Champéry: piste guide

There’s plenty of off-piste terrain
There’s plenty of off-piste terrain

Champéry’s slopes are open and sunny with the exception of two partly wooded long runs to the valley.

Extent of slopes

You reach the edge of the bowl of Planachaux via the village cable car or a fast six-seat chairlift from Grand Paradis, a short, free bus ride away. With two or three further lift rides you can get up to the French border. If snow is good, there are a couple of pistes back to Grand Paradis – one curling well away from the lift system – but no pistes back to Champéry. Some slopes are floodlit for night skiing till 10pm twice a week.

Champery resort guide table

Fast lifts

There are a few fast chairlifts but most lifts on the Swiss slopes are ancient draglifts and chairs.

Queues

If snow is poor, you can expect end-of-day queues for the cable car down to the village. But there are few other problems.

Terrain parks

The Superpark is a good terrain park at Les Crosets; it has everything you could want, including rails and kickers for different ability levels. There’s a snowcross course near La Foilleuse. New for last season was the Micropark for beginner freestylers near the Grand Conche chair. There are other (excellent) parks easily accessible in Avoriaz.

Snow reliability

The Swiss side of the mountain roughly faces south-east and so snow quality can suffer. More snowmaking would be good.

Experts

The Swiss Wall, on the Champéry side of Pas de Chavanette, is usually a giant mogul field and provides great amusement to those riding the chairlift over it. It used to be classified black but is now an itinéraire. The proper blacks in the area are worthwhile and there’s plenty of off-piste terrain.

Intermediates

Confident intermediates have the whole Portes du Soleil at their disposal. Locally, the runs home to Grand Paradis are good when the snow conditions allow. Les Crosets is a junction of several fine runs. There are slightly tougher pistes from Mossettes and Pointe de l’Au, leisurely cruising above Champoussin, and delightful tree-lined meanders from La Foilleuse to Morgins. From Col des Portes du Soleil a long blue run goes down a quiet, wooded valley to Morgins; but after a good descent to the rustic Tovassière restaurant the run turns into a path, dropping a mere 200m in around 4km.

Beginners

Far from ideal. The Planachaux runs, where lessons are held, are steepish and small (as well as remote from the village), and there’s a lack of easy longer runs to progress to – some of the local blue runs could easily be classified red.

Snowboarding

Not ideal for beginners, and there are several draglifts (some quite steep). There are good terrain parks in Les Crosets and Avoriaz for intermediates and experts, though, and some good powder areas to explore.

Cross-country

It’s advertised as 7km – not a lot – with 4km floodlit every night, and the snow is unreliable.

Schools and guides

The children in a recent visitor’s party used the Swiss school – ‘All made good progress and enjoyed their lessons.’ It faces healthy competition from the Freeride Co and Redcarpet Snowsport School.

Families

Champéry wouldn’t be high on our shortlist for a family trip, given the lack of slopes at village level.

Where to Ski

This guide is taken from Where to Ski, edited by Chris Gilll. 

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Intersport