Équipements haut de gamme
Vues spectaculaires
Joyau caché
Équipements haut de gamme
Vues spectaculaires
Joyau caché
Équipements haut de gamme
Vues spectaculaires
Joyau caché
Équipements haut de gamme
Vues spectaculaires
Joyau cachéSome ski bases give you a mountain. This one gives you two, plus one of the loveliest cities in the Alps. Axamer Lizum and Muttereralm are neighbouring ski areas in the Tyrolean Alps of Austria, , set in the mountains just southwest of Innsbruck and linked to the city by a short ride on the ski bus. Axamer Lizum is the higher and more rugged of the two, a broad alpine bowl below a jagged limestone ridge that locals call the Dolomites of the North. Its altitude keeps the snow dependable, earning it a reputation as Innsbruck's "white roof", and its history runs deep: these slopes hosted the alpine races at both the 1964 and 1976 Winter Olympics (and you can still ski the old downhill and giant-slalom lines today). Muttereralm, a few minutes away, is gentler, its runs threading down through forest.
Put together, the two areas add up to around 55km of piste, and each has its own character. Axamer Lizum is larger and more varied, with wide runs dropping from the 2,340m summit through open alpine terrain, most of them blue and red and best suited to intermediates. Beyond the pistes lies a serious amount of off-piste: 300 hectares of marked freeride terrain, with couloirs, open bowls, and a handful of ski routes. Muttereralm is smaller and easier, with around 16km of mostly blue and gentle red runs through the forest. Their seasons differ, too: Axamer Lizum's altitude gives it a long season from late November into April, while lower Muttereralm opens mid-December to mid-March, holding its snow through north-facing, tree-shaded slopes and full snowmaking cover.
The setting is a big part of the appeal: village quiet when you want it, with a city's dining, culture, and nightlife only minutes away. Both areas are based around small, traditional villages on the city's doorstep, with central Innsbruck just ten to fifteen minutes by tram or bus. That closeness is unusual for a ski trip: you have a whole city's worth of restaurants, bars, and shops within reach, plus a walkable medieval old town and the museums and cafés of a lively university town.
Some ski bases give you a mountain. This one gives you two, plus one of the loveliest cities in the Alps. Axamer Lizum and Muttereralm are neighbouring ski areas in the Tyrolean Alps of Austria, , set in the mountains just southwest of Innsbruck and linked to the city by a short ride on the ski bus. Axamer Lizum is the higher and more rugged of the two, a broad alpine bowl below a jagged limestone ridge that locals call the Dolomites of the North. Its altitude keeps the snow dependable, earning it a reputation as Innsbruck's "white roof", and its history runs deep: these slopes hosted the alpine races at both the 1964 and 1976 Winter Olympics (and you can still ski the old downhill and giant-slalom lines today). Muttereralm, a few minutes away, is gentler, its runs threading down through forest.
Put together, the two areas add up to around 55km of piste, and each has its own character. Axamer Lizum is larger and more varied, with wide runs dropping from the 2,340m summit through open alpine terrain, most of them blue and red and best suited to intermediates. Beyond the pistes lies a serious amount of off-piste: 300 hectares of marked freeride terrain, with couloirs, open bowls, and a handful of ski routes. Muttereralm is smaller and easier, with around 16km of mostly blue and gentle red runs through the forest. Their seasons differ, too: Axamer Lizum's altitude gives it a long season from late November into April, while lower Muttereralm opens mid-December to mid-March, holding its snow through north-facing, tree-shaded slopes and full snowmaking cover.
The setting is a big part of the appeal: village quiet when you want it, with a city's dining, culture, and nightlife only minutes away. Both areas are based around small, traditional villages on the city's doorstep, with central Innsbruck just ten to fifteen minutes by tram or bus. That closeness is unusual for a ski trip: you have a whole city's worth of restaurants, bars, and shops within reach, plus a walkable medieval old town and the museums and cafés of a lively university town.
Je réserve habituellement moi-même les vols, les transferts, l'hôtel, la location du matériel de ski et les forfaits ski, mais cette année j'ai utilisé WeSki pour un séjour à Morzine. C'était tellement plus simple. Tout a parfaitement fonctionné - les transferts sont arrivés à l'heure et il y avait beaucoup de retours d'information tout au long du processus, ce qui vous donne confiance que les vacances se dérouleront sans problème.
Un service vraiment utile qui est beaucoup plus facile à utiliser que d'autres sites "tout compris". Il comble parfaitement le fossé entre une agence de voyage et la réservation du séjour par vous-même en ligne. J'utiliserai WeSki chaque fois que j'irai au ski à partir de maintenant.
Nous avons réservé un séjour au ski de dernière minute à Morzine via WeSki. Nous avions envisagé de réserver le séjour nous-mêmes, mais nous n'avons pas pu trouver un prix aussi avantageux que celui proposé par WeSki. L'entreprise a été super et nous n'avons rencontré aucun problème du début à la fin. Je passerai certainement de nouveau par eux pour réserver un autre week-end au ski.
Une expérience fluide du début à la fin. Je passais des heures à essayer d'organiser un week-end et j'ai réussi à le faire avec WeSki en quelques minutes et pour le même prix que si je l'avais réservé moi-même. Le vol, le transfert et l'hébergement étaient tous comme prévu et nous n'avons rencontré aucun problème.