This under-the-radar French resort is good for spring snowboarding, sluggish journey and households in search of a quieter Alpine expertise.
Tucked between the Beaufortain massif and the Aravis mountains, Val d’Arly is a kind of locations that has quietly saved its identification whereas the remainder of the Alps raced forward. That’s no dangerous factor. In case your concept of spring snowboarding is solar in your face, a neighborhood cheese plate for lunch and barely a queue in sight, this unpretentious nook of the French Alps would possibly simply be your subsequent favorite place.

It’s not a single resort however a cluster of 4 conventional Savoyard villages—Crest-Voland, Cohennoz, Notre-Dame-de-Bellecombe and Flumet—linked with Les Saisies and Hauteluce underneath the broader Espace Diamant ski space.
Between them, they provide entry to almost 200km of pistes, however the tempo right here is distinctly relaxed. This isn’t about racing for first lifts. It’s about snowboarding that matches round good meals, native heritage, and absorbing the view.
Regardless of its comparatively modest altitude—most slopes sit between 1,200 and a pair of,000 metres—Val d’Arly fares surprisingly nicely in spring. That’s due to its north-facing terrain, particularly round Notre-Dame-de-Bellecombe, the place the snow lingers longer and the tree-lined runs keep well-shaded. My ESF teacher, Dimitri—who additionally occurs to be a musician on the facet—identified a number of off-piste bowls that maintain nice snow days after a fall.

I began in Notre-Dame-de-Bellecombe and skied throughout to Les Saisies, Crest-Voland and past. The terrain is playful—light rollers, pure undulations, huge pistes excellent for cruising—and there’s loads of selection if you wish to combine mellow runs with extra technical challenges. Even the native black run close to Les Saisies skied extra like a pink, which suited the spring snow situations completely.
Dimitri advised me the realm was a lot busier in March ten years in the past, however now it provides a peaceable escape for these within the know. “We nonetheless get the Dutch, Belgians, French, and a few Brits,” he mentioned, “however nothing just like the big-name resorts. It’s good snowboarding, good vibe.”
Espace Diamant, the primary draw, hyperlinks Val d’Arly with Les Saisies and several other different resorts for a complete of 192km of runs, 159 slopes and 82 lifts. Nevertheless it by no means feels overwhelming. What’s refreshing right here is the house. Large pistes, sweeping bowls, and minimal elevate queues—even throughout peak lunch hours.
The highest of Chard du Beurre (1,889m) offers you a spectacular “balcon sur le Mont Blanc” view, and from there you may scope out the Chaîne des Aravis and the Beaufortain peaks. Native instructors say this space is ideal for households, inexperienced persons and intermediates, with particularly good inexperienced and blue runs round Crest-Voland and Les Saisies. However for extra skilled skiers, the off-piste potential round Plan des Fours and the Lac de Flumet space provides a little bit of journey.
The day after alpine snowboarding, I attempted a brief ski touring taster with native information Thibault Chambéliant. A Nordic ski race was underway in Les Saisies that morning—no shock, as the realm is thought for its 120km of cross-country tracks. Thibault, who usually excursions within the quieter corners of the Aravis, says the self-discipline is rising quick. “Ten years in the past, nobody was doing it. Now, even inexperienced persons can get began—Decathlon makes it low cost.” He prefers it for the calm: “Alpine snowboarding is noisy—lifts, individuals. Touring, it’s simply you and the mountains.”
Val d’Arly’s villages provide an actual distinction to massive resorts. Notre-Dame-de-Bellecombe, the place I stayed, has a inhabitants of simply 450 individuals. By late March, locals joke that nobody’s out earlier than 8am and most retailers begin to wind down. Elodie, from the native workplace du tourisme, casually talked about that the ski teacher I’d met earlier was her cousin—due to course he was. That’s the kind of place that is.

Again within the Thirties, earlier than chairlifts and gondolas, skiers in Notre-Dame-de-Bellecombe relied on one thing way more rustic: a télétraîneau, or ski practice. Pulled by a Ford V8 engine and operating on a cable system, the open-air sleigh may carry as much as twenty individuals up the mountain. Certainly one of solely three of its type in France, Assume hay bales for seats and a ski tow powered by farm mechanics. Restored in 2017 for its eightieth anniversary, it now sits proudly on show as a reminder of how deep the roots of ski tradition run on this valley.
Native meals tradition is equally sturdy. At La Ferme de Victorine, as soon as a working farm, the cow barn overlooks the eating room, the place a herd nonetheless munches hay simply metres from diners (pictured under). Down the valley in Flumet, Le Toi du Monde provides a extra modern tackle Alpine eating. Proprietor Florent, an engineer by commerce, inherited the farm from his grandmother and reworked it right into a sustainable restaurant and eco-project.
“We wished to push the environmental imaginative and prescient so far as we may,” he advised me. “We produce virtually half of our personal components right here.”

Throughout a cheese tasting, I discovered how a lot remains to be made by hand within the villages utilizing conventional strategies. Cheesemaker Corinne Mollier defined, “In summer time, when the cows eat flowers within the pastures, the cheese is good. In winter, they eat hay—and the style adjustments.”
It summed up the realm’s sluggish tourism ethos – taking time to know the land, meet the producers, and savour what’s in your plate.
Even the village partitions provide surprises, like a mural of Michelangelo’s David reimagined as a skier, rainbow puffer and all—a part of the annual Val d’Arly Avenue Artwork Pageant.
I stayed at Chalet Hôtel du Mont Charvin in Crest-Voland, a conventional alpine resort with comfy rooms, heat hospitality, and a beneficiant breakfast. It’s nicely situated for exploring each Val d’Arly and Les Saisies, and its quiet, homely ambiance matched the texture of the entire journey.
Val d’Arly won’t have the high-altitude glamour of the big-name resorts, however that’s exactly its appeal. It’s a spot that doesn’t shout for consideration—however deserves all of it the identical.

Have to Know
Ski Space: Espace Diamant (192km of pistes)Altitude: 1,000–2,069mBest for: Households, relaxed skiers, meals lovers, spring ski fansTransfers: 1hr 30 from GenevaWhere to remain: Chalet Hôtel du Mont Charvin, Crest-Voland
Photos above the télétraîneau from Espace Diamant Tourism; picture of the télétraîneau and people under copyright Katy Dartford.









