment and finances.

It is not just a simple case of saying "go high". Higher resorts often need more snow to cover the rocks which make up their base, rather than the pastures in the lower villages - and they are also often lacking in shade from the sun and the wind, which can lead to icy wind-blown runs.

Far more important is the ability to make snow and the potential of the slopes to keep it once it is made, which in turn depends on the altitude (does the temperature drop below freezing?) and the exposure (are the runs exposed to the sun?).

These days, and recent years have been prime examples of this, a decent dump of early season snow added to subsequent low temperatures mean that resorts can provide excellent skiing conditions despite not having had a decent fall of snow for three weeks.