Selva di Val Gardena buying powder

Selva di Val Gardena buying powder

Selva di Val Gardena buying powder

Selva di Val Gardena buying powder

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Selva di Val Gardena buying powder

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. My friends and I will be in Selva the last week of January, and we are really excited to explore the area. We are obviously going to ski the Sella Ronda, and from what I understand skiing around Arabba is pretty great, but is there anything else that is a must for advanced skiers we rarely venture off piste, however? Any particular trails or ski areas? Mountain restaurants? Other activities? Also, is it worth it to take a bus to some other ski resort in Dolomites while we are there, or will Selva give us enough to play with? Thank you. Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person. Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see? You will need it. It gives you access to all 12 of the ski areas. I will be amazed if you ski in more than 4 -or less than 4 come to that! Alastair Pink , has repeated more or less what I said in the other thread on the Dolomites. Do not miss the Hidden Valley and its unique horse tow. There is plenty of info about the area on this board. Look forward to enjoying the most beautiful ski area I have ever seen. You need to Login to know who's really who. There has been plenty written on here about the different areas around the Sella Ronda, you'll be blown away by the extent and variety of the skiing as well as the breathtaking views, some estimate kms of linked skiing in the 4 areas around the Sella Ronda. Use the Sella Ronda to access quieter areas as the main circular route can get busy. High winds and other adverse weather can sometimes close the Ronda and prevent you leaving your home valley. Mountain Restaurants are a particular highlight, one on nearly every run and excellent food, memorable ones are: Jimmys Hutte near Passo Gardena, Baita Daniel in the Seceda area, Rifugio Fredarola for pizza just as you drop from the top of the Sas Bece chair twd Arabba, Rifugio Scotoni in the Hidden Valley. Villa Frainela tea shop just across from the Dantercepies base station in Selva is great for homemade cakes in a pretty setting. Great fun to be had on the toboggan run down through the Rasciesa forest above Ortisei, nice new funicular to service it too. Local Ice Hockey matches at the stadium in Selva. Google it all. In a week you will only scratch the surface of what the area has to offer. I'm jealous as another year is passing that I can't get back there. Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do. All been said above really- if you can get a day in Cortina it might be worth it? Although there is more than enough to do in the main Sella Ronda area. You'll need to Register first of course. Worth a trip up the m Sass Pordoi on a clear day even if the run down the Front face isn't open as the views are spectacular Then you can post your own questions or snow reports English version After all it is free. Sasslong is really good as is dantercepies. The skiing tends to be better just off the sella ronda and much less crowded so u get more done. If there is a clear sky the scenery is amazing. You'll get to see more forums and be part of the best ski club on the net. Thank you all so much for recommendations! Very eager to try it all. Hopefully there'll be snow. Ski the Net with snowHeads. Colfosco is one of my favourite spots. Nice restaurant at the top and some great views. Do not miss! And love to help out and answer questions and of course, read each other's snow reports. This trip report from the German Alpinforum with lots of photos that pre-dates the recent snowfalls highlights the impressive snowmaking facilities in the Dolomites, the majority of valley runs complete with artificial snow, which of course now is the base on which some nice fluffy white stuff has fallen, as per the webcams, covering the grassy hillsides right down to the villages with natural snow as well as the high mountain. 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. That is indeed impressive! I am relieved that by now they got some real snow too. This is the first time we are traveling to Europe so early in the season- we normally come in March. However, I didn't really think that the last week of January was ' early' so I didn't anticipate potential lack of snow. You know it makes sense. Thanks for the advice! I was about to start a new thread to ask exactly this. My girlfriend and I will be in Selva for the same week. From what I've read on here it sounds like we couldn't have chosen a better place to go skiing - I'm very excited! We're ambitious beginners, so we're trying to squeeze in as much as possible alongside lessons. Here's how I'm thinking of spending our time, weather permitting: Days Lessons in the AM, then skiing as many of the pistes in Selva as possible and maybe nip over the hill to Corvara. Day 4. Hidden valley then maybe the rest of the clockwise Sella Ronda circuit. Day 5. Marmolada glacier and the anti-clockwise Sella Ronda circuit. Day 6. Let me know if there's anything else you think we should try to squeeze in. I'm sure we'll only scrape the surface. All the more reason to go back next year! Otherwise you'll just go on seeing the one name:. Hopefully after 3 half days of lessons we'll be good enough to do the rest of it. Days 4 and 5 are big days: I'd be more inclined to go down the valley to Seiser Alm, or, if going North do Alta Badia. Good suggestions by Dr Rock - 4 and 5 are big days. Not much time there to admire views, take photos or have a decent lunch stop. I would suggest doing the Cinque Torri area and the Hidden Valley on one day. Taxi to Falzarego and go up the Lagazuoi cable car but hang a right just after the top excellent red run and come back down to the pass to link up to the Cinque Torri before going up the cable car again to do the Hidden Valley. You might then have enough time to explore the Pralongia plateau a bit more you'll have done some of it to get to the taxi stop before heading back to Selva. Still a big day but more flexible and most of it off the Sella Ronda so less likely to be crowded. If you are doing the Marmolada, pick a sunny day first time I went there we had a very good view of the inside of the clouds and start early. If no sunny days then perhaps leave that one for your next visit - because you will be back! Just to tag onto this thread with a quick question. Any suggestions on the best base to stay for 6 middle age blokes going in March. No kids in tow, so want it to be lively ish with great access to slopes. All of us are decent skiers but first time in Italy. Many thanks. Ah - didn't notice this before my earlier reply. Your days 4 and 5 are too ambitious unless you are both young, sporty and quick learners. My suggestion for the Hidden Valley day would be pushing it but I'd definitely suggest leaving the Marmolada for another holiday. The long red down from the top will knacker you unless you are very fit and you'll still have a lot of skiing to do to get back to Selva. Arabba is smaller though with a bit less lively apres ski than Selva. Are you going with a tour operator or DIY? People all learn at different speeds, but I took some quick-learning second-weekers from Selva to the Hidden Valley and directly back again, we did struggle on the way back and caught the last chair up to Dantercepies just after it's posted closing time And that's with someone who knew the way I doubt you'll have time to go the wrong way round the Sella Ronda on the way back. Obviously you will gauge how quickly you're progressing, the run over the Dantercepies to Colfosco and back, maybe with a side-trip up Edelweiss valley would be good as a first excursion. The various red and black runs back down to Selva from the top of the Dantercepies are thigh-burners. The chopped-up steep red pitch off the back of Ciampinoi would be a test of whether you could cope with the worst the Sella Ronda could throw at you. The easier blue progresser terrain at Selva is up at Plan de Gralba and the Sella Pass, but you have to either do steep reds or catch a bus to get there. I remember doing the clockwise Sella Ronda with my mate on our third week Have fun exploring Agree day 4 and 5 are big. I'd advise doing the Sella Ronda without diversions first to get an idea of timings. Did Marmolada and hidden valley from Canazei last year and hidden valley was a very long day, admittedly not helped by snow conditions lots making it impossible for anyone I saw to carry enough speed on Pralongia to get up the other side of the dips! Marmolada was shorter for us not diametrically opposite on the Sella Ronda but found hanging around at altitude didn't help my style on the way down. For the 'harder' Sella Ronda make sure you can deal with daily bumps towards the end of the day. The first pitch down from Porta Vescovo is steep for a red and chops up during the day until at about 2. Known as the graveyard to seasonaires I'm the weaker skier of me and OH at 4 weeks but ws generally happy on steep reds and pisted blacks and end of day type bumps rather than seasonal bumps before coming. Wouldn't bother with Marmolada if weather not clear, the piste isn't that different to others available and it's all about the situation, so being able to see is fairly crucial! Arteta10 , Selva is probably the only option if you want lively apres, but not quite on an Austrian scale, though Piz Seteur and its twice-a-week dancing girls are an interesting Italian take on it!! Canazei has a few lively spots too. Arabba is quiet but the best base to avoid crowds and access challenging skiing. The start of this season has been unusually mild across most of the Alps, it's usually white from late Nov onwards with most pistes complete with either natural or artificial or both in time for Xmas week. Hopefully you'll get a few more top-ups before you arrive. Amazing there now. On Saturday the Fellas in our group were up on Ciampinoi at 8am for first tracks in 8' of powder which had fallen over night. For almost an hour we had the mountain virtually to ourselves in perfect viz. It was superb. The weather closed in soon after. All in all, another fantastic week in the VG valley. I would forget the Hidden Valley and Marmolada, personally, if staying in Selva. It will be very rushed and not as enjoyable. Do the Sella Ronda to get an overview of the other areas, but otherwise why not spend your time exploring Val Gardena? I have been to the Dolomites 3 times now, but have still never got much further than St. Cristina on Selva side, as I have never stayed in that valley. You have the Seceda area, Ortesei and Seiser Alm on your doorstep, places that are hard to reach from other areas. Save the Marmolada and Hidden Valley and Cinque Torri, because that's even further for when you go next time and stay in Arabba or Corvara side. Because you will. Alenchic Just back from Selva last night. Its fabulous and so beautiful. Great food - the biggest pizza Ive ever sen for 6. Don't be put off going to the Hidden Valley. We did it from Selva leaving We are good intermediate skiers. Same goes for Sella Ronda green or orange route - back at 2pm. This will bring you to the bus stop for the Hidden Valley. Beautiful snow over there. It now has the blingiest loos of any mountain hutte in the World!! Thanks for the advice folks all received and understood. Going to book last minute so prob be package. Blue 9 is shut?! Aww maan, that's one of my faves That right turn is very easy to miss Arteta10 wrote: Thanks for the advice folks all received and understood. Good luck, not too many Brit TOs in Selva these days. The Russians have found the place however. We'll definitely go to the Hidden Valley, it certainly sounds doable, and like your group we are good intermediate skiers, on the fast side. And I am very much looking forward to Italian food! Alastair Pink , I will definitely report back. My only experience skiing in Italy prior to this trip was Cervinia, and while it was certainly enjoyable, mostly due to proximity to Zermatt, it definitely lacked in charm. From what I understand Dolomites will have no such problem. Mollerski wrote: Arteta10 wrote: Thanks for the advice folks all received and understood. Crystal have just the Salvan and Neilson nothing. So it's mostly hotel packages which won't come cheap. Were the Russians there this year?? I thought the problems with the Rubble The first time I skied based from Arabba was with Ski Beach Villas - no other Brit operator there then - next season they had been swallowed up by Neilson and it was a shambles in comparisom. The major time waster on the longer days has always been navigational fails. Make sure you know where you're aiming for and agree with the rest of the group. Not zooming past any direction signs is a good plan. Although our detours were generally pleasant apart from stoopid run which had about as much up as down, with relatively slow snow so even the pro looking types were having to side step - think it was on an unplanned loop of the Cherz sector and no lifts were missed the stress was tedious. Hidden Valley was tight partly due to us both making stupidly heavy weather of the optional black back down to Laguzoi highly recommended if not skiing like a numpty and then getting sidetracked by the many photo opportunities and views on the way down. The maps are a little unwieldy and minimising the faff time at decision points prevents impatient people heading off on a guess! Options best for the way back That mass of mostly blue runs is almost impossible to decipher from the full Sella Ronda map. And sometimes following the signs at piste junctions can be confusing when it points both ways to the same place esp. Good advice. Huge amounts of time can be wasted by bad navigation. Even though the signposting is pretty good. Yep, that was the culprit. Every base station I checked was out of maps. And as flat blues in slow conditions there's a definite speed limit. Far easier to make up time skiing the steeper runs being less wet than usual than when flat out tuck still gets nowhere fast. That said too fast on the bumpy steep runs isn't that effective either as the out of control idiot who lost it, crashed and required medical assistance proved. He wasn't the fastest but was clearly the least in control. Haven't decided whether or not to repeat the Hidden Valley this year staying in Canazei again. Tempted by the Selva sector and some more of Arabba instead. Definitely not Marmolada as don't fancy the altitude at this point. Is Alpe di Suisi realistic as a trip from Canazei? And the long run down to Ortisei. Enjoyed Sasslong and Cir last year and need to try the Alba black didn't fancy the conditions last time, too much snow, rubbish light so I bussed back from Pozza while OH skied back across and decided to give the black a miss due to mini avalanches, and an adventure diving for a misplaced ski after a double eject followed by double somersault in a hidden dip! Looking forward to a last holiday before it all becomes complicated. 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. Selva di Val Gardena- where to ski, what to do? 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:. Dr Rock wrote:. Arteta10 wrote:. Mollerski wrote:.

TR: Selva Val Gardena

Selva di Val Gardena buying powder

Please, find here all information related to hiring ski and snowbard equipment, access to the latest models, and professional advise on the best fit of skis. Our ski rentals represent with their wide array of services an ideal one stop shop for all of your needs. Our services include: ski hire, ski equipment deposit, sportswear shop, and ski school information point. Furthermore, it would be our pleasure to provide you with all useful information related to the resort, and current events! This label is a guarantee for experience, excellent quality and kindliness. For this ski season we have to present lots of new freeride skis new rocker design of skis and snowboards, touring skis and many more …. Book online your skis and snowboards. Our ski rentals in Val Gardena offer an online shop, where you can book your skis, snowboards and boots for adults and children directly. You save money and time! A fantastic ski area, a breath-taking scenery, absolute snow-reliability, hundreds of great kilometres of piste and on the top of it a large variety of supporting program aside from the ski runs. Val Gardena impresses every winter sports enthusiast with its limitless ski experience. No matter whether you are old or young, a beginner or a professional skier — no wish remains unfulfilled. Ortisei , S. State-of-the-art lift systems start right in the city centers and take visitors up into the Dolomiti Superski ski area. With the local ski pass you can reach the entire ski area around the Val Gardena Valley and the Alpe di Siusi , including the Saslong World Cup course, which is a challenge for passionate skiers. With the Dolomiti Superski pass you have access to the ski carousel, which consists of 12 ski areas and 1, kilometres of ski runs. Definitely a paradise for skiers! Snowboarders let off steam in the fun park on the Piz Sella or they board down to the valley on the broad slopes. Cross-country skiers get excited about the magical cross-country ski runs through forests on the Monte Pana. Families and children feel perfectly comfortable in Val Gardena, because there are numerous ski runs for children within easy reach of the village and kids parks with especially trained skiing instructors. The toboggan run on the Rasciesa, the ice skating in the stadium of Selva Val Gardena, ski tours on fantastic routes through the Dolomites, snow shoe hikes, etc. No wish remains unfulfilled in Val Gardena. The beauty of the landscape alone should be worth a visit to Val Gardena. If you feel like going on winter vacation now, our ski rentals provides you with the best addresses for ski service, ski storage facilities and ski shops to update your equipment. Val Gardena is limitless ski fun! Exclusive Swiss precision work. Every single ski is handmade and therefore quite unique! The winner weapon: the new Atomic Redster Double Deck 3. The winning skis of Marcel Hirscher More info: www. A modern, frontside ski with precise edge control, high-speed stability and nimble handling. Paragliding Tandemflights in Val Gardena. Discover the world from above! COM the joint homepage of ski rental in Val Gardena. Hot Deals Book online your skis and snowboards. Our quality promise:. Recommended ski and snowboard rentals in Val Gardena-Italy Here you will find a selection of quality rentals in Val Gardena. You also have the option to buy the skis and ski boots after test. Simply order online and enjoy all the benefits of on-site. Why these ski rental shops have the best service? Best price guarantee with online booking Only the latest skis and boots Free ski helmet for children up to 14 years Free delivery and collection service Free ski service Free exchange Free ski depot. English Italiano Deutsch Nederlands.

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