
Chapelco (Argentina)
Chapelco is an intermediate ski area that has sprouted horns. It started life in
1978, but like Gran Catedral, Bariloche, its more famous neighbor 120km to the
south, it could not guarantee good snow.
Skiers from Buenos Aires who once knew Chapelco for its gentle, tree-lined runs
are now confused by Chapelco's more machismo image. They complain that while
money is poured into the thrilling terrain on the upper slopes, they lack good
snow below the tree-line at 1,500m. The situation is aggravated by the fact that
Chapelco's slopes face north (the "wrong" way for a southern
hemisphere resort). Chapelco is a substantial ski area: it has 10 lifts and 35
runs.
El Colorado (Chile)
With 16 lifts and 25 trails, El Colorado is Chile's biggest and arguably most
popular ski area, at least at weekends, when day trippers flock here from
Santiago, the capital which - pollution allowing - is at times visible in the
valley below.
E1 Colorado's coneshaped peak, with southfacing slopes, has good cruising with
excellent off-piste below the cliffs on the south-eastern edge of the resort. A
guide is advisable and a pick-up vehicle essential.
Gran Catedral, Bariloche (Argentina)
There is much to like about this cosmopolitan resort on the banks of Lake Nahuel
Huapi: but two things let it down. It has an unpredictable snow record, for
which it can hardly be blamed, and it is not well organized.
Indifferent organization is often the fate of ski resorts which have lifts run
by different companies. Bariloche is no exception.
One manifestation is poor piste marking. In fresh snow, it is hard to tell poles
indicating rocks from those marking the way down. That is a serious problem in a
resort with 32 lifts, 50 trails, and a vertical drop of 1,000m.
Heini Kempel, director of the Gran Catedral ski school and formerly of
Argentina's demonstration ski team, believes one day soon Bariloche - with its
excellent cruising runs on the upper slopes, its chutes and bowls below Punta
Nevada, and the Carlitos and La Hoya mogul runs - will live up to its reputation
as South America's best ski resort.
La Parva (Chile)
La Parva may have the edge over Portillo as the best single ski area in Chile.
Portillo has more dramatic terrain and scenery, but La Parva has more choice.
It has the biggest vertical drop: 960m. Such is the variety of skiing options
and scenery that days on the mountain rush by.
The problem with La Parva is that it is more a glorified ski club village than a
resort. It has no big hotel. La Parva has 13 lifts, most of them going to
interesting places, especially the new Barros Hegros chair reputedly the longest
quad in South America.
There are 20 listed runs, but much off-piste skiing opens up after a good
snowfall.
Las Lenas (Argentina)
While Bariloche would like to think it has the most important skiing in
Argentina, that honour probably belongs to Las Lenas.
No other resort in South America has such an extraordinary choice of chutes,
gulleys and other off-piste delights.
Las Lenas has an unusual history: almost 20 years ago the then owners of the
land (two brothers who ran a food and manufacturing company) were kidnapped by
guerrillas who demanded a ransom of US$60m. Released unharmed, the brothers sold
to the present owners, who opened the resort in 1983.
Many of lifts and hotels have astrological themes: Piscis is the best hotel,
Geminis the smallest. Venus is a beginner chair, and Neptune accesses the most
exciting and important lift in the resort, Marte (Mars).
Portillo (Chile)
Owned by the American Purcell brothers, this is probably the best-run ski resort
in the continent and among the most spectacular, in a steep sided valley.
It has introduced snowmaking on a realistic level its pistes are well-groomed
and signposted, and it has expert avalanche control. The resort is dominated by
the colonial-style Hotel Portillo, the emphasis on old-fashioned style, comfort,
and values.
The skiing is exotic and slightly eccentric. It is possible to ski to the lake,
and to be rowed back or to ski back on the ice. The steep avalanche chutes are a
big attraction: two are served by unique Va et Vient lifts. These have no lift
towers, but drag skiers up on high-speed platters suspended in mid-air.
The run kept open at almost all costs is the mile-long plateau run; a perfect
pitch for most skiers, a classic cruising run with no awkward moments.
Termas de Chillan (Chile)
There are several volcano ski areas in Chile's Lake District: most have exciting
scenery but their skiing is compromised, either by wet or windy conditions.
Termas de Chillan is perhaps the only one that manages to maintain reasonably
good skiing conditions. The resort is 80km from Chillan the birthplace of
Bernardo O'Higgins, Chile's great revolutionary hero and first president.
Its Don Otto chairlift, at 2.4km, is the longest in South America.
From the top, skiers have a choice of some exquisite off-piste gulleys and
ravines.
Valle Nevado(Chile)
Valle Nevado is pure deja vu: a French purpose-built ski area rising straight
out of the Andes below the awe-inspiring peak of El Plomo (5,426m). It was built
and is owned by Spie Batignolles, one of France's biggest construction
companies.
Valle Nevado was completed in 1988 in the image of what international skiers
might expect from a modern European resort.