Charme traditionnel
Vues spectaculaires
Joyau caché
Charme traditionnel
Vues spectaculaires
Joyau caché
Charme traditionnel
Vues spectaculaires
Joyau caché
Charme traditionnel
Vues spectaculaires
Joyau cachéSt Jean d'Aulps sits at 970m in the Vallée d'Aulps in Haute-Savoie, a traditional Savoyard farming village in the French Alps where stone farmhouses and dairy pastures have shaped the valley for centuries. A Cistercian abbey was founded here in 1094, and the village grew up around farming and cheesemaking long before the first lifts arrived. That heritage still sets the tone: this is a working mountain community where the skiing has an unpretentious, family-rooted feel, the kind of place people come back to for the welcome as much as the slopes. It's part of the wider Portes du Soleil region, one of the world's largest ski areas, while keeping a character entirely its own.
The skiing rises on the Roc d'Enfer, a striking peak that towers over the village, with the local area covering 50km of pistes climbing from 970m to a summit of 1,800m. Runs wind through sheltered forest lower down, then open out to wide mountainside and long views across the Chablais Alps higher up. It's well-balanced terrain that suits every level: gentle greens and blues near the village for finding your feet, a solid spread of reds through the mid-mountain, and a couple of blacks up top for confident skiers chasing a challenge. The north-facing slopes hold snow well, and with snowmaking on the main runs, conditions stay reliable through the core season from late December into late March.
Beyond the slopes, the Vallée d'Aulps is a place to slow down and eat well. This is Abondance cheese country, and the valley's dairy heritage runs through everything from the farm shops selling wheels straight from the cellar to the tartiflette and fondue on restaurant menus. The ruins of the Aulps Abbey sit in a meadow just outside the village, with a heritage centre and gardens worth an afternoon. There's plenty to fill the days you're not skiing: snowshoe trails through the forest, a weekly village market, and the lakes and waterfalls of the valley to explore on foot. For a bigger night out or a wider choice of shops, Morzine is ten minutes down the road.
Check out St Jean d'Aulps ski deals to start planning your trip.
St Jean d'Aulps sits at 970m in the Vallée d'Aulps in Haute-Savoie, a traditional Savoyard farming village in the French Alps where stone farmhouses and dairy pastures have shaped the valley for centuries. A Cistercian abbey was founded here in 1094, and the village grew up around farming and cheesemaking long before the first lifts arrived. That heritage still sets the tone: this is a working mountain community where the skiing has an unpretentious, family-rooted feel, the kind of place people come back to for the welcome as much as the slopes. It's part of the wider Portes du Soleil region, one of the world's largest ski areas, while keeping a character entirely its own.
The skiing rises on the Roc d'Enfer, a striking peak that towers over the village, with the local area covering 50km of pistes climbing from 970m to a summit of 1,800m. Runs wind through sheltered forest lower down, then open out to wide mountainside and long views across the Chablais Alps higher up. It's well-balanced terrain that suits every level: gentle greens and blues near the village for finding your feet, a solid spread of reds through the mid-mountain, and a couple of blacks up top for confident skiers chasing a challenge. The north-facing slopes hold snow well, and with snowmaking on the main runs, conditions stay reliable through the core season from late December into late March.
Beyond the slopes, the Vallée d'Aulps is a place to slow down and eat well. This is Abondance cheese country, and the valley's dairy heritage runs through everything from the farm shops selling wheels straight from the cellar to the tartiflette and fondue on restaurant menus. The ruins of the Aulps Abbey sit in a meadow just outside the village, with a heritage centre and gardens worth an afternoon. There's plenty to fill the days you're not skiing: snowshoe trails through the forest, a weekly village market, and the lakes and waterfalls of the valley to explore on foot. For a bigger night out or a wider choice of shops, Morzine is ten minutes down the road.
Check out St Jean d'Aulps ski deals to start planning your trip.
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.