Charme traditionnel
Vues spectaculaires
Activités hors-piste
Charme traditionnel
Vues spectaculaires
Activités hors-piste
Charme traditionnel
Vues spectaculaires
Activités hors-piste
Charme traditionnel
Vues spectaculaires
Activités hors-pisteSesto (Sexten in German) is a traditional South Tyrolean village at the head of the Sesto Valley, directly beneath the most famous skyline in the Dolomites. The Sesto Sundial - a chain of peaks named after the hours of the day because the sun passes over each in sequence - rises directly above the village, and the Tre Cime di Lavaredo, the three rock towers that are the defining image of the Italian Dolomites and a UNESCO World Heritage Site, stand at the valley's end. The village itself is a quiet, year-round farming community with traditional timber-and-stone houses, a parish church, working dairy farms, and the kind of deep-rooted South Tyrolean character that larger resort towns have long since diluted. It's a place where the mountains, not the tourism, still set the agenda.
Sesto is one of the base villages for the 3 Peaks Dolomites (Drei Zinnen) ski area, which covers 115km of pistes across 82 runs served by 31 lifts - including six gondolas. The Helm (Elmo) sector, accessed directly from Sesto via gondola, is the sunniest and most panoramic part of the ski area, with south-facing slopes that look out across the Puster Valley towards the Rieserferner group and into Austria. The summit reaches 2,300m with a 1,170m vertical drop. The terrain is predominantly beginner and intermediate, making it one of the most accessible ski areas in the Dolomites. The Dolomiti Superski pass opens access to over 1,200km of pistes across the wider region.
What makes Sesto special is the combination of the most spectacular mountain scenery in the Alps with a village that's remained genuinely authentic. The Tre Cime are visible from the slopes, the Sesto Dolomites provide a jaw-dropping backdrop to every run, and the village below has the kind of quiet Tyrolean soul - wood-panelled Stuben, home-baked strudel, cattle bells in the distance - that you can't fabricate. The area also has 255km of cross-country skiing trails, making the Puster Valley one of Europe's premier Nordic destinations. Check out Sesto ski deals to start planning your trip.
Sesto (Sexten in German) is a traditional South Tyrolean village at the head of the Sesto Valley, directly beneath the most famous skyline in the Dolomites. The Sesto Sundial - a chain of peaks named after the hours of the day because the sun passes over each in sequence - rises directly above the village, and the Tre Cime di Lavaredo, the three rock towers that are the defining image of the Italian Dolomites and a UNESCO World Heritage Site, stand at the valley's end. The village itself is a quiet, year-round farming community with traditional timber-and-stone houses, a parish church, working dairy farms, and the kind of deep-rooted South Tyrolean character that larger resort towns have long since diluted. It's a place where the mountains, not the tourism, still set the agenda.
Sesto is one of the base villages for the 3 Peaks Dolomites (Drei Zinnen) ski area, which covers 115km of pistes across 82 runs served by 31 lifts - including six gondolas. The Helm (Elmo) sector, accessed directly from Sesto via gondola, is the sunniest and most panoramic part of the ski area, with south-facing slopes that look out across the Puster Valley towards the Rieserferner group and into Austria. The summit reaches 2,300m with a 1,170m vertical drop. The terrain is predominantly beginner and intermediate, making it one of the most accessible ski areas in the Dolomites. The Dolomiti Superski pass opens access to over 1,200km of pistes across the wider region.
What makes Sesto special is the combination of the most spectacular mountain scenery in the Alps with a village that's remained genuinely authentic. The Tre Cime are visible from the slopes, the Sesto Dolomites provide a jaw-dropping backdrop to every run, and the village below has the kind of quiet Tyrolean soul - wood-panelled Stuben, home-baked strudel, cattle bells in the distance - that you can't fabricate. The area also has 255km of cross-country skiing trails, making the Puster Valley one of Europe's premier Nordic destinations. Check out Sesto 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.