Zell am Ziller buying hash
Zell am Ziller buying hashZell am Ziller buying hash
__________________________
📍 Verified store!
📍 Guarantees! Quality! Reviews!
__________________________
▼▼ ▼▼ ▼▼ ▼▼ ▼▼ ▼▼ ▼▼
▲▲ ▲▲ ▲▲ ▲▲ ▲▲ ▲▲ ▲▲
Zell am Ziller buying hash
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen. Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers. Snow Cams. Active Threads Search forums. Log in. Active threads. Search Everywhere Threads This forum This thread. Search titles only. Search Advanced search…. Everywhere Threads This forum This thread. Search Advanced…. Members Registered members Current visitors. Toggle sidebar. Install the app. There's more to this forum than meets the eye! Join today. Register to remove the ad below Join today. Forum Ski Travel Europe. JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding. You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly. You should upgrade or use an alternative browser. Thread starter LeWombat Start date Dec 8, Register to view full-size images Join today. Prologue One of my best experiences as a Dad has been teaching the kids to ski. Many moons ago, we made a crazy decision to do a season in St Anton with an 18 month-old toddler and while very different to life as a something skibum, it was a truly epic adventure. That decision led to other questionable life choices like doing it again with two little ones. And again. We loved it so much we decided to stay, put the kids in the village school, and embrace the year-round mountain lifestyle. We pulled the kids out of school, gave notice on our lease, bought a snow card, and planned to ski all 91 resorts in Tirol. Then someone coughed in a bar in Ischgl and the world changed. A week later, the lifts stopped and the govt kicked out all the tourists. Australia closed its borders, our flights home were cancelled and we were left in limbo. As residents we could stay in Austria and our landlord kindly let us stay on even though our lease was up but the visa situation for me was tenuous. So when lock downs were lifted we made the only sane choice we could - we chose a random village in the French Alps and start a new life there. France turned out to be lovely. Miss now 15 became quite the skier, debuting on the European Cup last year, and has her sights set on the World Cup in Due to a series of unfortunate events, she will just miss out on the Youth Olympics as we couldn't make it to the main qualifications in NZ. And if she does make it to the WC next year, this will be the last chance we'll have to do a season together as a family. So it's time for one last family hurrah. We've rented out our house in France and are moving back to the Tirol for the winter. Between work, school, training, and competitions, we want to get to all the Tirolean resorts we missed previously, plus a handful of other euro resorts. Of course things never go to plan but that's part of the adventure. LeWombat One of Us. Mar 29, Arrival - Aschau It didn't take long for plans to go wrong. We had hoped to arrive on 1 Dec as the Zillertal resorts were opening a weekend early and the weather was. Early snows fell in the French Alps in October and continued on and off into November. We live at m so this threw a bit of a spanner into the house renovations and come 28 Nov, we were way behind schedule. Queue a manic week of work and we were almost ready to depart Then it snowed another 1m and there was no way I was driving an overloaded car down uncleared french mountain roads. So we called our future landlord to explain yet another delay and waited. Thankfully, verbal agreements seem to work in Austria. We had booked an apartment for the season through the in-laws of a friend via whatsapp but were yet to sign a lease or hand over any money. I've got no idea what he was thinking after the 4th time we called to announce our non-arrival. It's very hard for me to infer Austrian sarcasm through their thick dialect but I'm sure he'd been briefed about the family of crazy Australians from our last landlord. Oh well. I really enjoy living in France but Austria was my first alpine love and I am genuinely curious to see if it lives up to my memories. Despite being the same 'Alps', the Tarentaise are so different to the Tirol. It is so much higher, rawer, and more expensive in our new homeland. France seems to lack the polish, the infrastructure, and general effort the Austrians put into snow sports. La Folie Douce ain't no Mooserwirt but how would Austria stack up to the idealised version in my head? Pretty good so far. Reactions: dawooduck , sara , skifree and 23 others. Sbooker A Local Ski Pass. Sep 28, 7, 13, I wish I had the balls to do it too. Reactions: Tanuki and Jacko Opening day - Hochzillertal Thursday was the official opening day of the Zillertal resorts but opening here is a gradual kind of thing. With a Snow Card, you can ski from 1 Oct - 15 May on the glaciers and with the early snow, Hochzillertal and Mayrhofen opened for earlybird weekends too. We arrived early Monday morning so missed the most glorious start to December in history but I was keen to test the legs after a largely sedentary few months. A couple of lifts were open for a FIS race at Horberg so we got a few hours of flat light skiing and watching the juniors smash gates before my legs said no more. I was expecting some of the parks to be open so we could begin training but they are still under construction. For the best I suppose - our first competition is still 5 weeks away and our preseason prep has been lacking. Now we can just ski, gradually build up the legs, have fun, and take a few pistes down memory lane. The clouds broke for the Thursday opening and it was glorious. Nebelmeer in the valley but bluebird upstairs. Only half the lifts were open and fewer runs were groomed but that didn't matter. There had been 30cm overnight and with no crowds, the side hits would last longer than my legs. Hochzillertal isn't the prettiest of resorts. Set in the industrial quarter of town, it has all the charm of a multi-story car park. People here party at the bus stop enjoying the giddy combination of schnapps and diesel fumes. But Hochzillertal is easy. Even in peak season, the queue is never more than 5 mins before you are lifted vertical metres up. This is where I taught the kids to ski. It was our local for many years and is my reference point to all other resorts. So how does it compare to my new home in Les Arcs? Obviously it's smaller. Les Arcs is obviously higher - skiing down the Aiguille Rouge m is very different to the Wimbacher m. But it is nature of the terrain that distinguishes it the most. The pistes in Les Arcs seem to be laid straight down the fall line, lifted along a series of long curved faces. Hochzillertal has more varied terrain. There are a number of internal ridgelines and gullys that seem to allow the pistes to neatly connect to each other - perfect if you like wide cruisy reds for big carve turns. Despite its smaller size, much of the terrain is lift accesssable whereas back in Les Arcs, there are quite a lot of peaks within the resort that require a considerable climb to reach. They're different. I prefer the terrain of Hochzillertal but couldn't ski it for more than 1 week. Les Arcs just has more. However Hochzillertal and Austria in general is the clear winner on price. I'll save a more detailed price comparison for another day but just point to my other reference datum - 0. Reactions: dawooduck , sara , teebee and 13 others. Heinz Travelling again Ski Pass. Oct 14, 31, 23, 1, Adelaide. I likened it at the time to a supersized version of Treble Cone in NZ. Quite a contrast to the big open pistes of Hochzillertal. One place I missed checking out. I have a few of the Alpine Groove CDs. Heinz said:. Click to expand Reactions: Heinz. Fozzie Bear Where's my flapping ears gone Ski Pass. Jun 2, 16, 32, In the woods. LeWombat said:. Kristall was open - they do one of the best Kaiserschmarns in the Zillertal and is a great place for an afternoon chill. Reactions: cqen2l. Kletterer Thredbo Doughnut Tragic Moderator. Nov 26, 29, 42, 1, Canberra. Zell am Ziller is not very pretty. Gerlos is nicer and Konigsleiten is gorgeous. Excellent off piste on the Konig. Reactions: Principal Douglas , blueandwhite and LeWombat. Zeroz A Local Ski Pass. Apr 8, 6, 8, Bouvet Island. Speaking of Alpine Grooves and Zillertal, I am reminded that my parents gifted me their CD collection, including this beauty. While I have yet to listen to this CD or any of them I'm prepared to accept offers for this one magnificent Zillertal music collection which I assume involves extensive yodelling and wild accordion solos. An ideal Xmas present for young, aspiing World Cup skiers. Zeroz said:. Let's just say the local music is a little 'different' First Weekend - Mayrhofen A cloudy Friday brought a needed recovery for my legs before the skies turned blue again for the weekend. Snow quality is excellent and the crowds are minimal. It's an amazing start to the season. The Harikiri is officially closed but there's more than enough snow to ski it - sometimes it doesn't open until late Jan. We spent most of the day just cruising around the Penkenjoch and the Gerent chasing the sun. Got to enjoy these wide empty pistes before the tourist hoards arrive in a few weeks. Most lifts are now open except Larchwaldexpress which we later learn was the site of a terrible accident. One of the seats with a young family had come loose and slid down into the following seat throwing them off. They fell 8m to the piste below and were badly injured. Hyst Untenshu - kangoshi Ski Pass. Nov 23, 5, 5, Copenhagen. Family LeWombat have got great gloves.! But they have gone downunder it seems. Hyst said:. Reactions: Hyst. Early Season Routine December in the Alps can be hit and miss but this year it is on. The early season snows continue, providing another 50cm this week before a few more days of blue bird. Weekends are busy with German day trippers but mid-week is glorious. Blue skies, open pistes, and hardly a soul out. Bad weather days have given us some much needed time to catch up on school and work. Homeschooling in France where we usually live is now illegal I am contracting remotely as a software developer, which while a times better than being in the office, still comes with meetings and project deadlines that that don't always agree with the weather. It is taking me a little longer than expected to find my winter work-ski balance but an extra data plan, zoom backgrounds, and always wearing thermals to regular meetings makes it possible to take video calls on the slopes and catch up on work in the evening. We've been getting about 5 days per week on the slopes but this has been exclusively at the parks in Penken or Hochzillertal. Training, picnic lunch, then some free skiing. The sun is behind the mountains at 2pm which makes jumping sketchy so then its back home for more school and work. A new front is on its way today with another 50cm forecast before Xmas and then the season can get into full swing. Remote work for software people - my daugther chose that after doing two seasons. Now, what the f Great pictures! Reactions: elSpike. Reactions: DidSurfNowSki. Zillertal Arena - Zell am Ziller Christmas eve morning and the and the clouds have begun to clear after 4 days of precipitation from Storm Pia. Unfortunately, Pia was a little too warm and we got mostly rain below m so no Christmas snow angels tonight. Higher up however, the tally was 1 - 1. The groomers had been busy and the pistes were some of the best December corduroy I've ever had - a tad too soft to really rip but perfectly forgiving for the mm Revolts. The Zillertal Arena is a pretty sizable resort. Today however, the new Wilde-Krimml gondola that connects the Zell area to Gerlos was on wind hold so it was hot laps until the legs said no more. That didn't matter though as we had to take an extended break before lunch as Miss 15 had a very important prior engagement - Secret Santa with the village kids back in France via zoom. We've moved around a lot - the kids have been to 6 schools in 3 countries - but she has finally found her tribe so there was no way a season away was going to get in the way of Christmas with her crew! While 1. Combined with some strong winds from the west, the post Christmas snow is starting to look a little shabby. It's not all bad however. First, it's not 35C summer in Brisbane. Third, early season snow work means that the valley runs are still open and we get ski home to our door. I'm not sure how he does it but the highlight of Mr 12's day - who normally can't be pryed from the couch - is to ski non stop down the ski route from the the top of the Wimbachjoch m to our village at m. If only I could teach him to put the kettle on for my arrival 20 mins later. Anyway, it is a new year and new snow is on its way. Happy New Year everyone! Reactions: climberman , whether , DidSurfNowSki and 7 others. Kreischberg, Steiermark 4am, -8C. Scraping the ice off the the car in the dark. The last few weeks have been a blur of work and training. Trying to fit in a regular 40hr week around skiing has been a bit of a challenge and our plan to visit other resorts outside the valley has been thwarted by zoom meetings that don't respect weather windows. Our first 2 Europa Cups of the season have been cancelled due to lack of snow Prato Nevoso and surprisingly Alpe d'Huez so when a new event in Austria popped up on the calendar we jumped at the chance. Sunrise in the Taurachtal was truly spectacular - like an Austrian version of the Canadian Rockie sorry no photos as both hands were needed driving up the pass - and after a quick breakie pitstop in Obertauern it was onto Steiermark and our final destination - Kreischberg. Kreischberg is different for me at least. It certainly isn't a mega-resort. With 2 gondolas, 2 chairs, and a few t-bars, we managed to see the entire resort between qualies and finals. I've never skied this far East in the Alps before and found the terrain here noticeably different too. In the Western Alps, the mountain take up the sky. Mt Blanc is m, and in our home valley of the Tarentaise, the lifts go up to m. Here the mountains are lower and the peaks rounder. Blues at the top, reds in the middle, and blacks at the bottom to the gondola station. The tops are marked by snow fences rather than rocky peaks And more snow. And more vertical. And better beer. So Kreischberg is definately one of those regional family orientated resorts. But on a snowy day with a decent base, it could be great. Lots of forested bowls protected from the wind, interesting features to huck, and not too far from the lifts for hot laps. So would I visit again? But despite the 4hr drive each way, usual comp day lots-of-waiting-for-a-just-few-runs, and too few girls for full FIS points, I'm glad we made the effort. The weather was great if a little cold, and a win in FIS Junior is still a win! Reactions: climberman , sara , whether and 5 others. Did you have a Murauer bier? I had a couple of days in the very nice little town of Murau just down the road in June and visited the Brewery. Saw Kreischberg from the train afterwards. Different without snow. This was it in June. I think I'll keep my Preiselbeere for my Schnitzel thank you very much! The summer green really helps - Kreischberg village isn't very pretty in the January monocrhome shadows. But it does make for an interesting comp venue - they have a big air night world cup at the bottom of the talabfahrt in your photo and land right in the car park. Second home of Anna Gasser - can see why. Reactions: LeWombat. Livigno - Getting There It's like all over again. Catching a lurgy in some overcrowded apres-ski club in Italy and spending the next week and a bit in bed. Not how I had hoped to spend the last few days of glorious January sunshine. But in hindsight it was inevitable. Backtrack two weeks. It's 4am and I'm up too early again, packing the car for another competition. This time we are off to Italy for 3 days of the World Rookie Festival and the forecast is for cold What should normally be an easy 3hr drive has been made harder by heavy snowfall a rock slide closing a key road. We stop for a quick breakfast in Nauders before continuing down snowy switchbacks into Switzerland and the Engadine. The road hadn't been properly cleared yet so we chug along at safe pace and enjoyed what scenery we could see though the clouds. The 3. The other thing to be aware of is on Saturday, they have a different schedule - leaving Livigno, for entering. If you miss those windows, you are in for a very long wait! Livigno lives up to its nickname of 'Little Tibet' It's high - the village sits above m - and ringed by high mountains on all sides that trap the cold air. But there's no time for sight seeing - we pick up lift tickets and bibs and head up to Mottolino for training. The park is amazing. An XL line with 22m jumps, an L with m ones, and a huge array of jibs of various shapes and sizes. Training is challenging in the flat light that hides the compressions in the very fast in runs. Miss 15 works on some new tricks but it doesn't always go to plan so after a few crashes, we take it easy for the rest of the afternoon. Training done, we check into our hotel. We are staying at the Hotel Bernina, a central place with very friendly staff but poorly sound-insulated rooms. Breakfast and dinner is included and the highlight is definately pizzoccheri - a local dish made from buckwheat tagliatelle, cabbage, and LOTS of Valtellina cheese. It may not look like much but it is quality ski comfort food. Livigno - Competition Apologies in advance as trip reports from competition days are going to be crap. Once upon a time, I had dreams of visiting all these different ski resorts and exploring the slopes in the long waits between competition runs. But the reality is much different. Course inspect, training, qualies, then finals if lucky. Conditions are normally too hard before 10am for sustained jumping and after 2pm depending on the resort, early winter shadows make depth perception challenging. Despite the waiting, it is a challenge to get good photos of the resort. This is a junior event and it is amazing to see how much the level of junior slopestyle improves every year. The boys are throwing dub cork s in both directions and the standard of some of the girls here is higher than at the olympic finals in Miss 15 did well enough during qualies finishing 5th overall but had bad luck with visibility during the finals and crashed out in both runs. The bad weather and her shin bang ment there was no point exploring other parts of the resort so we called it quits and headed back to the hotel for an afternoon of netflix. But I did remember to get a snap of dinner - pizzoccheri again , roast beef, venison ragout, and white chocolate icecream. Reactions: LMB , blueandwhite , Zeroz and 6 others. Official parties aren't normal at FIS events, especially junior events, but this was branded as a 'freestyle festival' and had different activities every evening like yoga, art, and being filmed watching a film about last years athletes being filmed. Hashtag recycledmarketingmaterial. Given that some athletes were as young as 13, I was expecting a private party at a bar owned by someone's friend but it turned out the plan was to simply give out handfuls of free drink tickets at a night club when doors opened to the public at Miss 15 quickly found the other girls from the comp and by , the place was full with ' East Slough Rebels on tour ' shirts and bad remixes of remixes. By midnight it was a total sausage fest and the music was too loud to talk to anyone, so we called stumps and walked home. I really can't imaging a party for U18s like this happening anywhere outside Italy but when in Rome I guess. The next morning we woke to perfect weather and for me, a splitting headache. There was no way we would make the tunnel closure so we decided to hit the slopes after checkout until outbound traffic could leave at It was a good decision. During the cloudy competition days I didn't see much of it but in the sun, Livigno turns out to be a really nice ski town. Low rise chalets spread along a long pedestrian street, with pistes on all sides heading directly into town. The pistes were perfectly groomed with none of the holes and accidental speed bumps you find in France. Plus there were plenty of cafes, restaurants, and grappa bars on the slopes. Infrastructure is top notch too. Modern gondolas depart from the town's edge in multiple directions Sitas, Carosello, Mottolino and with chairs and tows higher up. Sitas even has a funky undground station that you can ski over and watch gondollas come out of the ground! Desipte the cold C , the sun took the edge off it allowing us to chill and me to nurse my increasly bad headache. The top of Carosello has a south facing terrace, another park and tubing for the kids, and a beach-atm vibe that would be fantastic come spring. Back down in town, there are plenty of non-alpine activities. There's also an indoor water park and loads of duty free shops - although prices don't seem any cheaper to the rest of Europe. The one exception would be fuel - fill up in Livigno as it is WAY cheaper If I was to try and find fault with the place, it would have to be the limited on piste terrain. We skied every lift on the western side in one morning and could have skied the other side in the afternoon if we weren't chasing the sun. Pistes are predominantly intermediate with the classic glacial shape of blacks at the bottom, reds in the middle, and blues at the top. But the freestyle is world class, the freeride potential looks amazing, its cold and snow sure. Food is good and prices are reasonable, especially when compared to St Moritz next door. Judging by the number plates, the clientel is primarily Italian, Polish, and Czech. I heard a bit of 'stryne walking around town and after finally visiting, I'm surprised Livigno wasn't on my radar earlier. Really looking forward to coming back for the Junior Worlds later this season and in '26 if things go well. And the headache. Well that turning into a nasty case of RSV that put me and the family in bed for the next 10 days. So next time, I'm skipping the the night cubs. Reactions: LMB , bluestick , cwpski and 6 others. May 26, 2, 9, TQY. Loving the trip report, some fantastic pictures as well. Please keep them coming! My daughter has been plagued with shin bang as well. Absolute nightmare. Oddly she seemed to suffer this more in racing than in freestyle. But we got her some full tilt boots for freestyle and moguls so she switches into those boots when not racing now. This seems to have helped a lot. But nothing more frustrating than having to quit training or a comp because of shin bang. Hopefully Miss15's shins improve and don't impact on your trip too much. Reactions: blueandwhite. Nordkette It's been a warm and bare February here in Austria. Most precipitation days have had a freezing line around m so there's been lots of rain in the lower valleys and all the talabfahrts are now closed. At least the tops have managed to hold the snow relatively well and the parks are in good shape - it has been spring conditions for most of Feb which has been great for soft landings but not so great for south facing pistes. Despite many winters in Tirol, I've never actually skied the Innsbruck city resorts. The resorts there are aren't very big and parking can be a nightmare but I've always been curious about them, especially the once 'locals secret' of Nordkette. A local competition gave us an excuse to give it a try and it was Access is via the Hungerburgbahn funicular that departs underground from the city center under the Congress. This very funky train with articulated glass carriages then takes you to the Nordkette gondola which whisks you up to m over the capital. The views are amazing The ski area itself is very small. The real treat however is the park and freeride potential. The jumps are perfectly dialed however and make for effortless landings that my old knees hardly noticed. There is a dedicated park lift and plenty of jibs and hips for some creative fun. There's also another small gondola that gives access to a few steep couloirs. In fresh snow, Nordkette would be amazing as there are ski routes all the down to Innsbruck but given it's proximity to the city and southern aspect, I think it would be tracked out by There's one restaurant at the top that serves standard Austro fair. But again, the views on a sunny day are amazing. The verdict? Definately worth a day trip just for the view. If you ski park, then you'll never get sick of this place and if there is fresh snow make sure you are on the first gondola and you'll have an amazing time. Beginners though should stay away. While there is a snow play area with free bobs and snow bikes, everything else is red, black, or off-piste. I like that Danish connection! Ischgl The warm spell has past and the powder has returned so after a weekend chasing the fluffy stuff locally too busy skiing for photos , it was time to venture further a field. This time to Even though the Feb school holiday madness is over, Ischgl didn't get the memo. After finding the last spot in the overflow car park, we turned the corner at the Silvrettabahn to discover the usual gaggle of Dutch and German school kiddos had been replaced by hordes of over 50s. We'd just driven 2 hrs to get here and longest queue in Europe took at least 40 mins plus an other 20 mins in the gondola so it was before we clipped our skis on. The crowds at the top were just as bad and my grumpy-dad mood further deteriorated when I was hit by 2 different out of control beginners before I'd gone 10m. Not happy. So we scadaddled as far away from the main gondolas as possible and thankfully the crowds thinned as the elevation rose. Ischgl is big. And high. Spread over multiple bowls on the Austro-Swiss border, there are 3 lifted peaks over m and another 4 over m. These aren't lots-of-rocks-with-a-small-piste-down-the-middle type peaks either. Almost all the lifted faces are wide open and skiable - either on or off piste. The freeride here looks amazing Heading back towards the Silvrettabahn Bergstation area, most of the crowds had stopped for lunch. Between this and the impressive lift infrastructure, the pistes here were pleasent enough. There are a LOT of lifts in Ischgl, many doubled up side-by-side so the queues at the top were minimal given how bad it was at the bottom. There's also a long red 'duty free' run down into village of Samnaum in Switzerland where you can buy tax-free-but-still-overpriced perfum and watches. I've always been curious who actually goes shopping on a ski holiday but I guess if I'm asking that, I'm not the target demographic. Overall thoughts Huge skiable area with interesting terrain, very good infra, and on the day we visited, amazing snow quality. The customer demographic was noticably different to other resorts - almost no children or teen but lots of older gents in bogner gear a few sizes too tight. I didn't get to try the Swiss side of the resort, nor the famed apres which hurts both the wallet and head too much these days anyway. But I'd happily return for the freeride which looks the bomb. Reactions: Tanuki , LMB , blueandwhite and 3 others. Interested in your day at Nordkette. A few years ago we had an aborted Austrian trip that never happened due to covid restrictions. We'd originally planned to stay in Innsbruck for the first few days and ski Nordkette and another resort on the south side of town. I was fascinated by Nordkette as it looked like pretty much everything was quite steep and I also kind of liked the idea of wandering around Innsbruck in full ski gear to get to the gondola! Out of interest what was the trail down from the top station like? Not that bad? It was pretty hard to get a steer on it without first hand experience. Also had no idea they had a park! Innsbruck Station Congress to Golden Roof. You must log in or register to reply here. Similar threads. SnowKid Oct 24, Europe 2. Replies 58 Views 5, Feb 7, Heinz. Trip Report Austria Heinz Jan 21, Europe 2 3. Replies Views 9, Mar 14, Whiteman. Astrogirl Jan 2, Europe. Replies 10 Views 2, Jan 18, dawooduck. Share: Share Link. Log in Your name or email address. Password Forgot your password? Stay logged in. Top Bottom Back.
Austrian Dreaming - Dec/Jan Trip Report
Zell am Ziller buying hash
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. Hello everyone. First post so be gentle. We are off to Mayrhofen for the first time at the end of Jan and wondered if anyone had any top tips for where is best to grab a bite to eat on the mountain? Just looking for big hearty meals as a reasonable price. Thanks for your help. Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person. DJH, Welcome to snowHeads! Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see? Also if you are a fan of a pizza and a beer then the penken park is awesome Kristalhutte can get very very busy as it is the easiest to get to so we normally head to the wedelhutte, for cheaper eats then the Firnhutte, set just below the top of the 2nd stage of the gondola, very authentic and cosy and they do an awesome steak salad. Zell and Ziller We will be in the valley from the 27th so ask away if you have any questions, this will be our 8th year in zillertal! You need to Login to know who's really who. Thanks both. Perfect advice, exactly what I was after. Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do. You'll need to Register first of course. Actually Enduroaid, I'll be coming to Zillertal this February and it'll be my 2nd time. Last year I found only one good restaurant for dinner in Mayrhofen- Perauer. Do you have any other recommended restaurants? Then you can post your own questions or snow reports It is my partners birthday whilst we are there and in typical style I am still without a gift! A really nice meal out may well buy me enough time to get something either whilst we are there or when we get back! If anyone can help a fella out it would be greatly appreciated. After all it is free. DJH , It's quite a few years since I actually stayed in Mayrhofen, however back then the Hotel Rose which is on the street going up on the left hand side of the church did a daily choice of 3 different 3 course meals which were reasonably priced. Finally in the main street opposite the photographers shop 'Foto Willy' and one building down there was a restaurant called Grillkuchl which did good typical Austrian cuisine. Hope the above is useful. You'll get to see more forums and be part of the best ski club on the net. Panne e vino - on high street, great Italian. Steakhouse Tyrol - does a very good chateaubriand. Edelweiss - the entrance on Pfarrer Krapf Strasse where the central car park is not the downstairs entrance. Great pizza or steak. Down sit downstairs. Ski the Net with snowHeads. These are my favourite evening eats in Mayrhofen town. And love to help out and answer questions and of course, read each other's snow reports. Thanks guys! Perauer was my favorite too last year. 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. DJH How is it out there?! We're coming out on the 4th, can't wait! You know it makes sense. Everything tried so far has lived up to expectation. Goulash at the Vogelnest. Enroute to Eggalm. Very good Pizza at Penken Park also very good. Stopped for a beer at Unterbergalm Penken, far right on the map really nice spot and food looked really good. Hintertux -Tuxerjochhaus. Fairly basic place compared to some on the glacier but friendly people and the food was ok. Self service but made up to order. If that makes sense. Very very busy at 1pm but good food again. Otherwise you'll just go on seeing the one name:. DJH Thanks! We'll go and try some of those out! To continue my blow by blow account of current restaurants this week. Sit down affair so a bit more than expensive than the others previously mentioned. Very very good. Try and grab a waiter and ask for a table or you are down to pot luck with someone leaving close to where you are stood. There is also a self service part next door. 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. 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:.
Zell am Ziller buying hash
Family vacation in Zillertal
Zell am Ziller buying hash
Zell am Ziller buying hash
Turmhaus Tirol — Zell am Ziller, Austria
Zell am Ziller buying hash
Zell am Ziller buying hash
Zell am Ziller buying hash
Buying blow online in Hertogenbosch
Zell am Ziller buying hash