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THE SWISS SIDE OF PORTES DU SOLEIL
by Ted Heck
When Switzerland Tourism
suggested I visit their portion of the world’s largest “international” ski
domain, it was an easy sell. I knew the French side after several ski
holidays in Morzine and Avoriaz, but I had never been based in one of the
six Swiss resorts. France has eight resorts and between the two countries
there are 403 miles of prepared slopes served by 220 lifts.
I chose Champéry
because I knew a little of its colorful history and its reputation as one of
the first Swiss villages to recognize the impact tourism could have on its
future. The village in 2007 will celebrate its 150th anniversary
of being hosts to tourists. It is the dominant hamlet for skiing on the
Swiss side of the Portes du Soleil, but it is also popular in the summer
with bikers and hikers.
The five other
Swiss mountain villages in the Portes are Val-d’Illiez, Les Crosets,
Champoussin, Morgins and Torgon. All of them are also part of a region known
as Chablais, which has eight other communities in the Rhone Valley and
around Lake Geneva. Headquarters for the Chablais tourist office is in the
town of Monthey, where the cogwheel train begins its journey up to the ski
areas.
Like many other
train adventures in Switzerland, this one started with an urban setting, but
it soon changed to alpine meadows, with picturesque chalets and barns. It
looked like springtime with green grass and early flowers, until we reached
the snowline.
I was met at the
train station by Helene Besseling, owner with her husband of the Hotel Beau-Séjour,
a charming three-star hotel on the town’s main street and only a short walk
to a cable car. The building, like many on the street, has the dark wood,
photogenic exterior of structures from another time.
The Chablais
region is in the French-speaking part of Switzerland, but any nation so
dependent on tourism has to be attuned to English as well. In the hotel I
also heard a lot of Dutch and quickly discovered that the Besselings have a
loyal band of customers. A dozen skiers from the Netherlands stay with them
every year. The hotel had been fully booked from Christmas until the first
week in April.
The Beau-Séjour
only offers bed and breakfast, but a connected public restaurant, Le Vieux
Chalet, was a comfortable place for my first dinner. Vanessa Freidl came up
from Monthey to welcome me to the Chablais; she is responsible for marketing
the region. We talked about all the villages and the different attractions
available, particularly those with a family orientation. For a comprehensive
picture of the region visit
www.chablais.info and browse through the various villages.
I could
have used Vanessa as a guide the next morning. The top of the mountain was
fogged in and I had trouble in the flat light, so I abandoned any idea of
going over to Avoriaz in France. Vanessa, a former ski instructor, would
probably have told me that “you don’t have to see it, just feel it.” It’s
advice I’ve often heard in the Alps; it’s never worked.
But I
managed to get in several days of fun, by adjusting to breaks in the clouds.
Between Planachaux and Les Crosets the snow was heavy in areas of traffic,
but I found some groomed and mostly untracked areas to flex my muscles in.
In
addition to information given by Vanessa. I received a good orientation on
Champéry from local tourist director Steve Theytaz. His office is across the
street from the train station and the aerial tram that goes up to Planachaux
---and near two ski shops. Steve invited me to the Palladium, a huge
structure that the town’s forefathers could not have foreseen. I watched ice
skaters, a curling lesson, and swimmers in the large pool.
Prizewinning work
of Swiss and French political cartoonists was on display, but the major
event was a two-hour concert on Saturday night by a Chablais quartet---three
guitars and a drummer with a repertoire that went from country to rock to
ballads, with impressions of Johnny Cash and Nat King Cole. The lead-ins
were in French, the songs in English.
My visit to Champéry
was a long time in coming and all too
short. I must go back.
Find more information
for
U.S.,
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ski statistics and ski resort information here:
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