SHARE
COPY LINK

WEATHER

Swiss ski resorts still waiting for snow

If the strong Swiss franc fails to keep holidaymakers away from Switzerland's luxury resorts, then the current lack of snow certainly will.

Swiss ski resorts still waiting for snow
EmsiProduction

Operators are desperately waiting for the first fall of flakes to draw in ski tourists who are putting off making their reservations just yet.

“It’s difficult to give an opening date, we are waiting to see if the snow arrives and if it’s cold enough to use the artificial snow machines,” said a spokesman for the southwestern Crans Montana resort.

The ski station, which notched up a million overnight stays last year, is suffering from the current snow drought in Switzerland and the Alps in general.

“We haven’t had any snowfall yet, but it’s too early to be defeatist about it,” the spokesman said.

Davos in the southeast has the same dilemma. The resort has managed to open seven of its 50 runs thanks only to snow machines.

“There was a bit of snow in October, but it didn’t last,” said a spokesman.

Dry air conditions brought by a massive anticyclone are behind the lack of the white stuff, according to Swiss forecasters.

The last rainfall was seen on October 16th, with Davos recording just 0.6 mm of rain through Autumn.

Not a flake has fallen at Arosa, a family resort in the eastern Grisons area, which usually enjoys about 25 centimetres of snow on its slopes from mid-November.

“A change will definitely occur in the middle of the week,” said an expert at Switzerland’s meteorological body Meteo Suisse.

“But it’s still too early to say how much snow is going to fall.”

The lack of snow is adding to an already difficult time for the country’s tourist industry, battered by the high cost of the Swiss franc.

The currency has gained about three percent on the euro and around four percent on the British pound, making stays at Swiss resorts all the more pricey.  

Because 60 percent of Swiss hotel visitors are foreigners, half of them hailing from the eurozone, the Swiss government has taken measures to support the industry, with a 100 million-franc (€81.1 million) boost.

The Swiss tourist board has meanwhile spent four million francs promoting the country as a winter destination across the eurozone, Britain and Russia.

The resorts have also taken measures to attract foreign visitors, who are becoming all the more cautious as the debt crisis worsens.

Davos is offering a complimentary ski lift pass with each hotel reservation.

“Tourists want to be sure that the weather is going to be good and are reserving later and later,” said a spokesman at the resort, famous for the World Economic Forum taking place there every year.

At Crans Montana, the tourism office has also responded by offering big reductions on overnight stays.

“Reservations are beginning to pick up. But it’s snow that will prove the trigger” for the influx of skiers, a spokesman for the Valais resort said.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

WEATHER

Will Switzerland be visited by ‘Ice Saints’ this year?

Ascension is not the only annual happening in the country in May, as Switzerland also ‘celebrates’ another 'chilling' event this month.

Will Switzerland be visited by 'Ice Saints' this year?

From May 11th to the 15th, a meteorological event takes place each year in Switzerland.

It “observes”, though admittedly not on scientific basis, a centuries-old weather phenomenon called “Ice Saints”.

What exactly is it?

As its name suggests, it is related to saints, as well as ice and frost.

The saints in question are St Mamertus, St Pancras, St Servatius and St Boniface.

According to a weather lore, once these Ice Saints have passed through Switzerland in the middle of May, frost will no longer pose a threat to farmers and their land.

As the official government meteorological service MeteoSwiss explains it, “spring frosts have been a regular occurrence for centuries, giving rise to the traditional belief that a blast of cold air often arrives in the middle of May. Over time, this piece of weather lore became known as the Ice Saints.”

Fact versus myth

You may be wondering whether the Ice Saints lore actually has basis in reality.

Records, which date back to 1965 and originate from the Geneva-Cointrin, Payerne, and Zurich-Kloten weather stations, “clearly show that, over the long-term average, frost directly above the soil is only a regular occurrence up until the middle of April”, MeteoSwiss says. “After that, the frequency with which ground frost occurs progressively declines to almost zero by the end of May.”

“We can conclude, therefore, that there is no evidence in Switzerland to confirm the Ice Saints as a period in May when ground frost is more common.”

However, MeteoSwiss does concede that “ground frost is nevertheless a regular occurrence throughout May as a whole…having occurred at least once or twice in May every year, and in around 40 percent of the years there were more than two days in May with ground frost.”

What about this year?

MeteoSwiss weather forecast for the next seven days indicates that, this year too, no frost will be present on the ground in mid-May.

In fact, temperatures through much of Switzerland will be in double digits, reaching between 18C and 25C, depending on the region.

You can see what to expect in your area, here

SHOW COMMENTS