Come summertime, when people want to feel the sun on their backs, they turn to the south, through instinct – like migrating birds – or just habit. Come winter, when they want to feel soft snow beneath their skis, they turn… to the south.
It’s a curious phenomenon. Everybody knows that the places where it’s always cold, and the snow is thick on the ground, lie in the opposite direction; but the bulk of skiers still head south to the Alps.
But when the Alpine ski business was merely wringing its hands about the effect of climate change on
Just after the millennium, when it had recently added Hemsedal in Norway to a portfolio of Are and Salen in Sweden, SkiStar was already the most profitable ski company in the world, according to one experienced UK ski entrepreneur I spoke to. Last season, when everyone else in the ski business was struggling, SkiStar saw its
SkiStar’s plan already seems to be working – although it is actually the global economy rather than global warming that is keeping Scandinavian skiers at home.
When it comes to downhill skiing, of course, altitude is fundamental, and Scandinavia’s mountains fall far short of the Alps. For example, at Trysil, Norway’s biggest and most popular resort (now a SkiStar property), the highest skiable point is at 1,100 metres, and the ski area has a drop of a mere 685 metres. It’s a nice, civilised resort with good cruising runs, some of them fast enough to satisfy Michael Schumacher (who until recently had a chalet there); but it does lack challenge.
Indeed, comfortable skiing is the norm in Scandinavia, although there are some steep runs, notably the downhill course for the 1994 Winter Olympics at the Kvitfjell area near Lillehammer in Norway and the World Cup piste at Are. But the closest thing Scandinavia has to an Alpine resort is Hemsedal (highest skiable point: 1,450 metres), which has steep pitches on either side of the lower slopes which are tricky when ungroomed. Hemsedal also has the attraction of the Skarsnuten “design hotel”.
Of course many Nordic skiers are unconcerned about slopes.
In Arctic areas, there’s a lot to be said for
An attempt at ”tourism on skis” in the lakelands of central Finland was initially less successful, as my chosen destination, Jyvaskyla, turned out to have heating beneath its main streets and pavements. But out on the frozen lakes, skiing to see buildings by the architect Alvar Aalto went more smoothly.
Unlike the Alps, Scandinavia has hardly any
But the most appropriate destination for UK skiers is probably Are, where SkiStar has cunningly tuned the valley’s five villages to meet the needs of different market sectors, from families to
Many Nordic resorts have long






















