Aletsch Arena, CH: 02/03/22

jamesdeluxe

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 17, 2020
After four days with mostly nice weather here in the Valais region, a wet, blustery storm came through on Wednesday so instead of skiing through poor visibility, I stayed in the town of Brig, hung out in a cafe, bought groceries at Lidl, and took it easy. Since last weekend, the forecast had been pointing to Thursday as my only chance of powder on this trip and it panned out more or less as advertised. I woke up to clear skies and the Aletsch Arena's Gazex exploders booming in the distance.

15-20 inches of new snow were waiting when I got out of the Riederalp gondola from the valley:
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At the top, I asked a small group of locals who were farming both sides of the 1,200-vert Hohfluh chair if I could join them:
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The snow was neither champagne nor concrete and stiffening up a bit as the morning progressed so the group was moving with an almost American sense of urgency.
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Around 11 am, the locals headed back to the valley so I started out on an end-to-end tour of the area:
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At 65 miles (104 km) of marked trails and a little under six miles wide, it's considered on the smaller end of the Alps' interconnected circuits. On either end are two independent ski areas, Belalp and Bellwald:
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There was plenty of fresh snow along the sides of the trails:
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At the top of Bettmeralp, dozens of people were taking photos of the Alps' largest glacier:
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Here's a Wikipedia pic that shows more of the glacier:
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It's the resort's one superlative so they remind you of it in signage all over the circuit:
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After skiing down to the village, a ski instructor with a group of little kids asked me to chaperone them on the lift:
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I made it to the far looker's right, Fiescheralp, around 1 pm, had lunch, and did a bunch of runs there. It's certainly the circuit's best terrain sector:
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At 2:30, it was time to head back so I took some of the many "autobahns" that move you horizontally across the circuit:
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Nice!
Glad ya got some nice snow for yer trip.
Looks amazing.
I’ve seen the Swiss Alps from the air looking out the window, stared at it as long as I could and dreamed.
Took a train to Lugano from Milan on a day trip once and it made me want to go to the Alps to ski them.
Keep up yer good works.
Enjoy.
 
just stunning!!!!
 
Incredible! Looks like you hit it just right.
 
Great report JD beautiful scenery .
 
A final bit of travelogue as I'm waiting for my flight in Milan...

In my first report from this trip, Rothwald, I mentioned driving over the Simplon Pass and that it was pretty challenging, even on dry roads. I decided that I didn't want to do it again on the way back to Italy so I bought a ticket on the Autoverlad -- the auto train that takes passenger cars through a tunnel to the other side of the pass in 20 minutes. It's a no-brainer if significant snow is in the forecast and even if it isn't, I'm a bit of a train geek so it seemed worth the one-way fare, $22.

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Here's the train arriving from Iselle, the Italian station on the other side of the pass:
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After the train stops, the conductor gets out, pulls down the metal barrier, and off you go:
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A few minutes later, I joined 15 other cars -- I was second from the front. You move up within ten feet of the next car, engage the parking brake, and that's it.
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As you can imagine, most of the 20-minute ride is in pitch-black darkness; however, there are a couple spots with lights:
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On the Italian side, there were no clouds:
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90 seconds after the train stops, you're back on the Italian autostrada. Using the Autoverlad as a means of transport robs you of the incredible mountain vistas; however, it cuts 40 minutes off the travel time and takes carsickness from all the switchbacks off the table.
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Some more fantastic reading material in 17 years!
da bom
Safe travels
What exotic locale next?
 
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