Les Contamines-Montjoie - Ski Resort

Ski Resort

Les Contamines Montjoie main industry is tourism through its Skiing Area which is moderately sized. It ranges from the village at around 1100m to l'Aiguille Croche at around 2500m. There are four sections of the ski area: The Tierces section, the Roselette section, the Montjoie section and the Hauteluce section.

The Tierces section is south facing, it is the highest section of the resort and possesses the resorts hardest black runs: Grevettaz and Rebans. The Tierces section also has easier blue and red runs such as Coins (blue) and Tierces (red). From most places in the Tierces section one can see (weather permitting) a vivid panorama of Mont Blanc and its neighbouring peaks including Aiguille de Bionnassay and Domes de Miage.

The Roselette section is a north facing section of ski runs which range from blue to black, the hardest run in this section is the black of Olympique. The Aiguille de Rosselette towers over the majority of the section giving it its name. There is off piste potential in the steep couloirs of the Aiguille de Rosselette.

The Hauteluce section is the name given to the section of runs on the other side of the Col du Joly in the Val Joly (rather than the Val Montjoie) the run difficulty is varied in this section.

The Montjoie section is the name used to describe the lower runs.

Read more about this topic:  Les Contamines-Montjoie

Famous quotes containing the words ski and/or resort:

    The goal for all blind skiers is more freedom. You don’t have to see where you’re going, as long as you go. In skiing, you ski with your legs and not with your eyes. In life, you experience things with your mind and your body. And if you’re lacking one of the five senses, you adapt.
    Lorita Bertraun, Blind American skier. As quoted in WomenSports magazine, p. 29 (January 1976)

    I trust the time is nigh when, with the universal assent of civilized people, all international differences shall be determined without resort to arms by the benignant processes of civilization.
    Chester A. Arthur (1829–1886)