Convenience. Comfort. Calm. You’ll never find these things on a flight. Nor will you find them driving through a blizzard behind winding red brake lights. What if we told you there’s a better way to travel to go skiing? More stylish. More sustainable. More zen.
Relax, take the train.
There are a variety of options with staggeringly different experiences: from the Via Rail Snow Train from Edmonton, Alberta, to Jasper National Park (catch the free shuttle to Marmot Basin ski resort) to riding Mother Russia’s 10,000-kilometre Trans-Siberian Railroad to, well… whichever passing range catches your fancy. Here are six accessible options to whet your rail appetite:
Vatnahalsen Train
Myrdal, just one station past the lodge, is on the Bergen Line, meaning Vatnahaslen connects with trains running between the capital, Oslo, and Bergen, Norway’s second-largest city. Combined with world-class ski touring and freeriding, a trip to Vatnahalsen is a worthy experience. When conditions allow, ski to the bottom of the valley and take the world-famous Flåm Railway back to the lodge.
The Glacier Express
The 7.5-hour route from Zermatt to St. Moritz includes 291 bridges, and 91 tunnels, and surmounts the 2,033-metre Oberalp Pass. Doing it in one shot, however, would be a great shame when you can stop to ski at storied resorts like Bettmeralp, Andermatt, and Disentis.
Tokyo Ski Trains
You can also board regional trains from Nagano to access several resorts, such as Myoko and Arai.
Swedish Night Trains
You can also reach the popular ski resort of Åre on a night train from Stockholm or do the long haul into the Arctic Circle through the iron-mining town of Kiruna to ski Abisko, Björkliden, Riksgränsen, and even Narvik, Norway. Make sure to book your own sleeping compartment and enjoy a hot dinner served in the restaurant car.
Eurostar Ski Train
From there, further access via bus, taxi, and (in some cases) aerial tram will deliver travelers to 16 major ski resorts, including Méribel, Courchevel, La Plagne, Les Arcs, Tignes, and Val d’Isère. With 750 passengers per train, Friday overnight and Saturday daytime services carry 24,000 skiers each winter.
Colorado Ski Train
It’s slim pickings in the Lower 48, but that makes the ol’ D&RG Ski Train from Denver to Winter Park, now well into its seventies, unique in the United States as the only dedicated train route to deliver skiers directly to a ski hill. Denver’s municipal rail service even makes it possible to connect Union Station with Denver International Airport, so you never have to step foot in a car the entire trip.