Skiing

The winter season 1987/'88 we spent in Meribel, Les Trois Vallées, France.

It was one of the hosts for the 1992 Winter Olympics, bills itself as the largest skiable area in the world.

It is a massive interconnected ski region, consisting of three main resorts and eight villages in three valleys:
Vallée de Courchevel (Courchevel 1,300, 1,550, 1,650 and 1,850 meters)
Vallée de Méribel (Méribel, Mottaret)
Vallée des Belleville (Les Menuires, Val Thorens).

Vibe in the powder
Vibe in the powder down Mont Vallon.

Ingo in the powder
IngO in the powder, Mont Vallon.

Méribel and Mottaret are in the middle of Les Trois Vallées and provides the most convenient access to the riches of the area.

Courchevel often gets the votes as a place to stay.

Val Thorens is the highest village in Les Trois Vallées (2,300m) and the highest ski resort in Europe.

Les Menuires is voted one of the ugliest ski resorts.


Cold Facts:
Vertical Drop:
Courchevel: 1,402 m
Meribel: 1,200 m
Val Thorens: 900 m
Top Elevation: 3,200m
Lifts: 200
Total Pistes: 600 km
Cross Country: 110 km
Snowboards: Yes
Ski Instructors: 1,000
Patrolmen: 280
Vibe in the powder 2
Vibe doing tracks

On our tour around the world, we visited Treble Cone, Wanaka, New Zealand.

Treble Cone ski area is located in the Matukituki Valley, 28 km west of Wanaka on New Zealand's South Island. Driving time is about 30 minutes from Wanaka and 100 minutes from Queenstown, a major tourist resort.

The skiarea faces northeast, giving the field protection from cold southerly winds and providing lots of sunshine.

Treble Cone offers the largest lift-served vertical drop on the South Island and is voted having one of the best views in the world.

Vibe  looking at one of the worlds best views
Cold Facts:
Vertical Drop: 660 m
Lifts: 6 (2 chairs, 1 fixed grip, 1 platter, 2 T-bars)
Terrain: 15/40/45 (beg/int/adv)
Snowboards: Yes/halfpipe/basin
Season: Late June - Early October