Équipements haut de gamme
Excellente ambiance après-ski
Vues spectaculaires
Équipements haut de gamme
Excellente ambiance après-ski
Vues spectaculaires
Équipements haut de gamme
Excellente ambiance après-ski
Vues spectaculaires
Équipements haut de gamme
Excellente ambiance après-ski
Vues spectaculairesSilvretta Montafon is one of Austria's best-kept secrets: 141km of pistes in the Montafon Valley of Vorarlberg, making it the largest ski area in the province. Created in 2008 by linking the established Hochjoch and Silvretta Nova areas into a single network, it combines serious mountain scale with a valley that feels genuinely Austrian rather than built for tourism. Ernest Hemingway spent two winters here in the mid-1920s, writing and skiing, and the mountains that captivated him haven't lost any of their appeal.
The terrain stretches from the valley floor at 860m to 2,300m, served by 35 modern lifts. More than half the pistes sit above 2,000m, and the skiing is genuinely varied: wide, confidence-building blues across the sunny Silvretta Nova side, long flowing reds through the mid-mountain, and serious challenges higher up, including the Black Scorpion runs with gradients of up to 81% and the HochjochTotale, Vorarlberg's longest unbroken descent at 12km dropping 1,700m back to Schruns. Off-piste, the terrain between the Verwall and Silvretta ranges is vast and varied, with steep couloirs, open powder bowls, and long backcountry descents that have earned Silvretta Montafon its reputation as the \"Home of Freeride\" and a regular stop on the Freeride World Tour and Open Faces Series. A Freeride Station at the Grasjoch summit serves as a meeting point with safety information and guided sessions. Snowmaking covers 66% of the runs, and the season runs from late November to mid-April.
Away from the pistes, the Montafon Valley has a depth that rewards exploring. Schruns is the main town, reachable by train from Bludenz, with a pedestrianised centre, shops, and the Aktivpark leisure centre. St. Gallenkirch and Gaschurn add quieter, more traditional bases further up the valley. Dining leans into hearty Vorarlberg traditions, with mountain huts serving Käsknöpfle and Kaiserschmarrn alongside more refined options in the valley, and early-morning sunrise skiing sessions on Saturdays let you carve freshly groomed pistes before the lifts officially open.
Silvretta Montafon is one of Austria's best-kept secrets: 141km of pistes in the Montafon Valley of Vorarlberg, making it the largest ski area in the province. Created in 2008 by linking the established Hochjoch and Silvretta Nova areas into a single network, it combines serious mountain scale with a valley that feels genuinely Austrian rather than built for tourism. Ernest Hemingway spent two winters here in the mid-1920s, writing and skiing, and the mountains that captivated him haven't lost any of their appeal.
The terrain stretches from the valley floor at 860m to 2,300m, served by 35 modern lifts. More than half the pistes sit above 2,000m, and the skiing is genuinely varied: wide, confidence-building blues across the sunny Silvretta Nova side, long flowing reds through the mid-mountain, and serious challenges higher up, including the Black Scorpion runs with gradients of up to 81% and the HochjochTotale, Vorarlberg's longest unbroken descent at 12km dropping 1,700m back to Schruns. Off-piste, the terrain between the Verwall and Silvretta ranges is vast and varied, with steep couloirs, open powder bowls, and long backcountry descents that have earned Silvretta Montafon its reputation as the \"Home of Freeride\" and a regular stop on the Freeride World Tour and Open Faces Series. A Freeride Station at the Grasjoch summit serves as a meeting point with safety information and guided sessions. Snowmaking covers 66% of the runs, and the season runs from late November to mid-April.
Away from the pistes, the Montafon Valley has a depth that rewards exploring. Schruns is the main town, reachable by train from Bludenz, with a pedestrianised centre, shops, and the Aktivpark leisure centre. St. Gallenkirch and Gaschurn add quieter, more traditional bases further up the valley. Dining leans into hearty Vorarlberg traditions, with mountain huts serving Käsknöpfle and Kaiserschmarrn alongside more refined options in the valley, and early-morning sunrise skiing sessions on Saturdays let you carve freshly groomed pistes before the lifts officially open.
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.