Feature stories
General
overview
The skiing overview
News
in brief
St. Anton am Arlberg, perfect mountain resort
St.Anton
maps
How
to get there
World Alpine Ski
Championships map
Summer map
Beautiful big map
Arlberg ski map
Austrian
videos
The
call of the mountains
Austrian
Arlberg
Lech / Zürs
Imperial
Mountains
Winter activities
The
never ending story
Arlberg a winter's tale
The
unique experience
Ski schools
with a world class reputation
Secret
tracks
The resort of
days & nights
Perfect holiday combination
The
streets of the world village
See
you again in summer
It
was its incomparable ski areas that made St.Anton am
Arlberg famous
Summer activities
Fresh
water Source
Tiroler Oberland
Stroll in to the Arlberg summer
The absolute tops
Alpine
Flowers on the
trail of nature's secrets
Arlberg-Arena
Children
Rule the Roost
The
most incredible experiences in the
lowest gear
Hiking
Paradise at the Arlberg
St.Anton photos
St.Anton photo album
Stuben photo album |
St. Anton
Skiing in depth

Like every other resort- well
in fact like the whole sport of skiing, this ski area is adapting
and evolving. It moves and improves with the times. Although
this evolution is both unstoppable and good for the resort, the
industry and holidaymakers, there will be some who will swear
the resort is "not what it used to be".
You see, this area of The Arlberg
has long been thought of as the
"serious skiers" resort, and almost since time began
(as far as skiers were concerned) it attracted those who awoke
at the crack of dawn in search of the "steep and the deep".
Hard ski, hard party was and still is the name of the game. And
these loyal, and welcomed skiers were largely responsible for
both St. Anton's formidable reputation as a ski resort, as well
as the development of one of the most awesome apres ski line-ups
in the Alps. Great. And more power to them.
However, many lost sight of the fact that, in order to survive
and prosper, any great resort has got to attract a wider base
of skier, and must market to the beginner, the familyas well
as the ever-aging ski population. And let's face it. This section
of the Arlberg has always had the facilities to attract and please
all comers, it was just that its "bad boy of the Alps"
reputation preceded it. This marketing is paying off, and more
and more less serious skiers, including families and beginners
are enjoying all St. Anton has to offer.
However some things never change.
St. Anton still draws and still delights in the attentions of
the serious skier. Late November the annual migration
to the powder mecca begins, and there is no let up until after
Easter. An early local pioneer, Hannes
Schneider, developed ski instruction methods that are not all
that different than those we know today, and as the progress
of St. Anton went over the years, so too did the progress in
the sport world wide. St. Anton is a leader in the skiing business.
Much of St. Anton's following
is largely made up of younger "serious" skiers who
dearly love the challenge presented by the resort. For the skiing
here can be very stiff indeed. Names like the Valluga, the Tanzboden
and the Kapall will be familiar with "clued in" skiers.
And the opportunity for "off piste" or powder skiing
here is legendary.
A look at some of the wild places
showing fresh ski tracks will bear this out. But no resort can
live by challenge alone. A good resort must provide ski terrain
for all standards of skiers. A good resort must provide easy
access at different levels so beginners can be assured of decent
snow to make their mistakes on.
A
good resort must feature well
groomed intermediate grade slopes, so not-so-proficient skiers
can feel and look a bit more proficient. More stylish. More confident.
This St. Anton provides. Then you have the bonus of the other
resorts in the immediate vicinity on the same lift pass. St. Christoph is one such entry just a little ways up on the Arlberg
pass.
This much smaller and much quieter
resort, has immediate access into the mainstream of skiing in
the area, and allows those looking for the opportunity to get
away from it all, in style. The little resort of Stuben offers
that elusive special Austrian resort atmosphere that is coveted
by so many winter holiday makers. It too has a lift system that
is immediately connected into the St. Anton network.
Skiers based in Stuben can enjoy
skiing almost directly above the
resort vai the Albona lift system, and use it as well as an entry
point into the main skiing areas. If that's not enough to satisfy
you top it all off with Lech and Zürs on the same lift pass
(but not interconnected by ski lifts) and you have got a major
league ski area for major and minor league skiers.
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