Reviving the thread - looking at the same thing in 2016. Here we go - lots of questions:
June or September school holidays to guarantee snow. Novice Skiing/tobogganing etc.
Is there any such thing as budget conscience accommodation near the ski fields?
How much are we talking about per night?
Does anyone here own or knows friends that own a place (cabin, farm stay, holiday house etc) we could stay at for 2-3 days?
If you had the 2-3 days which place would you go? Thredbo, Perisher, Blue Cow, Mt Selwyn (names I've just picked out of my head)
Thanks...
Hi McTavish,
Neither of those dates will guarantee snow. Just depends on the season. Definitely will be cheaper for those dates but if you plan to ski you'll be at the mercy of the snow gods.
In terms of budget accommodation you can try the Big4 at Jindabyne they have relative speaking cheap cabins (that is they are cheaper than other places - but not what you'd call cheap). Station resort is another place to try. Private rentals might work as you could possibly get a spot between other renters if you only 3 days. If you want your family to enjoy it, DO NOT CAMP! You need to be really set up for snow or very cold weather camping. I camp twice a year in 0 or below temp ranges and I wont bring my family along for those, they would hate it (despite both loving the snow).
Unless you love fast skiing I'd stay away from Thredbo (there are less greens in my opinion - less variety for green skiers - my wife only skis on greens - I trick her into the odd blue run). I prefer Perisher resort for skiing, good long meandering slopes that are fun. Lots of choice for all levels of skiing (if its windy in one location, say Mt Blue Cow, you move to Guthega or Front Valley and its good).
Both Thredbo and Perisher have good toboggan areas and the kids have lots of fun on those. If the kids are under 2 then Perisher childcare will only look after then till 1pm. Older kids they take the whole day. Thredbo childcare does all day regardless of age. Once they are 3 then ski school is the way to go for them.
If you haven't ski'd before then take lessons, if you have young kids put them in childcare / ski school while that is happening.
Both resorts have beginner packages for those that havent ski'd before. Welcome to another expensive hobby! Having said that for the last 5 years I haven't needed to hire anything so I'm almost at my break even point :-) I did have 22 ski days one season so I was happy!
Oh I should also warn you that if you ever ski overseas you'll look at Aussie snow differently......
Chris