The ski season ahead in 2011-12

Patrick Thorne has the rundown of all this year's news

Suggested Topics

Do we have lift off?

Today should have been a big day in the new 2011-12 ski season. Europe's highest resort, Val Thorens (00 33 479 000 808; valthorens.com) in France was due to open with – it was hoped – 10,000 skiers and boarders in resort to celebrate and test out the new season's gear. But warm weather and limited snowfall in the Alps has led to the opening being postponed by a week; the same decision has been made at Switzerland's Andermatt and Davos.

 

How's the snow?

So are we looking at the start of another poor snowfall season? Hopefully not: colder weather is expected imminently. In Scandinavia, where some resorts had expected to be open over a month ago, Finnish resort Ruka (00 358 860 0200; ruka.fi) finally opened on Wednesday – a positive sign. Parts of the Alps, Dolomites and Pyrenees had healthy snowfalls earlier this month too, allowing some areas to get a good base of snow built up ready for fresh falls.

Across the Atlantic it's a much better story. Revelstoke (001 250 814 0087; www.revelstokemountainresort.com) in British Columbia is opening a week early next weekend after nearly two metres (193cm) of snow has fallen so far. All three ski areas at Banff are already open, too.

 

American beauties

There are changes afoot in New England, which seems to fluctuate in popularity with British tour operators but where the ski areas are generally easy to reach with a flight in to Boston and the use of a hire car to drive north on the I-95. Here the ski areas are smaller than those further west, but they're still adequate for those who appreciate the upside: a shorter flight and less jet lag.

Maine's Sugarloaf (001 207 237 2000; sugarloaf.com), pictured below, is expanding and has spent $3m (£2m) on a fast new chairlift, opening up more terrain in its plan to overtake giants such as Killington (001 802 422 3333; killington.com) and become the largest ski area east of the Rockies by 2020.

More remarkable still are the fruits of $240m (£160m) spent by Vermont resort Jay Peak (001 802 988 2611; jaypeakresort.com), a chunk of which has gone on an indoor water park that opens on 12 December. This vast facility brings a whole new angle to après ski, including a 60ft freefall chute that sends its users into an upside-down loop at speeds of 45mph. Suddenly the terrain park seems passé.

 

Back to the Club

In France, another large sum, the equivalent of £75m, has been spent in Valmorel by Club Med (0845 367 0670; clubmed.co.uk) on what the firm is describing as its greatest village yet. Club Med was the European company that pioneered "Western" ski holidays in Japan at Sahoro in the 1980s, long before everyone else caught on. More recently, it was the first Western company to open in China, at Yabuli last winter. But with Valmorel, pictured right, Club Med has returned to its roots. The village's importance as a revenue-generator is underlined by the fact that the French Prime Minister, François Fillon, will be carrying out the official opening next month.

The pedestrian-only resort has, we're promised, been meticulously integrated into the local landscape and has a traditional Savoyard atmosphere thanks to the efforts of architect Pierre Diener, who used local wood, stone and slate in the construction. Featuring four- and five-"trident" accommodation (the rating used by Club Med), it also has the company's complete range of children's clubs, for youngsters from four months to 17 years old, and there's ski-in/out access to 150km of piste.

Day In a Page

Skyscrapers: Inside the power of the tower

Skyscrapers: Inside the power of the tower

A new book dissects the workings of our megatowers
The death of theft thanks to apps

The death of theft

Will software that hunts down our property one day render our stuff almost unstealable?
The 10 Best Pocket Camcorders

The 10 Best Pocket Camcorders

Camcorders are now small enough to fit into your shirt pocket
Shadow of Mafia returns to Italy

Shadow of Mafia returns to Italy

The latest murders in a mob turf war have switched the new government on to a racket that costs £100bn a year
Money talks: The battle of the billionaires

Money talks: The battle of the billionaires

The court case involving Roman Abramovich and Boris Berezovsky
All about Steve: Sorkin lined up for Jobs biopic

All about Steve

Sorkin lined up for Jobs biopic
James Lawton: An atmosphere of mutual disgust. A weak manager. Coaches held in contempt...

James Lawton on England's Rugby World Cup

An atmosphere of mutual disgust. A weak manager. Coaches held in contempt...
Ian Herbert: Mancini uncertain about way forward

Ian Herbert

Mancini uncertain about way forward
Pre-season training: It's just not cricket

Angus Fraser

Pre-season training: It's just not cricket
Sisters of evolution: how a handball team was born

Sisters of evolution

How a handball team was born
Picture preview: Lukas Strebel, Antoglyph

Lukas Strebel

Antoglyph exhibition preview
Stanislaw Lem: Who is the novelist celebrated in today's Today's Google Doodle?

Elaborate Google Doodle for Stanislaw Lem

Today's Doodle celebrates the Polish science fiction author
Highest resolution picture of the Moon

The Moon up close

The highest resolution topographic map of the moon
The Sri Lankan editor trapped in his office for the last five years

Sri Lankan editor trapped in his office for last five years

New freedoms promised by the end of 25-year civil war are still being denied
Can America escape its $1.3 trillion black hole?

Can America escape its $1.3 trillion black hole?

An impasse in Congress over spending cuts could send the US spinning into recession