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Wednesday, September 08, 2010    

The Best Ski Resorts in Germany

The Best Ski Resorts in Germany

Germany has some great, easily accessible alpine ski resorts that have retained a friendly, accessible charm all of their own. Often overlooked, the best resorts in Germany have a good reputation for being consistently efficient with high levels of service.

German resorts are mainly pretty mountain villages, surrounded by lots of tree-lined slopes. The pistes are quiet in the week, but the mountains and the nightlife gets much busier at weekends.

There are no major mountains in Germany, so the ski resorts are all a little low to guarantee powder for the whole season.

Positioned in the centre of Europe most of the ski resorts possess easy access to both scheduled and passenger flights. The international airport of Munich is close to all the main ski areas, plus most of the ski resorts have their own train stations and are easy to get to from France, Switzerland and Austria.

Garmisch-Partenkirchen

The Best Ski Resorts in Germany - Garmisch Partenkirchen

Packed with old-world Alpine architecture, it doesn't get any more Bavarian or charming than the twin towns of Garmisch-Partenkirchen. The scenery, crowned by the mighty Zugspitze (2964m) which lies partly in Germany and partly in Austria, is inspirational.

Garmisch and Partenkirchen are spread out beneath a great horse-shoe of jagged peaks formed by the Wettersteingebrige and Ammergauer mountain ranges. The scenery is so spectacular that it does not matter that the skiing is not quite premier league, although there are some challenging slopes, particularly the infamous Kandahar downhill.

One of the drawbacks of the ski resort is that the various ski areas are fragmented.

There are three ways of reaching the Zugspitze slopes, from Garmisch itself there is a choice between cable car and cog railway. The railway with a short cable car ride at the end is more fun. The cable car takes you to the very top of the Zugspitze, but as it is unthinkable, to all but the most extreme skiers, to ski down to the Glacier, it is necessary to take another cable car down to the slopes on the Zugspitze Platt.

The so called 'happy Card' ebables skiers and boarders to visit six resorts in the region: Garmisch-Partenkirchen own ski areas; the Zugspitze glacier plateau, Alpspitze-Kreuzeck-Hausberg and Wank-Eckbauer, plus the Austrian resorts of Seefield, Mittenwald and the Schneearena Tiroler Zugspitze, which includes Ehrwald and Lermoos.

Garmisch-Partenkirchen In Brief


Getting There:
Zűrich: 310km (194 miles).
Műnich: 120km (75 miles).
Innsbruck: 60km (37 miles).
Railway and bus services available from Műnich and Innsbruck.
Railway station at Garmisch-Partenkirchen.


Height: 740 - 2,830m (2,430 - 9,290ft).


No of Lifts: 38.


No. of Pistes: 43.


Longest run: 3km.


Types of Pistes:
23% beginner, 66% intermediate, 11% advanced.


Main Advantages:
High-altitude skiing; picturesque Alpine villages.


Drawbacks:
Six resorts but fragmented ski areas.