e bluest day possible, rivaling some sweet blue sky days I have had elsewhere. The snow was spring-ish as the temps were rising. I have limited spring snow experience, and now I have much more.
The key to this great day of skiing was realizing that all of the bumps (no designed moguls here, but lots of traffic through melting snow made for many bumps) were easy to navigate as I could go around or through. My sister noticed I became more and more aggressive as the day went along, pushing through the bumps, trying as much as possible to stay in rhythm, using the bumps t
o change direction.
This part of the Alps are beautiful as it turns out. The setup was good, with lots of lifts, although the chair/gondola balance was not as skewed towards gondolas at Saalbach. Still, mostly very comfy, leather, heated seats (we didn't need the heat at all). There were occasional lift lines that were not nearly as bad as they looked, so maximum wait was 10 minutes. My sister hired a guide who took us all over the right side of the place--we only took the big gondola to the distant mountain once just to see it--we didn't have enough time or energy to ski there.
The terrain was quite good--mostly wide slopes with some decent steepish parts. Too many traverses. The ridges were fantastic--great views and not windy. The only big challenge of the day was the traffic. I don't think I have been surrounded by as many skiers as I was yesterday. So, most of my thinking yesterday was not about technique but tactics--when to stop and when to start and on which side to avoid the many bodies.
I enjoyed the very short slalom course that was built for kids (I banged my helmet trying to enter the course area) and got smoked by a teenager who left the gate before I was set:
I could have worn one less layer--but I have no real spring skiing style experience. So, I was pretty warm.
Our guide showed us the famous Hannankahm race course, and we did a very tiny piece of it.
Now that I am on the way home, I now have to figure out where Saalbach and Kitzbuhel rank. I definitely enjoyed them more than my previous Austrian experience at Zurs and Lech. I think, putting aside having more fun since I had a ski buddy on this trip, Zermatt and S/K compete. Both had amazing views,varying terrain, great chalets on the slopes, and lots of good slopes for my ability. S/K were easier to navigate with better signage and better design. I think I liked the terrain at Saalbach better, but I would have to do more at Kitzbuhel to be sure. One more day would have really helped with the comparative analysis.
In terms of ski towns, Zermatt was better but not much better than K and both are better than Saalbach. Zermatt benefits in part by its proximity to Italy--Italian food is much better than Austrian, athough I enjoyed several apfelstrudels and one wonderful Kaiserschmarrm.
I guess the big test is where would I want to go back the soonest, and the answer is Hokkaido. But if Japan is out, then probably Kitzbuhel for more exploration and to address my completion fixation/FOMO, then Saalbach and then Zermatt, but recency bias is a hell of a thing.
One last thing--this is a very bad year for avalanches in Europe and North America. The a-alert level was 4 on a 5 point scale, so people couldn't go off piste. We did see some spots were mini, controlled avalanches occurred.
The only danger I faced were the crowds, who I mostly avoided, and a slipping ski buddy on the lifts, and that, well, was a closer thing. While I am tired, I only have a slightly sprained finger and am ready for two weeks of asking interesting folks a bunch of pesky questions. But first: two flights home and a heap of laundry.












