Never been skiing before? that’s not a biggie, don’t fret, wever got you covered. Here is a beginner’s guide to skiing in Flachau for those who have never been skiing before. Here’s what you can expect when you’re going down the alps. Here’s how our resident travel journalist encountered on his first trip in the winter of 2024.
This isn’t the kind of holiday lie-down I pictured. I am on my belly, like a seal. The snow, and the boards strapped to my feet, make verticality an impossible dream. I have fallen and I can’t get up.
A beginner’s guide to skiing in Flachau
Thinking of skiing for the first time? Here’s what you can expect.
I’m in Flachau, in the Austrian winter sports region of Salzburgerland, to learn to ski with other newbies. It is one of the hottest ski resorts in Austria.
It’s picturesque here in the eastern Alps, where the snow lingers for longer than in other places, yet the resort’s fairly unknown to Brits, with most visitors Austrian, German or Dutch. Not that I can appreciate the picturesqueness from my current position.
The area is part of the Ski amadé lift pass alliance – a collaboration of 5 areas created to offer winter sports enthusiasts 760 km of groomed pistes over 25 resorts across 5 different regions; 25 marked ski touring routes and extensive off piste areas are also available explore.
Can I go skiing without lessons?
The short answer is yes, although we would only recommend this if you have some skiing experience. And you can book a refresher lesson at the slope.
White-knuckle: Flachau offers slopes for beginners and experts
My instructor, who hauls me back to standing, explains there are no set hours for a total beginners’ course like this; it depends how quickly students catch on. I have two days to get up to speed. On a plus point Flachau offers slopes for beginners and experts.
Luckily, Flachau is a good place for those to whom skiing is completely alien. The drive to Salzburg is only 50 minutes, and do-able on public transport, so if I never find my snow legs I can bail and learn about Mozart while walking on lovely, familiar pavement.
I’m nervous but kitted out and ready to take on skiing for the first time
But I begin to hope escape might not be necessary. After my first lesson I am still terrified, but I can use a button lift and snow-plough.
A suitably celebratory lunch in the slopeside Restaurant Zum Holzwurm offers Kasnocken, or cheesy potato dumplings, and local speciality Kaiserschmarrn – ‘Emperor’s nonsense’ — a pile of fluffy, chopped-up pancakes with jam.
Feast fit for an emperor: Plate of Kaisersharrn pancakes and jam
Lifting spirits: A miniature ski lift is used to deliver beer to the table and orders back down
My group then tries an apparently integral part of a ski trip – Après-ski, or, in a concept familiar to Brits, drinking from mid-afternoon. No culture shock here. Hofstadtl bar is a riotous wooden nook, blaring oompah tunes as flush-faced skiers tramp about in salopettes. Beer travels up to our balcony on its own teeny tiny ski lift.
The liquid courage is needed; last on the evening’s agenda is tobogganing. The course begins atop a winding mountain path. A cosy restaurant, Possruck, waits at the bottom.
The journey down is exhilarating, the view of Flachau’s lights below gorgeous, and it all ends with more hearty local food, deep-fried egg, with limbs intact. I’m taking that as a victory.
The next morning starts with more lessons
The next day, more lessons await. We try exercises like hoisting our ski poles up in the air, or touching our knees, as we descend in the brilliant sunshine. Once I lose a pole. I’m going too slowly, but I’m scared to speed up.
Frustration rises. I miss horizontal ground. But then, at the top of the slope, I steel myself to go faster. I bend my knees and bring my skis closer, swooshing around a turn.
Suddenly, the fear is gone. I am on a mountain, I am skiing, and it’s fantastic.
After lunch we beginners are left to ski by ourselves. Once the piste wilts in the sun, we call it a day, wistful to be leaving. That’s it. I can — sort of — ski. A surprise for someone with such poor balance they had to remove the wheels of their Heely trainers as a kid.
The evening brings a horse and carriage ride from neighbouring Filzmoos to a mountain restaurant. The village is part of the same region as Flachau — and that region is one of five in vast resort group Ski amadé — so our ski passes cover us in both places. In fact, as part of Ski amadé we’re covered for 760km of slopes and 270 lifts.
Breathtaking: A view from Filzmoos
Road to snow-where: Horses and carriage travel up a mountain road to a restaurant
More importantly for this evening, Filzmoos has breathtaking scenery. Sitting Schnapps in hand, watching the forest and jagged mountains deepen into dusk, must be the best way to travel.
Passing cars dwindle and disappear as we climb, and it could be hundreds of years ago. Warming food and hot chocolate greets us at Unterhofalm, a traditional wooden inn.
My last lesson has a twist; I’m on a bike. Two skis replace wheels. I prefer being on my feet, but ski bikes are useful for those with certain disabilities — letting one of our instructors’ students continue skiing after he had a leg amputated.
Non-skiers can take some chair-lifts, meaning newbies don’t need to miss out on views, and that’s exactly what we do to reach the last restaurant. As the lift climbs, the landscape opens up, swathes of white below and peaks rising around us.
Hunger for dumplings sated, we take the same lift back down; we’re not ready to descend on skis. But there’s a different kind of hunger in me as I watch the more experienced skiers swish towards the town, surrounded by rugged beauty. One day.
How to get there:
To organise your skiing in Flachau in the Salzburger Sportwelt ski zone in the SalzburgerLand region of Austria. You can fly to Slazburg and catch a shuttle bus that most places provide or a taxi which will cost around 50-6- Euro.
You can stay at the Hotel Reslwirt – Where a double room costs from €120 per person per night (2 sharing B&B); a 6-day Ski amadé lift pass is €370.50 per adult; the 3-day Learn to Ski package for adults is €407 per adult (4 hours tuition [per day – 2½ in morning/1½ in afternoon).
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Here’s a quick guide to skiing on a budget
Ski resorts don’t have the reputation for being the most affordable — particularly for total beginners, who face stumping up for all manner of clunky kit they might not even want to keep. Here are some ways to go off-piste when it comes to spending and have a carefree ski.
Avoid the chalets
Take advantage of flexible ski passes
Use public transport
Get your gear for cheap(ish)
What else you can do if you don’t like skiing at Flachau
Skiing in flachau is fun and thrilling, but it’s not for everybody. Or even still you may prefer to do it sparingly. Skiing enthusiast usually skii every day, you may like to do it every other day. Perhaps you arrive only to discover the sport isn’t your cup of tea. But it doesn’t have to be downhill.
There are alternatives to enjoying your time at a ski resort. So do not despair if you have taken the plunge of booking a trip without committing to any literal plunges.
Exploring the city: Escaping to Salzburg to see Mozart’s birthplace or simply pretend you’re Maria von Trapp is only a matter of a 50-minute drive from Flachau, or free bus 522 to Radstadt then a €16 train.
Tobogganing: The best or wurst of times depending on your disposition, this is one for thrill-seekers that prefer sitting. skiing at Flachau and nearby resorts offer sled rides at varying prices — even at night, when floodlights and the twinkling of the resort below will guide you.Â
Riding on a horse-drawn carriage: Another sit-down with the bonus of blankets, this is a tranquil way to soak in the landscape. If you start in Filzmoos, your €24-per-person trip will take you up to a traditional mountain hut .Â
Taking to the water at Therme Amadé: This spa and water park — accessible on Ski amadé’s free bus — offers pools, saunas and massages, plus a climbing wall you scale sans harness, then simply drop into the pool. Even harder-core is a ‘rocket slide’ which drops the floor out from under riders. A day ticket is €38.50, less without sauna access.
Going back in time at a medieval castle: Berg Hohenwerfen is a 1077 fortress that rises imposingly out of the rock near Flachau, and offers falconry shows. Tickets start at €10.40 — €16.90 all-in, including a ride on a funicular rail.
What is the Ski Amadé?
The Ski Amadé region of Austria is a network of 28 ski areas and towns that combined provide tourists with a comprehensive skiing experience. Forming the second largest ski resort in Europe and is named after Mozart who was born in Salzburg.
What is closest airport to Flachau
The closest airport to the ski resort of Flachau is in Salzburg. It is an international airport and accommodates thousands of destinations.