Posts Tagged ‘european ski holidays’

First week on Grand Alpine Tour of european ski resorts

Friday, October 9th, 2009
camping in the alps in September is pretty great actually

camping in the alps in September is pretty great actually

After a relatively easy, if un-glamorous trip down from Calais to the French alps, we traded in our nights in highway truck stops for balmy days in a gorgeous French campsite at the foot of Alpe d’Huez ski resort.

Jimmy helps daddy to fetch water to the Airstream

Jimmy helps daddy to fetch water to the Airstream

We get excellent WiFi so I can crack on with a few days of work online which need to be completed before we can start to visit the alpine ski resorts to review their ski holiday facilities.  Jimmy settles in immediately and, along with mummy, befriends a charming Dutch couple who are regulars at the campsite (been coming here for 17 years, and I can see why).

A lot of roadies stay in this campsite for just a night or two, as they’re here to take on the mighty Alpe d’Huez, one of the most famous climbs in the Tour de France – there are also a lot of Dutch caravanners & motorhomers here, among the many French old-timers who have made this their summer/autumn residence in retirement.

I’m struck by the marked difference in the Dutch and French approach to us – bonhommie aught rather to be a Dutch word I think, as one or a couple of Dutch campers come to say hello most days, ask if they can look around the Airstream and enquire enthusiastically about our Grand Alpine Tour - the French only speak or even smile at us after several days of effort with huge smiles all round and “bonjour! ca va?” attempts to engage.

It’s here, and while thinking about this difference between the French and Dutch, that I started to realise just how similar the English and the French really are.

The Dutch are certainly extraordinarily socially capable, when roaming abroad – I think a lot of their confidence comes from the impressive Dutch multi-lingual abilities, of which I am frequently envious, but there is something more to it too.  Maybe its that straightforward matter-of-factness… whatever the reasons, they are one of the most generous and enjoyable of nationalities to meet when travelling.

Ben and Jimmy were immediate friends

Ben and Jimmy were immediate friends

But back to the English and French – yes, we are incredibly similar.  If you look at demographics, a caravanner is most likely to be working class and/or retired so I asked myself, if a French person turned up in a (let’s be honest) fairly flash caravan, in a working class caravan site in the UK, how many of the locals would rush over to say hello… speaking in French?  Not too many is my guess!  But, if that French person made lots of effort to be friendly and engage, no doubt most Brits would be generous and welcoming… and so it went on our first week in the French alps.

turn right, behind the bins to find the waterfall - is everywhere stunning in the French alps?  yes, probably

turn right, behind the bins to find the waterfall - is everywhere stunning in the French alps? yes, probably

By the end of the week Jimmy was saying “au revoir” or rather “ov-war” to everyone and even “bonjour” if the camper had a “doggie” with them.  With French ladies, Jimmy is our secret weapon! (he is a terrible little flirt – gets it from his ma ;-) )

Jimmy checks out the cafe culture in Bourg dOisans, below Alpe dHuez

Jimmy checks out the cafe culture in Bourg d'Oisans, below Alpe d'Huez

Next: driving up (and struggling down) Alpe d’Huez with a 2.5 ton vintage caravan

(if you’ve a business or accommodation in Alpe d’Huez, Get Listed Now on our ski holidays guide and I’ll name-check you in the Alpe d’Huez blog post)

Airstream ski resort tour leaves London and heads to the Alps

Sunday, October 4th, 2009

Passports – check

Ferry tickets – check

Euros – check

Alpine Maps – check

Vintage american caravan – check

Trepidation – CHECK

With no more time for procrastination, prevarication and even palpatation… we left the safety of  our sunny Surrey camp site and headed for “In’jin country”

this way there be monsters

this way there be dragons

Actually the road to Dover sea port was pretty uneventful, but it still felt like we were taking our life into our hands… as we headed for nearly four months in an untested vintage caravan, on an uncharted route, via un-booked campsites, to visit largely un-opened ski resorts

… Jimmy slept through our trepidation with the certainty of someone who knows that, whatever transpires, it’s not his problem.

All we Brits need is a good queue to take our mind off things

All we Brits need is a good queue to take our mind off things

Fortunately there is no real managing of a road trip and, once you’re properly on the road, any fear and foreboding is quickly submerged by the rhythm of travel.

Like ski holidays, road trips can be hard going but mostly road trips are fun – especially if you’re 19 months old, or travelling with someone who is.

Though hes been in his PJs and sleeping bag for 2 hours, Jimmy is not taking any hints re sleep

Though he's been in his PJs and sleeping bag for 2 hours, Jimmy is not taking any hints re sleep

On the ferry we all start to crash…

Jimmy sleeps on daddy, on ferry, en route to France

Jimmy sleeps on daddy, on ferry, en route to France

… I’m trying to keep the wheels on with a LOT of coffee but…

Jimmy sleeps on daddy, who sleeps on the ferry, en route to France

Jimmy sleeps on daddy, who sleeps on the ferry, en route to France

… coffee is no longer working … I even tried taping a hedgehog to my head but, as you can see, even that didn’t work.

Normally mummy can’t sleep with daddy’s driving but, add 2.5 ton caravan, remove 40+mph velocity… and she’s gone.

Iddi sleeps en route to alpine ski resorts

Iddi sleeps en route to alpine ski resorts

lost in france right-click link & select “open in new window” to listen to Bonnie Tyler cheese-classic “Lost in France” while reading.

Since the sno-mobile is a very big “rig” we sleep in French truck stops, but are careful to only stay in the busy service station car parks – not the un-manned picnic stops.  We’ve heard scary things about those pretty little picnic stopping areas - lovely for lunch by day, but prone to highway robbery by night.  Aparently thieves have not been deterred by the fact that people are asleep inside the caravan they are breaking into… and even driving away with!

not the most glamorous start but were quickly meeting French truckers - some of them might ski

not the most glamorous start but we're quickly meeting French truckers - some of them might ski

I won’t bang on here about the roads. the driving style or the exorbitant motorway tolls – I silently repeat to myself that they are not “wrong”, they are just “different” as my Franglais slowly starts to return amid much gesticulation.  On the thousand or so mile journey down to the French alps, we slowly begin to adapt.

Jimmy hasn’t really noticed we’re in a different country, but is pretty put out by all the sitting down, as we eat up the miles.

Where ever I keep my toy box... thats my home

Where ever I keep my toy box... that's my home

And then the road starts to fade into the background and thoughts turn back to the 30+ ski resorts we’re going to visit in the Swiss and (mainly) French Alps… as we arrive in the mountains.

its not snow capped, is not great weather, but were here... in the alps

its not snow capped, is not great weather, but we're here... in the alps

Next:  first week in a French campsite – thank heavens for the Dutch!

(for now, check out our ski holidays and ski resorts guide on sno travel and sno mobi)

Grand Alpine Tour Prequel – 3 sno people, 3 months, 30+ european ski holiday resorts

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

A few words and pictures on preparing our selves, lives and vintage Airstream for a 3  1/2 month tour of the major ski resorts for european ski holidays.

Is that entertaining if you don’t know us? … not sure… but you’ll come to know we three sno lovers and predict for yourself if we’ll be able to go from London-living-townies (him BBC telly maker, her Bank of America IT manager) to some kind of ski-resort/Romany/travelling hybrid… in 10 short weeks…

… laughter… tears… something for everyone!

TO-DO-LIST

1 – get Airstream and tow-car ready (see earlier caravan-geek post)

sno mobile get ready to roll... and roll... and rol

sno mobile gets ready to roll

2 – Rent the Putney Flat:

We can’t afford to be away on this mad adventure and also pay the mortgage, so our home must be rented - thanks to Gumtree we managed to do so in extremely short order… to a local young family, spookily similar to ourselves (he’s even a beeb chap)… makes you doubt your uniqueness that sort of encounter… however, they are lovely and need exactly the same duration tenancy as we need to fill (they’re having a big loft extension done and need to be elsewhere with 2 very small children) – Iddi deftly handled the flat renting process and this is a pleasing, if solitary, TICK on the to-do list.

2 – Choose 3 month route through the alps:

It’s a big old drive from London to the alps but once you’re there, all of the major ski resorts in France are within a few hours drive of each other

Airstream Preparation – getting a 1966 vintage US travel trailer ready for 4 months touring the Swiss and French alps ski resorts

Friday, October 2nd, 2009
Vintage Airstream Preparation (before visiting 30+ european ski resorts)

Not much about ski holidays or ski resorts, this post is for the Airstream lovers – you might want to skip this one if you’re not a vintage caravan nut… or just look at the pretty pictures!

1 – polish alluminium Airstream exterior:

From totally oxidised grey, to a mirror shine takes 2 people 2 weeks and 5 different grades of cutting and polishing – lets not get into that here! – if this is your bag, you can read an amazing Airstream polishing guide or get it done by pros like like Sarah Jane’s company American Caravans, as I did – this blog will stick to the “before” and “after” shots of the sno mobile

43 year old Airstream looking lovely but very grey and oxidised

43 year old Airstream looking lovely but very grey and oxidised

(gorgeous) George works his magic on the old girls bodywork

George works his magic on the old girl's bodywork

WOW!  family inspection before Grand Alpine Tour (inexplicably dressed as bandidos)

WOW! inspection before Grand Alpine Tour (inexplicably dressed as bandidos)

2 – make sno mobile road-legal in UK – also done by Sarah Jane’s talented chaps

- convert brakes from US “electric” to UK “over-run”

- replace running gear & suspension to work with over-run hitch

- replace towing hitch A-frame and add a hand brake

- convert road lights and add UK yellow turn-indicators (from a 60′s morris minor)

Like J-Lo ?

Like J-Lo ?

3 – buy a huge 4×4 large enough to safely pull a 2.5 ton caravan at speed on the highway

- US trailers have a much higher “tongue” weight (direct downward weight on the tow-bar) so only a Landrover can really tow a big Airstream safely (our trailer is the longest and widest you can legally tow in the uk with a car) - Defender, Disco or Range Rover? – it transpires that only a Range Rover is heavier than our trailer (safer at highway speeds if tow car is heaveier than trailer), so I had the perfect excuse to empty the bank account and buy a cracking mota

gets over 20mpg while pulling 2.5 ton Airstream - runs on bio diesel too!

gets over 20mpg while pulling 2.5 ton Airstream - runs on bio diesel too!

4 – build a cot for Jimmy and suspend it from the Airstream ceiling

not much need be said – parts of the process, here in pictures

take one Ikea cot and begin to improvise

take one Ikea cot and begin to improvise

power sanding is best accomplished with air guitar technique

power sanding is best accomplished with "air guitar" technique

campsite sheep will dispose of unwanted packaging

campsite sheep will dispose of unwanted packaging

legs are so passe - for that true DIY look, at least 2 corners must be supsended from the ceiling or wall

legs are so passe - for that true DIY look, at least 2 corners must be supsended from the ceiling or wall

behind bars

behind bars

Jimmy loves his new Airstream bed

Jimmy loves his new Airstream bed

5 - fit a massive battery bank, so we can keep working on the laptops, even if we’re in a ski resort where we can’t hook up to electric

- for the tech lovers among you; 6x Trojan T105 6v batteries wired in series and parrallell to give nearly 700 amp hours at 12v (its a monster!) – I got a spark in to check my handy work and his old dad asked me if I used to work on submarines…

- a big 2.5KW inverter/charger which can charge them all back up over one night on hook up, or power prett much anything on 240v AC from the batteries (all hidden in dead space under the bed and nicely centralised weight between the axles)

- a big yellow builder’s transformer to give 110v US-style, so we can keep the fab vintage fridge  and the US power outlets (if you check your phone and laptop charger, you’ll see it can work on either EU 230v 50hz or US 110v 60hz)

- 3x fairly inconspicuous UK power outlets plus 3x cigar lighter outlets for things like car chargers (charge things direct from 12v batteries without wasting lots of battery power in the inverter)

6 – get mobile broadband working in French and Swiss ski resorts (3G for the laptops)

we’ll need to be reliably online every day in lots of different mountains and not at rip-off UK roaming data prices!  so I need to find a way to get French 3G (ie a dongle) working in remote mountain places inside an Airstream (which is basically a Faraday cage – ie not radio signals go in or get out!).

Why is this hard?  (1) dongles are locked to the network you buy them from, so my O2 dongle won’t let me use a French Mobicarte SIM and (2) we need to get the 3G signal from outside the Airstream where its strong, to inside the Airstream where its warm and dry!

I found this excellent 3G antenna from Panormama Antennas and fitted it to the old American TV mast - the old mast has a very cool little winder inside so you can turn the aerial for best signal, from the inside!  I love it when old tech meets new – a really nice way of keeping this brilliant piece of 60′s engineering in use!

NB: You MUST buy a dongle with an aerial socket and also get the right lead for that dongle – marvellous chap at Panorama Antenas helped me get the right kit and it gave me excellent 3G reception in an English campsite where I couldn’t reliably connect before.

I unlocked the dongle online at unlocked-dongle.co.uk but have yet to get it working with another SIM, so I won’t make this link active until I can tell you it actually works (news-flash: it didn’t work!).   You need to use a French SIM because you really don’t want to be surfing on a UK SIM with your laptop while abroad – the prices are jaw dropping!

laptop online in remote mountain campsite via WiFi connection to old Nokia N95 - phone is suppliying its mobile 3G broadband via the clever Joiku Spot software

laptop online in remote mountain campsite via WiFi connection to old Nokia N95 - phone is suppliying its mobile 3G broadband via the clever Joiku Spot software

My backup 3G connection is my old Nokia N95 which has Joiku-Spot installed - the clever (and cheap) bit of software allows this excellent little phone to act as a mobile wifi hotspot from anywhere using it’s 3G connection to the inernet, and shares the internet connection with my laptop via wifi!  Again, simply buy the French Mobicarte SIM when over there… and pay for the Internet Max option (tip-1: don’t buy it by the hour as they try to make you… buy “Illimitee” for a monthly fee and you get at least 500MB allowance  for around

Airstream dream becomes sno-mobile reality

Friday, August 21st, 2009
vintage Airstream Overlander 1966 and on the right a 1950s one fully polished - now THATs what we need for our sno-mobile!

vintage Airstream Overlander 1966 and on the right a 1950's one fully polished - now THAT's what we need for our sno-mobile!

After looking for the perfect vintage Aluminium (Aluminum if you’re American) caravan (travel trailer) for an age, we found the perfect one in the middle of the Arizona desert …

… so I jumped straight on a plane from London UK to Phoenix AZ and bought it from a marvellous American chap who thought I was a ficticious e-person invented by an internet scam artist… he was more than a little surprised when I rolled down his dusty drive the following night in an enormous U-Haul truck!

(use these shortcuts if you’re looking for ski holidays or a ski resort guide)

I could try to write in some joepardy about how my internet search took me down a few bling alleys and also about the bonkers American “dealer” who advertises vintage Airstrreams for sale which he hasn’t actually bought yet…

… but the saga is long and considerably less interesting than the final 5 day adventure to buy my vintage Airstream and drive it 1500 miles to the container port in Texas, to put it on a boat back to England…

… so…

Falling back on the old adge that a picture is worth a thousand words, here are a few images which document what happened when I went to meet retired US marine veteran “Arizona Bill” in the desert, with thousands of dollars cash in my pocket, to buy a caravan which was 6 years older than I am.

Bill is an old-fashioned kind of young guy - hospitality like you used to get...

Bill is an old-fashioned kind of young guy - hospitality like you used to get...

This is Bill – in this picture he is the second owner of a 42 year old vintage aluminum travel trailer - soon to become the former owner of a 42 year old vintage aluminum travel trailer.

I found his particular Airstream after many weeks of online and on-phone searching.  I’m glad it took so long because there are really no short cuts to learning the in’s and out’s of vintage Airstreams.  They are things of beauty and rarity here in the UK, but they really are two-a-penney over in the good ‘ol US - so you need to learn a lot if you’re going to buy one yourself.

If you can afford to have it done properly, have a real expert do it for you.  If you need to DIY, like me, then take your time… because there are some absolute shockers out there!

1        2        3        4        U  S    MARINE    CORPS !

Arizona Bill is a former US Army infantry captain (don’ t know why I keep thinking marine - perhaps because Bill’s a bit of an anglophile and worked with our Royal Marines).  Having served in some really very difficult circumstances and unpleasant places, Bill has seen things that he would really rather not have… and is more than a little thankful that he is now retired from the armed forces, back into civilian life.  He was selling his Airstream because he used to take his boys camping in it but now has a VW combi for that purpose (much more like camping, than the Airstream “home on wheels” approach).

Understandably, it seemed not entirely credible to Bill that someone might fly eight thousand miles to buy a two ton trailer, which he could not possibly fly back with.  After more than a few emails and phone calls to convince him, Bill seemed to accept that I wasn’t going to ask him to deposit money into a Nigerian bank account – he agreed not to sell the Airstream until I arrived fresh off the plane the next evening.

I decided not, at that stage, to get into a long winded explanation of our clever ski holidays website which is designed to also work on all cell phones… or that his Airstream was about to become a sno mobile on a Grand Alpine Tour of three dozen Swiss & French ski resorts… from Bill’s perspective, the story was already weird enough.

My longish flight was delayed almost to the point of all the rental companies in Phoenix closing but, after literally running around them all, I found not a single one willing to rent me a pickup with tow hitch… once they knew what I wanted to tow… and how far…

… so I rented a U-Haul lorry (truck) and told the nice chap that I was taking my friend’s little boat-trailer down to go sailing in the port of Galveston (next to Houston TX 1,500 miles away) and required a (double the cost) one-way rental.

I finally pulled into Bills yard, up a dirt road amid cacti and wagon ruts (embellishing slightly for effect) – it was dark and Bill was understandably surprised/concerned that the Nigerian internet fraudster had actually materialised and was affecting a British accent and red-eyed cheeriness.

All credit to Bill – he was busy re-attaching the Airstream curtains which he had washed and ironed (!) and even gave me a full set of fresh bed sheets, so I could “test-drive” the Overlander, overnight in his yard.  He even had a cable hooked into his house to show me the vintage fridge freezer was super cold on that hot desert evening.

everything is perfectly formed and it all works!  gas & electric fridge, 3 stove gas hob, gas oven, gas hot water tank, electric water pump, shower with mini-bath, vintage loo (hmm, not sure about that), plus all original furniture

everything is perfectly formed and it all works! gas & electric fridge, 3 stove gas hob, gas oven, gas hot water tank, electric water pump, shower with mini-bath, vintage loo (hmm, not sure about that), plus all original furniture

Cutting a long story only slightly shorter, after a hot but comfortable night, Bill helped me look around the Airstream and all of its facilities and foibles.  We basically spent the day teaching me how to “Airstream” (lighting the water heater, runinng the fridge on gas instead of electric, using the stoves, oven and grill, purging gas, emtpying the black water tank, etc).  I should explain that I have neither owned a caravan before, nor even stayed in one (not since I was 7 anyway).

Bills favourite local bank teller signs to say I bought the Airstream fair and square

Bill's favourite local bank teller signs to say I bought the Airstream fair and square

After a visit to the local bank to pay in the cash and get the title notarised, we returned to Bill’s place where I showered, enjoyed something spectacular in an omelette (what did you call that Bill?) and with a wave and many thanks… I was off!

U-Haul was the only company who would rent me a tow vehicle to pull the vintage Airstream - I thought a cheap 4x4 would be perfect but nope... it had to be a truck!  14ft U-Haul plus 26ft Airstream equals the first 40ft vehicle Ive ever driven - still, only 1500 miles across the US driving on the wrong side of the road!

U-Haul was the only company who would rent me a tow vehicle to pull the vintage Airstream - I thought a cheap 4x4 would be perfect but nope... it had to be a truck! 14ft U-Haul plus 26ft Airstream equals the first 40ft vehicle I've ever driven - still, only 1500 miles across the US driving on the wrong side of the road!

first time driving a 40ft articulated vehicle?

1500 miles across the desert?

in a foreign country?

on the wrong side of the road?

… piece of cake!

Inexplicably, I actually asked Bill to drive it out of his yard and to the nearest hard surfaced road… as if that was going to be the trickiest section of the 1500 mile trip!

And then I was on my own…

The road from Bill’s place to the highway had a 3 mile cone-lined narrow section which was almost exactly as wide as my new “rig” – so the first 10 minutes at the wheel were often sphynctre clenching – but I got to the highway as the sun went down… and started truckin’

convoy (right click this link and choose “Open in New Window”, to listen to “Convoy” while reading the rest of this post)

nice Rs

nice Rs

The 3 day and night drive from central Arizona to southern Texas was an exercise in ignoring the clock.  My body/brain wasn’t on local time anyway and all that really mattered was to maximise the mileage, rather than to be awake or asleep at the correct local times… so I alternately drove until I was tired and then slept until I was not… repeatedly… for 3 days.

America is PERFECTLY geared up for travelling by road – a road trip is written into the DNA of an American… it’s second nature.

But the US is deceptively big by road,  if you’re from a small island, where you can drive the length in a day and the width in half that.

The highways aren’t different from ours in Britain and neither really are the stops/service stations, its just that its much more normal to be “on-the-road”.  Its normal to drive until you need to sleep and therefore its normal to sleep in a service station car park (you’d have PC plod knocking on your window at 3am if you were found sleeping in the Scratchwood services car park on the M1).

I slept in the Airstream sometimes by day and sometimes night – mostly alongside 18 wheelers, because my “rig” was too long to park with the other RVs and caravans.  It was interesting to note that most people didn’t stop and stare or come to look/talk – interesting because I knew they would do in the UK and Europe – that was the whole point of travelling in it on the sno ski holidays “ski resort tour”, to get SNO noticed.

Airstreams – even beautiful vintage ones – are utterly unremarkable in the USA and that’s why mine was just $8000 (approx £5300) from Bill - it would cost over £30k to buy in the UK (well beyond my budget).

I’m ashamed to say it now but that lovely old trailer of mine was bounced along behind the U-Haul truck at 80+mph for most of the trip, because time was tight and I kept telling myself that American miles, like their gallons, are smaller and therefore I wasn’t really do a proper 80!

That night I shared the price of a motel room with El Paso Airstream Guy

met Mark on the last leg to the port - he was shipping his to Japanese clients

met Mark on the last leg to the port - he was shipping his to Japanese clients

On the final night before reaching the sea port of Galveston Tx, coming to the end of my driving wakefulness, I passed a slightly older and beautifully polished Airstream cruising along behind a pickup.  I honked as I barrelled past and thought no more of it until, parked up that evening the owner/driver pulled in at the same station/motel area.  We got to talking and I discovered that Mark was a retired preacher who funded his homeless charity, across the border in Mexico, with a little Airstream dealing on the side… as one does.
polished 50s shows patinated 60s the way forward

polished 50s shows patinated 60s the way forward

Mark’s trailer was an empty shell so he needed a cheap room to sleep in… and my trailer was for camping only (I was determined to put no water or anything else into the tanks before dropping it off for the 4 week boat trip home) …
… Mark needed a place to sleep and, after 3 days on the road, I needed a good shower and shave…
… so we split the price of a room and I used his shower before retiring to the car park outside.
3652961491 1a60d2daa5 image from Airstream dream becomes sno mobile reality post in alpine ski resorts tour category
The following day was a comedy of errors as we tried to keep charging Mark’s pickup battery from my U-Haul truck…
… eventually swapped out his alternator…
… then went on a hunt for someone to “purge” (ie empty) my lovely polished aluminium gas tanks, so they’d be allowed on the boat.
Fortunately Mark knows a lot of people (he has shipped a lot of these trailers), but no one could do the job and also give the newly required certificate (its an insurance thing – they’d be sued beyond the horizon if they exploded on a container ship).
In the end we resorted to opening the valves in an industrial area and hoping no one would smell it – very naughty – but it didn’t come out nearly fast enough so I had to give up on those lovely polished tanks.
quite a loss these, but I later discovered you cant get UK/Euro adapters to fill them anyway and theyre not legal (must be steel over here)

quite a loss these, but I later discovered you can't get UK/Euro adapters to fill them anyway and they're not legal (must be steel over here)

Since Mark had been such a cracking chap, I gave them to him to “get what you can on eBay” – which turns out to be rather a lot!
With all of the faffing around, we got Mark’s trailer on the boat before the yard closed for the day, but not my sno-mobile - I would have to return in the morning – so Mark and I said our goodbyes and I drove to the beach to spend my last night in the US…
… and end the road trip…
… as is fitting…
… where the road ends…
cant drive no further, the roads run out

can't drive no further, the roads run out

… at the ocean…
… with a beer.
3652968657 f6671f6d35 image from Airstream dream becomes sno mobile reality post in alpine ski resorts tour category

NEXT:    the dash to get ski holidays website, caravan and life ready for the Grand Alpine Tour…

European ski holidays – the only place for a cheap deal ski holiday

Sunday, January 11th, 2009

If you’re still thinking of Canada for ski holidays then you’re probably not feeling the financial pinch as much as the rest of us.  Put simply, skiing North America is not the European snow lover’s answer this coming winter.

If you still want a snow fix when your credit is crunching