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Our community members are treated to special offers, promotions and adverts from us and our partners. You can check out at any time. More info. First things first, winter sports are expensive. Then, of course, Norway is an expensive country. All that oil and all those fish have created one strong economy. So naturally, a weekend snowboarding in Norway seems like the perfect way to experience these things first hand. And Norway really is staggeringly photogenic. The resort in question, a Radisson Blu resort at the base of Trysilfjellet in Trysil, Norway is modern, and spacious yet homely. There are two bars, one that transforms into a log fire-lit nightclub called Stabben on weekends that pumps out Scandi EDM until 4AM if Alesso and Kygo are up your street. If that sounds like your idea of literal pop culture hell, then fear not. No mountain resort is a proper mountain resort without a spa. Radisson Blu has one that comes complete with two outdoor hot tubs, so steaming water jets can massage your body while you look on smugly at people fighting the elements on the slopes just 50 metres away. As for the slopes themselves, there are 67 in total, which amounts to 71km 44 miles of skiable piste. For fellow amateurs, piste is a posh word for slopes which are groomed each night. There are many more off-piste slopes - unprepared slopes, which if you have an eye for, you will spot no problem. My instructor, Jack, was blessed with the gift of patience, which was a result. I spent the best part of an hour struggling to stand-up like a winter sports Bambi and the majority of the afternoon failing to get to grips with the simple premise of a ski lift. Within a couple of hours I can hurtle down the beginner slope and throw myself to the ground before crashing into crowds of toddlers like some twisted snow sport re-creation of human ten pin bowling. Well, half a day. In the skiing world it appears to be standard procedure to get on the ale at around three in the afternoon. Which is great news. But one thing to take into consideration is that alcohol is not cheap in Norway at all. A pint of beer in a restaurant or bar will set you back anywhere between 60 - 90 krone. A little like a night out in London. Norway is a very rich country and alcohol is one of the products that is taxed extremely heavily to dissuade people from drinking so much. So do be mindful of how much a big night out will dent your pocket. Luckily there are around 30 places to eat around Trysil with the majority all open in the evening. You can expect dishes from moose and elk to every edible river fish found in Scandinavia. And speaking from experience, they will all rack up the likes in no time at all, because Norway is breathtakingly beautiful. By Matthew Cooper Staff writer. Join us on WhatsApp. Norway — The home of skiing, lovely people and phenomenal Instagram opportunities First things first, winter sports are expensive. Story Saved. Follow Manchester Evening News. Facebook Twitter. More On Travel reviews. Travel all Most Read Most Recent Tourism British sunbathers targeted in Spain's latest anti-tourism protests forcing them to flee beaches Thousands of people took to the beaches and streets to protest against the damaging effect of tourism across Spain's Canary Islands. Bury mum among more TUI customers seeking legal help after holiday misery. People in Mallorca share honest opinions of tourists after Spain's 'go home' protests. Friends book boutique Greek hotel on easyJet — but it looks nothing like the pics. Benidorm tourists 'lose thousands of pounds' as warning issued over holiday scam. Travel advice. 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Registration's totally free, of course, and makes snowHeads easier to use and to understand, gives better searching, filtering etc. When you register, you get our free weekly -ish snow report by email. It's rather good and not made up by tourist offices or people that love the tourist office and want to marry it either We don't share your email address with anyone and we never send out any of those cheesy 'message from our partners' emails either. Anyway, snowHeads really is MUCH better when you're logged in - not least because you get to post your own messages complaining about things that annoy you like perhaps this banner which, incidentally, disappears when you log in Username:- Password:. Or: Register to be a proper snow-head, all official-like! Prev topic :: Next topic. Poster: A snowHead. We love Norway, great family ski destination, not expensive to get here or indeed to stay and ski here. However despite taking food and wine even essentials were ridiculously priced this year. Everything is three times the price at home. Shame as I think these prices will stop a lot of Brits coming here. Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person. Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see? Though I doubt it has ever been cheap going to Norway if you want to have more than one or two beers in the week. You need to Login to know who's really who. Yeah Trysil but even the coop is mega expensive. Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do. Large market for Teslas too as the tax on any other sort of high end motor is eye watering. You'll need to Register first of course. I went to Trysil a couple of years ago. I didn't find the shop prices to be particularly bad, most mountain shops charge a premium. I took as much food as possible with me and don't really drink. Then you can post your own questions or snow reports We stayed half board, lunchtime we just made some sandwiches and had bits and bob's from the supermarket which didn't seem any more expensive than I'd expect in the Alps. After all it is free. Restaurants and alcohol are very expensive in Norway, but the supermarket isn't three times the price? I notice it being a bit more expensive than Sweden, which is in turn more expensive than the UK, but not prohibitively so. You'll get to see more forums and be part of the best ski club on the net. I can assure you most items are three times the price much more expensive than three years ago. Ski the Net with snowHeads. When paying for a whole family the difference stings a bit. However, one reason I chose Voss was that the flights were very cheap for half term and I found a whole house on AirBnB for peanuts. So when compared to a popular French resort and flying into Geneva, the saving was huge. Ate out a couple of times but otherwise self catered and I found the supermarket prices to be fine, kind of Waitrose prices rather than Aldi. The exchange rate 3 years ago is almost bang on where it is today so that's not the issue. Agree, Norway is great for family skiing but think Finland tops it. Supermarket the trick seemed to be buy the Norwegian stuff. Imported hideously expensive, stuff like the store baked bread, local cheese, Norwegian jam, crisps snacks much more reasonable. And love to help out and answer questions and of course, read each other's snow reports. We are in Trysil at the moment 3rd time and I agree it is soooooo expensive. We are self catering and the prices are mental; way more expensive than before, and we haven't treated ourselves to a single meal out. We chatted to a Swedish lady yesterday and one of the first things she said was how expensive it was, so it's not just an exchange rate issue. That said, flights and hotel prices comparable with many parts of Europe. If you are coming, go half board and raid the breakfast buffet for lunch. So if you're just off somewhere snowy come back and post a snow report of your own and we'll all love you very much. You know it makes sense. Such a wonderful place to ski but back to France next year. Otherwise you'll just go on seeing the one name:. This is interesting - as I live here. Keep in mind, that locals like me , rarely - if ever, eat dinner at the restaurants at the Ski-Star resorts Hemsedal, Trysil, etc , due to the eye-gauging prices they charge. Norwegians are almost always doing self-catering, and stop at a supermarket somewhere on the drive to the resorts. A lot will also make lunch at the cabin, and take that to the slopes as well. The fact that Trysil, and most Norwegian resorts now have kids areas with grills with free firewood, make for a decent bbq lunch As an example, we are going to Hemsedal tonight for 4 days. Apart from lift cards, the cost won't be any more than what we would spend staying at home. In closing - yes Norway is expensive, but there are ways to minimise the sting. Please check your facts. Excuse me!!! Why are people so rude on here. I have checked my facts and i dont really see why you think you are right and im not?!?!? Quote: i dont really see why you think you are right and im not?!?!? Where do your facts come from? Anyone for whom drinking a lot is a key part of a holiday and who doesn't want to pay the widely-publicised high prices is nuts to go on holiday in Norway. I spent a couple of weeks in Norway the year before last not skiing and didn't find prices in supermarkets too bad - I travelled Oslo - Trondheim - Bodo by train at stunningly cheap prices. They were buying stuff in Norwegian supermarkets - the boat was in the Lofotens all summer. When not on the boat I picknicked - apart from one pricey but not ruinous pizza in Oslo - on stuff bought in shops, including ethnic shops with interesting fruit and other bits, reasonable prices. To my mind, buying pizzas and drinks out for a family of four is stupidly expensive in the UK too - the easiest way to save dosh is not to do it. Buying drinks at pub prices is ridiculously expensive too when booze in supermarkets is cheap. If I was going on a family holiday in Norway I'd be taking a checked bag full of carefully thought out edibles and surely a litre of spirits per adult should suffice?? Which, if hou read my post i have. I am not concerned about restaurants prices i was talking about general basics. I am not being rude. I am simply stating facts, and asking you to do the same I have lived here for almost 20 years, so I know what I am talking about. Well comebshopping to Trysil and tell me its not expensive as you will be the only man standing who doesnt. We've just had a 'second' week in Norway not done the 'first' yet which is France in March in a small resort Beitostolen. Very limited downhill but very extensive CC or should I say 'Nordic'… Some friends who also ski in the Alps had been a couple of times before for a 'cheap' week. Flights, transfers, accomodation. We never went in a bar or bought a coffee even, as our apartment was close to the skiing. A great advantage was that you virtually had the downhill area to yourself. But it was very limited, you'd only go there to do CC as well world class for that or as a downhill beginner. Incidentally, CC is considerably harder than I anticipated. I'm a fairly competent downhill skier and struggled to stop the damn things. But we may go back another year and give it another go. However La Plagne next So a bit more than a hotel in the UK in a prime location but not terrible. I've not looked in the supermarkets this year we brought all our food with us but assuming it's like Sweden, then as davkt said, buy the local brands not the imports. But then a skiing holiday in Scandinavia is not really about the drinking, is it? This is what you should get used to after Brexit. Higher prices in Scandinavia are driven by higher taxes, to fund a social welfare system and promote a more equal distribution of wealth across society. This is exaggerated further in Norway by money from oil and gas. Our UK prices will escalate and i will blame Brexit. Beer, had a couple of bottles from the supermarket across the week, Norwegian brands perfectly good, sure way more than supermarket beer prices here but no more than buying the same quantity in a pub in the UK. Seems to work when you see the results of happiness index surveys. Trondheim is cheap if you have 2 kids in international primary school. On the other hand, live on bread and milk and it's not looking so good. Norway is not cheap, but a week's skiing here doesn't have to be significantly more than a week elsewhere. That website also shows that on average it is more expensive for both groceries and restaurants in Switzerland than it is in Norway. It will depend on what you buy but the local buying power in Norway is greater than both the UK and Switzerland. So you can probably prove almost anything from the figures on that site depending on which index you adopt! It also shows milk as being 16kroner per litre and I've just paid 24 so I think it's either a bit out of date or we're being ripped off in the resort. Were we locals and could just fill the boot with provisions that would have been ideal. However we all managed to fill our suitcases as it was and couldn't have managed to bring anymore. We could have written an afternoon off to get an hourly bus into town and filled our rucksacks with food from the supermarket but decided we'd rather ski so it was our choice. The payback though is we haven't done anything else, because costs are prohibitive. We came here last year and two years ago and it is considerably more expensive now. It's a shame but I can't see us coming here again. Have a great time. Norway is almost 2 times richer than the UK. Hence why everything is so expensive to English folks. Don't bother making a point by posting a link in Norwegian. Nobody here will understand it. New Topic Post Reply. Snow Snow Snow! Solo Skiers v Groups - Orga Archives Lost and Found Ski Club of Great Britain To one side secret Mountain Hideout snowShops You cannot post to forums until you login You cannot read some forums until you login Read about snow conditions : snow conditions And leave your own snow report : snow report Find advice to help plan your ski holidays : ski holidays The snowHeads Ski Club : Ski Club 2. Terms and conditions Privacy Policy. Snow Reports. Last edited by Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see? After all it is free After all it is free. So if you're just off somewhere snowy come back and post a snow report of your own and we'll all love you very much So if you're just off somewhere snowy come back and post a snow report of your own and we'll all love you very much. Otherwise you'll just go on seeing the one name: Otherwise you'll just go on seeing the one name:.
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