When we arrived in Innsbruck in late February, I purchased a "Freizeit Ticket", an IKON-like seasons pass good for many resorts in the Innsbruck area. It's more than an IKON though because you can use it on many cable cars in the summer, for admission to some tourist spots, and for access to the local swimming pool. When I purchased it, the cashier said to me "you realize that the coverage period is half over." I just smiled and said, "it won't be a problem."
The Freizeit includes three days of skiing at the Arlberg. Yesterday I burned my last, making it my last day "am Arlberg" (on the Arlberg). The Arlberg is actually one of the easiest resorts to access from Innsbruck because it lies along the main train line to Bregenz and Zurich and thus there is quasi-hourly service on OBB "rail jet" trains that make limited stops. The rail jet is not high speed, but on the track between Innsbruck and Imst-Pitztal it hits speeds of 150 to 160 km/hr (90-96 mph).
After about an hour an ten minutes, you arrive in St. Anton where it is a five minute walk to several lifts. Snow was scant at valley level yesterday so the view leaving the station was not especially pretty!
Rather than do a "Run of Fame" day skiing from valley to valley, I decided to focus on a few areas that I wanted more time at and that get a little less skier traffic. I started though with a run down the Arlberg Kandahar Rennen, basically the route used for World Cup DH and SG races. It has a south and southeast aspect and given the spring conditions, was the first place to soften up for the day. I caught an early train and had fresh corduroy.
It's easy to carve big arcs down a run like that, but running it full gas would be terrifying. The course oscillates between steeper sections and gliding sections and I tried to imagine transitioning into the latter at speeds of around 80 mph. Some of those sections were even narrower than the one below.
I then worked my way over to Stuben, a village and ski area that is typically skipped by the Run of Fame crowd. On this warm spring day, it has the advantage of being north facing, although given the early hour I skied over the back side and started on its one south facing lift, the Albonagrat double chair. The terrain was a bit like a mini Mineral Basin at Snowbird.
The front (north-facing) side of Stuben drops about 3000 vertical feet to the village.
The terrain around Stuben is a bit unusual. The upper mountain has some attractive freeride terrain.
There are also some nice cruisers on the upper half (hard to see in the above), but the bottom half terrain is a bit convoluted and wavy. There are serpentine pistes that wind their way to the base through this terrain, although I didn't take any photos.
After lunch, I worked my way back to St. Anton. Across the valley from St. Anton is a hidden ski area called Rendl. There is a gondola that ascends from St. Anton to it, but you really can't see any of the terrain from town. It's a hidden gem in many ways with a lot of open, freeride terrain and even a small terrain park if you're into that kind of thing.
The southern portion of the resort has three fixed-grip doubles and a real old-school feel, which is very soothing given the industrial-scale lifts the cover most of the Arlberg. Below are views looking up the Riffelbahn I and then down the Riffelbahn II which reaches just over 2600 meters.
It will be a shame when these lifts are replaced by the inevitable high-speed six pack.
To conclude the day, I got a final thighburner back into town. The descent into town is via a west and north facing route, but the south-facing terrain acros the valley above St. Anton is looking pretty baked.
The Arlberg gets a lot of snow by Alpine standards, but has an abundance of south and west facing terrain and it pays the price, especially in a low snow year with warmth and abundant sunshine.