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The Zillertal Arena is a winter sports area and the largest ski area in the Zillertal valley in Austria. It has 163 kilometres of piste and 50 lifts that can transport 76,000 people every hour. It has 163 kilometres of piste and 50 lifts that can transport 76,000 people every hour.
Ski amadé: 1350–2188 3/6/6 41 Zillertal Arena: Krimml, Wald im Pinzgau, Gerlos T (mit dem Zillertal) Nationalpark Hohe Tauern: Zillertal Arena 1250–2505 6/26/19 133 Zwölferhorn: St. Gilgen am Wolfgangsee: Salzkammergut – Wolfgangsee: 560–1522 1/0/1 7
The Zillertal Arena was formed in 2000 from a merger of the ski areas of Zell, Gerlos and Königsleiten and is the largest ski area in the Ziller valley. It is accessed by the Rosenalmbahn and, since the 2010/11 season, by the Karspitzbahn, whose valley station is located in the parish of Zell.
There are many snow ski areas and resorts around the world. At least 68 nations host snow-covered outdoor ski areas. [ 1 ] Indoor skiing on snow is available in more than 30 nations, including Egypt and UAE .
The Harakiri is a slope in the ski resort of Mayrhofen Ski Zillertal 3000. It is named after the Japanese vulgar term for seppuku, ritual suicide by samurai. With incline of up to 78% (38 degrees), vertical drop of 375 metres and a length of about 1500 metres, it is the steepest groomed slope in Austria. Thus the slope is steeper than the ...
Morzine: 22 ski lifts, 34 ski slopes (45 km), 40 km of cross-country skiing; Orange: 3 ski lifts, 5 ski slopes, 14 km of cross-country skiing; Passy: 6 ski lifts, 6 ski slopes (12 km), 12 km of cross-country skiing; Plaines-Joux: 40 km of cross-country skiing; Praz de Lys: 23 ski lifts, 41 ski slopes (40 km), 60 km of cross-country skiing
Uderns in the Ziller Valley. The Ziller Valley [1] [2] [3] (German: Zillertal) is a valley in Tyrol, Austria that is drained by the Ziller River. It is the widest valley south of the Inn Valley (German: Inntal) and lends its name to the Zillertal Alps, the strongly glaciated section of the Alps in which it lies. [4]
Snowflake Ski Jump, Westby, Wisconsin (Four Hills SuperTour) 118 | 106; Silvermine Ski Jump, Eau Claire, Wisconsin [4] Abandoned. Papoose Peak Jumps, Squaw Valley, California (Site of 1960 Winter Olympics) 80 | 60 | 40; Bakke Hill, Leavenworth, Washington (Site of United States Ski Jumping Championships in 1955, 1959, 1967, 1974 and 1978)