It’s been snowing again and we managed to not only get up Mont Fort – where there was about 40 cm and not a breath of wind – but we also skied the Gentianes itinerary just as the cloud broke. And it was rather nice. And made all the nicer by the knowledge everyone else in Verbier couldn’t see more than ten feet in front of them…

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Suddenly the snow stopped and the clouds parted and we got a glimpse of what’s on offer tomorrow…

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The snow’s coming down in town and the forecast is for it to keep going all day. Which nearly makes up for the act we were due a load more on Friday but there’s high pressure moving north over the Med which has scuppered things. (Now, that’s a pretty geeky answer but we know you only deal in the cold hard facts).

Still, it’s pretty relentless snow this morning so cross something for us…

Meanwhile it’s been baltic in resort the last few days, but it’s also been blue skies and looking stunning. This stunning in fact:

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Snow update…

Here are a couple of snaps in town this morning but we’ve also just been told they’ve got over a foot of fresh down by Lake Geneva (cheers Rob – and everyone else have a read of his splendid blog).

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Well, I know it’s not nice to gloat, but our office looks like this and it’s brilliant. Gloat over. Sorry.

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Yup, the lifts are open and the snow is falling. The fact it’s falling at Attelas and not any lower was not ideal, so it was a rather soggy Lac des Vaux opening.

But we can all start with platitudes about a good dense base and cold nights etc…

Still, it was good get up there and there’s a proper fall coming next week so please cross your fingers.

However the highlight of the day was getting back to Verbier via the big new lifts. So new they were still making them when we went down, and let me tell you that getting being casually waved into a lift by a man who seconds earlier appeared to be trying to fit something important-looking to it is not a confidence instilling experience… But Rob was a very, very brave boy.

It’s been a little topsy-turvy in Verbier the past couple of weeks. The euphoria of the heavy snow back on the 24th and 25th of October was followed by whispers from TeleVerbier that we’d open on the 30th of October.

But the sun came out and it all went up in smoke. So back to the normal opening date of the first weekend in November? Not quite.

The official line was it would all be fine for the scheduled opening and the Wednesday before opening powers-that-be confidently announced announced that we would open on time.

However, in the T-Bar last night there were a few guys who work on the snow cannons claiming that the Foehn wind blowing in that night meant snow couldn’t be manufactured and the existing snow was receding. Fast.

So on the Thursday the lift company changed their line and explained that due to the massive change in the weather Verbier’s opening weekend has been cancelled. Which means disappointment two weeks on the bounce.

But it doesn’t end there. Never does….

After the snow / sun / Foehn came snow again this weekend and on Sunday we were getting excited. Again. But the sun came out and the snow line shot up to Ruinettes again.

Then it snowed. And got cold. And right now it’s not impossible (but by no means certain) that Saturday the 13th will be lucky for some.

But don’t hold your breath…

Is that it?

Well, not according to Felix. Because everybody’s favourite Canadian has – at some length – explained to me that due to the amount of fresh water entering the seas from melting snow caps, the Gulf Stream and the ocean conveyor belt will run slower, bringing less warm weather up to us and creating the coldest winter “for like thousands of years”.

Well, Felix knows his stuff and who am I to argue with him. After all, I was the one banging on about opening resort in October and look where that got me…

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