Making the most of après-ski
Article updated every 6 months. Last update: 14th May 2008
Author: Sean Newsom (Travel Expert) Ask me a question.
More about Sean Newsom
Sean Newsom loves skiing so much that he has made it his job, writing for The Sunday Times as their ski editor. He is also founder of welove2ski.com, the UK's leading specialist ski website.
"Skiing fast in the sunshine with your friends is one of the purest and brightest pleasures I know," he says. "Absolutely everyone should give it a go. If it were up to me they'd be giving ski and snowboard holidays away on the National Health. It would improve Britain's winter well-being in an instant!"
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Après-ski is part and parcel of the ski holiday experience, and if you've never seen a good mountain bar 'going off' at 6.30pm - well, you haven't lived. The sense of euphoria that being in the mountains can bring, plus the extra buzz the adrenaline provides, means the party atmosphere goes from 0-60 faster than you can mumble 'ein bier bitte' at the bar. At the best bars, it's like New Year's Eve every night.
Not all ski resort nightlife is so supercharged, however, and if you want to sample the best of it, you want to shop around. And if you can't bear the idea of being marooned in the middle of 1,000 sweaty, beery twentysomethings on heat, that's fine too: the mountains are full of resorts where a quiet and relaxing drink is the more acceptable means of unwinding after a day on the slopes.
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Kayte Williams
(Holidays Expert)
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Crystal Ski - Crystal have an online 'Resort Finder' service that allows you to search their resorts for those deemed to be good for après Ski
Thomson Ski - Thomson has a 'Resort finder' section on their home page allowing you to quickly find the resorts suitable for lively après ski.
Iglu Ski - Iglu Ski have a section under their 'ski resort' tab allowing you to search the best resorts for a lively night life.
See more of our recommended companies
Finding the right kind of après ski
Not all après-ski is the same. In fact a lot of it can be disappointing if you find yourself in the wrong resort. So here are few rules of thumb by which to steer yourself.
- Austrian après-ski is the best. But even so, it's not universally brilliant. If you want the real deal, go for a resort with reputation for it, such as St Anton, Saalbach, Solden or Mayrhofen.
- Italian resorts tend to be lively only at the weekends - unless, like Sauze d'Oulx, they attract a big contingent of Brits.
- Lots of the purpose-built French ski resorts suffer from being broken up into 'villages'. This means there are never enough people in any one of them to generate a real buzz. So avoid those resorts such as Courchevel, Les Arcs, La Plagne and Tignes which were built according to these concepts. (They do however, have plenty of places for a quiet drink - though the bars are often small and quite rudimentary). Resorts which have grown into big towns, such as Val d'Isère and Chamonix, are much better.
- If you want sophisticated cocktails, then aim for a resort with an upmarket reputation - St Moritz, Lech, Verbier, and Zermatt all do a great line in cool bars for grown-ups.
- Beware of the bar with the widescreen TV. Useful for catching up on the scores back home, but an atmosphere-killer.
- If the idea of après-ski appals you, go for a small resort with a family-friendly reputation.
Insurance
One important point to note is that most ski and snowboard insurance policies have specific exclusions for accidents caused by excessive alcohol or drug consumption. If you were to hurt yourself after a night out on the tiles, your cover may be void.
This almost certainly applies during the evening itself - unless you can either show the drinking was totally unrelated, or there are other circumstances that apply (for example, someone spiking your drink). It may also apply if it can be shown that any accident suffered on the slopes the next day was directly caused by your drinking the night before.
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