Phil, my friend at GTL, had bugged me to do a ski trip all semester. We settled on the weekend after finals. I noticed that a world cup skiing event would be held in Val d'Isère that very weekend. I've done an awful lot of skiing over the years, and the prices in Europe were hard to justify, so I told Phil Val d'Isere is where we're headed, and I'm going to watch the world cup, at least part of the time. I found a hostel in Tignes, a nearby resort and part of the Espace Killy - the combination of both Tignes and Val d'Isère ski areas with interconnecting lifts. Through the hostel we got discounted lift passes and ski rentals as well as delicious meals.
Here is a map of the two resorts.
The trip to Val d'Isère was no cakewalk. A train company strike nullified one of our potential routes, and nearly prevented me from travelling at all. In one of my most clutch instances of ipod touch use yet, I connected to wifi at the Metz train station used an app called Irail to find a variety of routes that not even the glorious Bahn.de german rail website would have provided, and picked one that left early Friday morning. Half of the GTL undergrads caught the 6AM bus into Metz to the train station, the majority heading to Paris to fly home. It was a nice way to see everybody off. Our itinerary sent Phil and me through Germany, then Switzerland, and back into France where we ended up at Bourg St.-Maurice, an hour bus ride from Tignes, at 6 PM. The whole train trip, we never knew if the 615 Tignes bus, the last one departing for the day, would have space for us, but we were more concerned with making our connections as a single missed train would doom us to spend a night in a train station. Everything was seamless though, and by 7 we were unpacking in our very own comfortable hostel room, before sitting down to a delicious three-course meal prepared by a hostel cook.
I can't say enough about the ski hostel experience. It was comfortable, affordable, and the meals were outstanding - worth about half the price of the hostel room. There were a number of British adults and families there. The hostel price, they explained, is such that they can take multiple ski holidays. Tignes Les Boisses, the village where the hostel was located was sleepy though, and the hostel lacked any sort of party atmosphere. I suspect hostels at other, less posh, more youth-oriented ski resorts are a bit rowdier.
A hostel worker told us that Saturday would be great weather for skiing and Sunday would be the opposite. I specifically remember her using the word sun, but it was nowhere to be found as we boarded our first lift, nor did it make more than a fleeting appearance over the course of the day. Phil and I struggled with the limited visibility, although the snow was decent and the trails were long, steep and interesting. We spent most of the day near Tignes. I rode my first ski-funicular, a train in a tunnel that moved up about as fast as I would come down. We enjoyed skiing at the top of the glacier, but stayed on-piste, heeding warning signs that showed stick-figure skiers falling into crevasses.
Later on I went over to Val d'Isère to see if the slalom was still going on. I talked to a ski patroller and got the details for the next day's race - GS starting at 10 AM. I skiied back to Tignes where I found out I couldn't make it down to Les Boisses on ski and would have to take a bus. I had some time to kill and took a few more runs, but by now the sun had set and visibility was absurdly poor. I nearly crashed after bucking over a fresh, unmarked, invisible mound of manmade snow, and decided to call it quits. At the bus stop I chatted with a Brit on vacation and a Danish man and his French girlfriend. The latter two were "Seasonaires" living in Les Boisses, meaning they work for the season at a ski resort, so they can ski or snowboard in their free time. They got cold waiting for the bus and hitchhiked down to Les Boisses.
Tignes' original village was destroyed intentionally in the mid 20th-century, as a hydro electric dam was built, flooding the town. The original church was moved up a hundred meters to Les Boisses, where it stands across from the hostel. This was my view Saturday morning.
Tignes' original church
I left Phil to nervously ski on his own, while I caught a bus to Val D'Isère. Racing was about to begin as I arrived. The crowd was mostly French, with a small Italian contingent. There were banners with competitors' names and people wearing jackets for specific skier fan clubs. A few younger fans had chest paint, cowbells, and even a truck horn mounted on a pole that accounted for a large portion of the crowd's noisemaking capability. The partisan fans cheered raucously for the French skiers despite their poor showing at the event. I was handed a starting list as I entered and spotted the names of Ted Ligety and Bode Miller on it, but Bode never raced. I read a few days later that he had sprained his ankle playing volleyball the night before. I guess I would believe that story - who knows. Needless to say I was disappointed. Ted did alright. He led the race with about 10 skiers to go, but was soon knocked off the podium. The winner was the Austrian Marcel Hirscher.
French fans waved flags, screamed "Allez Allez", rang cowbells and sounded truck horns as their countrymen skied
Some pretty awful footage from yours truly.

Ted Ligety in his brief stint on the podium, before being unseated

Another view of the race course
View of the mountains from Val d'Isere's base
Between races, I walked through the Val D village, then wandered down the main road where I spotted a go-kart racing course. I watched a few youths getting the hang of the hard-packed snow lanes. I eventually returned to the World Cup area. Nearby there was a kicker with an airbag in the landing for people of all ages to try new tricks. I thought it was a great idea. The airbag could have been a little wider and longer, though. There were definitely some close calls. Skiers landing in the airbag tended to lose their skis, but the landings looked reasonably comfortable and cushioned.
Kicker with airbag.
People tried all sorts of snow toys on the kicker...
and some weren't snow toys at all

Phil and I wandered up above the Tignes dam and found this helipad, where the pilots were putting away the chopper for the day.

The view from our hostel window
Monday morning I parted ways for good with Phil and headed to Lyon.