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This Topic is now a Sticky, for useful links and Official Info regarding travel to Switzerland and access to the Swiss ski resorts.

msej449 wrote:For those interested, here's a list of the various official sites that carry the latest updates on travel to Switzerland. The trouble with threads and posts is they tend not to get updated retrospectively, so can go out of date quickly. It's worth taking a wander 'round these various pages so you're familiar with them and can get the situation from the source.

Embassy of Switzerland in London
Swiss Federal Office of Public Health (FOPH)
UK Foreign Office (Switzerland) - Foreign Travel Advice for Switzerland
Canton du Valais - Regional Authority for Verbier & 4 Vallées

If you're intending to drive down through France, then it's also worth becoming familiar with

UK Foreign Office (France) Foreign Travel Advice for France
French Consulate in London

You can also sign-up for automated email updates re France and Switzerland on the corresponding Foreign Office pages above. This service will notify you when the site information is updated. I've found all these pages and the FO site to be pretty consistent and changes seem to be well-coordinated across the Swiss/Franch and FO sites.


Please keep discussion off this Topic; if you have new questions or just want to discuss, then please start another thread. Off-topic replies will be removed.
AndorraMike wrote:Today was a perfect bluebird day with a 900 m vertical hike up to 2800 m, close to as high as high as you can ski in Andorra.

That does look rather good... :thumbup:
Far Queue wrote:Any ideas on how this would work?

I'm not a lawyer (also, the law may change tomorrow, or even this afternoon!) but if the UK government advice is not to travel then you're still legally allowed to go BUT some travel insurers won't cover you if you do.

Obviously, if the borders are closed due to whichever government banning international travel then it's a different kettle of worms. The EU are not currently allowing non-essential travel from UK due to our virus numbers.

It's 2 weeks away so let's hope all the numbers (and politics) move in the right direction for things to ease up a bit by then.
J2Ski Snow Report 31st December 2020

Ok, so the lifts are shut but if you can get there and you're prepared to skin up... Le Grand Bornand, France, looks like this at the moment...

Happy New Year from J2Ski!

The mountains are waiting for us... please stay safe and follow local advice on travel. We can't all go skiing just yet but we can dream!

The Snow Headlines - 31st December
- Up to a metre of snowfall in 24 hours reported in the Alps.
- World's deepest snow heads towards 5-metre mark in Western Canada.
- More than 280km of slopes reported open in 4 Valleys, Switzerland.
- Ski centres close in Czech Republic, Ontario and Slovenia due to pandemic.
- Ski areas in Andorra, France and Italy wait to hear if they can open on 7th January.
- Rain briefly closes slopes in Northeastern North America.
- Three Scottish ski areas open for locals in country's 3-week lockdown.

It's a very mixed picture in the skiing world as we end 2020.

Although still to be confirmed, we are hopeful that most of Europe's ski slopes will be open by early January, and that most in North America and Asia will also be open.

The snow news worldwide is fairly good. The deepest reported base - in western Canada at present - is approaching 5 metres and the past week has seen significant snowfalls in western North America, the Midwest, Pyrenees, Dolomites, Alps, much of Eastern Europe and Scandinavia. There's even been some snowfall and consistently cold weather in Scotland.

For many of us, local and international travel bans are more of an issue at present but, fingers crossed, things should start to improve from here.


In the Alpine Forecast

Lighter, scattered snow showers in the forecast for much of the alpine region this coming week.


Snow heading for Canada, USA and Japan...


Re-publication :- our Snow Report Summary, being the text above this line, is free to re-publish, but must be clearly credited to www.J2ski.com with text including "J2Ski Snow Report" linked to this page - thank you.


Europe
Austria
Austria has opened (or in the case of its glacier areas re-opened) its slopes and has been reporting generally great conditions through its first week of the season. Snow that had accumulated during the seven weeks closed is lying up to 3.5 metres (12 feet) deep on glaciers and there was significant fresh snow at the start of this week too.

It's not a perfect picture, of course, as some low-lying ski areas have little snow on lower slopes and the latest snowfall was accompanied by up to 'hurricane force' winds on Monday which led to the cancellation of a World Cup slalom race after its first run.

Pandemic operating is causing issues too. Some areas were crowded over Christmas but others have reported very quiet slopes – in some cases too quiet to be able to generate enough income to cover costs and the Molltal glacier shut down 'temporarily' (but with no clear reopening date known) soon after re-opening, apparently for that reason.

Resorts had hoped to open for tourism on January 7th but that's now been set back to January 18th and then only if infection levels are low.

France
French ski resorts are still hoping they'll be able to open for the season from the 7th January, but the French government hadn't, at the time of writing, confirmed this and doubts are therefore growing that it will happen on that date.

Currently, resorts are generally open but without ski lifts operating, other than in enclosed children's nursery slope areas. Some trails have been groomed for those who want to hike up to ski or sledge down. Conditions look excellent for the few people in French resorts for New Year, with low temperatures and fresh snowfall earlier this week.

Italy
Ski areas in Italy hope to be able to open from January 7th, but at the time of writing it has all gone very quiet with no confirmation from the country's government. That rapidly approaching date is uncertain at present.

Italy's ski slopes do appear to be in good shape however if what stats there are, coupled with TV footage of world Cup races in Alta Badia, Bormio, Madonna di Campiglio and Val Garden in the weeks around Christmas are anything to go by. Another big snowfall in the country led races in Bormio to be postponed by 24 hours as up to a metre of fresh snow fell.

Switzerland
Although many ski areas are now open, restrictions on resort facilities seem to get ever more draconian in Switzerland (e.g. restaurant closures, etc.), the country continues to have the most 'normal' winter (even if it is far from that!) in terms of ski areas being able to open.

Most of the country's resorts do remain open, albeit suffering from a lack of skiers in many cases, and most reported some fresh snow at the start of the week. More and more terrain is open too with the 4 Valleys reporting it had more than 280km of slopes open for New Year – nearly three-quarters of its full area and possibly the largest area open anywhere in the world at present.

Scandinavia
Almost all ski areas in Scandinavia are now open, many having just started their seasons in the past week or two.

Some ski areas including Norway's famously snowy Roldal have been getting back to their normal state of being, reporting a foot (30cm) of snowfall at the start of this week but for many of the bigger resorts, it has been cold but not so snowy.

Are in Sweden, the biggest in the region has about half its runs open and a snow depth of only around 50cm. Hemsedal, also owned by the Skistar group but over in Norway, is in better shape with 80% of its slopes open and a snow depth of more than a metre.

Pyrenees and Sierra Nevada
It's looking like the Pyrenees may open up over the coming weeks although reports in the country's media suggesting Andorra's ski areas would open for the season from Saturday, 2nd January now look to have been premature with the date still unknown.

However, areas already open on the Spanish side of the mountains will dramatically increase what's available – Baqueira going up from 35km at Xmas to 90km of slopes open over New Year. French ski areas in the Pyrenees currently hope to open for the season from Thursday 7th January in a week.

Strong winds closed slopes in Sierra Nevada to the south earlier in the week.

Scotland
Scottish ski slopes have seen plenty of fresh snowfall over the past week and consistently low temperatures. Three centres are currently open in Scotland's latest 'near-lock-down' with all ski areas moved into the highest level 4 in the country's tier system, in common with the rest of the Scottish mainland, even though infection rates are currently very low where they're located.

Access is limited to people living in the regions where they are located (Aberdeenshire, Perthshire, Moray and Highland). Glencoe report snow is not quite enough for groomed runs so far but people are out ski touring. A few runs are open so far at each of Glenshee and The Lecht.

Eastern Europe
It has been the snowiest week of the season so far in Eastern Europe with Slovenia's Kranjska Gora posting one of the biggest accumulations, 70cm in 24 hours on Monday-Tuesday 28-29 December. Other big resorts in the region like Slovakia's Jasna or Bulgaria's Bansko have posted significantly improved conditions too with powder snow and more terrain open.

Most ski nations in the region have allowed their ski areas to open, although the Czech Republic, which had done initially, has now closed its ski slopes again.

North America
Canada
A real East-West divide in Canada with more snowfall and snow depths reaching the 4.5 metres (15 feet) mark along the BC/Alberta border at resorts like Banff (Sunshine) and Kicking Horse, the deepest in the world at present. Eastern Canada continues to have a rather lousy start to the 20-21 season, partly due to the pandemic but equally because mother nature refuses to play ball. Heavy rain was the latest issue to impact centres, closing many just after Christmas, but it has been colder and snowing again in the past few days, thankfully.

Ontario has become the first state or province in North America to see ski resorts closed by the local government.

USA
As with Canada, although perhaps not quite so extreme, there's an East-West divide for snow conditions in the US. That said, most parts of the country have seen fresh a snowfall in the past week, as much as half-a-metre (20 inches) in parts of the Rockies.

In the northwest, the snow came after a period of heavy rain which damaged snow cover on the slopes as it did to the north in Quebec. There was physical damage at one ski centre in New York state, Belleayre, where a 'wet snow avalanche' crashed down into the base lodge.

Against the mixed snow news, more popular ski resorts have been reporting their limited numbers of day passes have been selling out most days, generally due to a 50% capacity cut due to the pandemic being felt as holiday demand grows.

We'll see you next year! Thanks for reading...
SwingBeep wrote:The Valais Cantonal Police announced today that they were investigating 12 British tourists

Thanks SB, so a bit different to the 100s being falsely reported elsewhere. It'll be interesting to see if any action is taken; especially as it looks pretty clear that there was a time (perhaps just Xmas Eve?) when even those in quarantine were being allowed to leave, and some were apparently told they could either leave or quarantine (as a handful did stay).
Quick question for Swingbeep if you're around?

The UK FCO Travel Advice for Switzerland ( https://www.gov.uk/foreign-travel-advice/switzerland ) includes the following...

UK FCO wrote:British citizens currently in quarantine who intend to travel to the airport will need to follow protective measures to remain in quarantine; your local cantonal authorities will be able to advise on this, which may include avoiding public transport.


That implies that tourists told to quarantine are/may be allowed to leave the country if they "follow protective measures". Would that include climbing into your own car and driving it home? Swingbeep (or anyone else familiar with the details) - is that your understanding of the Swiss regulations?


Edited to add: Found this, addressing the case that your stay is less than the 10 day quarantine.

Arriving from a country with increased risk

...which includes...
If you do not exhibit any symptoms, you should generally be able to continue your journey. However, the cantonal authority may impose certain conditions for your onward journey, such as the requirement to wear a mask.

I'm not a lawyer, but you can certainly read that as leaving the door open for an "onward journey" home, and it doesn't seem to preclude cutting your stay short if you've already arrived.
SkiYetiMagic wrote:What do people think about the headlines from yesterday

Whilst certainly not condoning anyone who did flout the law, it's best to be pretty sceptical about the headline claims in the media. "trial by media" gets clicks and makes them money...

It'll be difficult to get a true account of what's happened but I'd doubt the numbers claimed.

Firstly, there are a lot of Brits in Verbier, there for the season and resident, and I've see on social media that some of them have already been challenged as to their (entirely legal) presence on the mountain. Secondly, the "identifying" of tourists has included sending texts to UK-registered mobiles recently present in Switzerland and I know one of our contributors (who may be along shortly?) received his text (telling him to quarantine) in UK despite having returned from Switzerland a few days before the quarantine was announced.

I'm sure that the Swiss authorities, being generally pretty efficient, will have a reasonable idea who they'd like to talk to but media headlines are rarely a reliable source of truth!