travel facts - Premiere Neige
Transcription
travel facts - Premiere Neige
36 www.edinburghnews.com FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2014 EDINBURGH EVENING NEWS TRAVEL Gill Martin meets Edinburgh businesswoman Fiona Harvey who swapped the rat race YOU CAN LIVE THE DREAM IN SAINTE FOY COTTISH chalet girl meets English pilot in the French Alps. They fall in love - with each other and a pretty mountain village called Sainte Foy. Fast forward a few years and they are married, with two sons, running a thriving chalet business based in Edinburgh that brings skiers to the same village that won their hearts. One week it’s wealthy Russian oligarchs who drink their cellars dry, the next it’s a scrum of rugby players, and then a high-flying couple de-stressing from work pressure to find family time in the snow and sunshine. “We are living the dream,” says Fiona Harvey, founding director of Premiere Neige, which is now in its twelfth year. Fiona, 39, and her husband Alistair, 47, have settled happily in Sainte Foy, in the Tarentaise Valley of the Savoy region, with their sons Sam, six and five-year-old Oscar. “We love it. It is really home now especially with our boys who go to local school and ski club,’ she says. “It opens up a whole new world. The winter brought us here but the summer is what keeps us here as it is so beautiful, there is so much to do and you have more time to catch up and breath in the mountain air. “I discovered Sainte Foy whilst working in nearby Val d’Isere as a chalet girl. It was so tiny then, just the main bar and a few small apartments “At an Overseas Home Exhibition in Edinburgh I found that constructors were starting to build beautiful chalets in Ste. Foy and decided it was the time to take the plunge before any big operators got in there. I’d always wanted to start my own business. “Friends and family thought I was mad - I gave up a good job as a marketing and events manager in Edin- S TRAVEL FACTS GILL MARTIN was a guest of Premiere Neige (0131510 2525; www.premiere-neige.com) and stayed in Sainte Foy at La Marquise which sleeps 16 in six double/twin rooms and one four-bed bunk room. It is priced from £905pp fully catered (air fares and transfers not included). Other Premiere Neige catered chalets are priced from £745pp per week. Premiere Neige has a crèche and kids club for newborns to 10-year-olds run by experienced, first aid-trained nannies and open to guests every day from 8.30am to 5pm. La Marquise offers a host of relaxing Elemis spa treatments and therapies in the comfort of a separate private treatment room. These range from massages and wraps to facials and manicures. La Maison à Colonnes - william. tirouflet@orange.fr call +33 4 79 06 94 80 Chez Merie chezmerie@ hotmail.fr call +33 4 79 06 90 16 Les Brevettes - difficult to find but worth the effort for simple fare Rental Republic www.rentalrepublic.co.uk online ski and snowboard hire with free delivery and in-chalet fitting TRAVEL BY AIR: Edinburgh to Chambery with Jet2 www.jet2.com (1hr 45mins transfer) Edinburgh to Geneva with Easyjet (2hrs 30 transfer) TRAVEL BY TRAIN: Direct train from London, to Bourg-Saint-Maurice by Eurostar Direct Ski www. eurostar.com/ski which runs between 20 December 2013 and 12 April 2014. (20mins transfer). Ste Foy tourist office www. saintefoy-tarentaise.com/ english/ burgh, with pension and company car and sold my flat. “We started that first year with two chalets and now run six luxury catered chalets and look after 30 self- catered chalets and apartments. “It became clear after the first year that to grow the business I needed to be in the resort year round to contract new chalets, meet with owners, get to know and be trusted by locals and be able to sell the dream. “Like all hospitality it is hard work, long hours and anything can happen at any minute: chefs breaking their arms on New Year week, pipes burst, oven fails mid-Christmas dinner, the dishwasher dies at midnight, fireworks up the chimney, Russians drinking génépi for breakfast, faddy eaters. But the scenery, surroundings and the ability to go for a ski when it’s all too much is amazing.” Her guests agree. One of the selling points of a Sainte Foy chalet holiday is experiencing leisurely life in a real French village, rather than the frenetic pace of nearby Val D’Isere. There is no extreme shopping for diamonds, designer outfits and caviar. Instead you can enjoy extreme skiing and extremely yummy cuisine at less extreme prices. The ski pass this season costs 156.50 euros for six days, 5.5 euros for a beer and most hearty lunch dishes around 15 euros. Another draw is the sumptuous chalet of La Marquise - all rustic timber, sheepskin, white leather chairs and a stylish floating fireplace with crackling logs. Comfort collides with style. Squishy sofas meet statement light fittings. Swish bathrooms with a sauna and steam room in the basement. There’s wi-fi or board games. On the veranda, as the mercury dips to below freezing, we indulge in the ultimate luxury: sipping bubbly in a foaming hot-tub with a view of the brooding mountains in the dusk. Muscles relax, snow falls softly, all is well with the world. There’s cold and colder running champagne with the canapés - duck and soft cheese, sweet chilli dip, before gourmet dinners of coconut, coriander and ginger soup, succulent duck breasts, mushroom risotto, lemon posset with fruit compote, local wines and gooey cheeses. After coffee, petit fours, a digestif of génépi - a herbal liquer produced by steeping aromatic flower heads in strong alcohol - how can you drag yourself off to the bar when there’s a game of Articulate to be played in front of a flickering fire? To wake to a sweeping view of the peaks, obliterated by mist and cloud for the first two days before revealing itself with a burst of brilliant sunshine and blue skies, was enough to have you bounding from the duvet. A power-packed breakfast - anything from fresh fruits, pain au chocolat and croissants to Scottish porridge oats and a full ‘English’ fry-up - keeps the keenest powder hound in carbs till lunch up the mountain at Maison EDINBURGH EVENING NEWS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2014 www.edinburghnews.com for a life in the French Alps running Premiere Neige LATE DEALS CANADA FLIGHTS: Air Transat is offering up to £30 per person off return flights from Glasgow to Canada when booked by 9pm on March 3 for travel until 31t October 31. The airline operates year round flights from Glasgow to Toronto, and from May 1 also offers services from Glasgow to Vancouver and Calgary as part of its summer schedule. Economy Class return flights, including the £30 per person saving, start from £398. For reservations, call 020- 7616 9187 or visit www.airtransat. co.uk. MALAYSIA GRAND PRIX: Premier Holidays is offering a five-day B&B package for £1399pp, with five nights in the four-star ParkRoyal hotel, Kuala Lumpur including three-day pass to the Formula 1 Grand Prix and daily transfers to and from the circuit; return flights from Heathrow with Malaysia Airlines and access to a choice of free concerts, based on two adults sharing and valid for departures on March 26. Visit www.premierholidays. co.uk or call 08444-927 542. CAPTION: In here à Colonnes or Les Brevettes, where locals are still talking about ex-England rugby player/Strictly Come dancing contestant Austin Healey practising his body surfing from the rafters. After a full day’s skiing afternoon tea is the most welcome touch - especially when an Irish member of our group announces her birthday. Chef Louise magics up an iced carrot cake in the shape of a shamrock, candles and all. No wonder the ski and boot experts who bring our equipment coordinate their visits with teatime to share our confections of coffee and walnut or lemon drizzle. There seems no end to the comforts provided at Chalet Marquise. A knickers fairy rescued my washed undies from the bathroom radiator to fold them ever so neatly on my bed. And when my aching body was THE GOOD LIFE: Fiona HarveyJordan at chalet La Marquise enjoys the winter ski season, but finds the delights of the Savoy region in summer just as rewarding mascrying out for TLC Lauren the mas seuse provided a soothing massage with hot stones, easing knots in neck, shoulders, back, thighs and calves so that I was fit to ski another day on un-crowded north-west facing slopes where the snow was well-groomed. On chalet chef’s night off we forced ourselves to explore the area - and discovered Chez Merie, in the nearby hamlet of Le Miroir, a charming restaurant run by two doughty sisters who set up business decades ago when skiers marooned by an avalanche needed feeding. A huge shoulder of lamb and a hefty cut of beef were cooking on the fire. This was not a place for vegetarians, although the winter vegetables were a treat and the mountain of chocolate dessert a challenge we embraced. Skiing throws up its own challenges - ski treeing. One of the appeals of Sainte Foy - a high, snow-sure resort at 1550m, rising to 2620m - is tree skiing. The art of skiing off-piste through the trees is seeing the spaces. Unfortunately I see only the trunks, so kept to safer routes. Pretty descents along tracks lined with towering larches, their boughs frosted and bowed with snow, were a delight. While I stuck to steepish red runs and wide, gentle blues, other braver souls hit the most challenging black runs and a bowl of off-piste and ungroomed runs. Wherever we went there were none of the elbow-jabbing queues that plague larger, busier resorts. Our two beginner/novices made good progress under the tender tutelage of instructors and guides. (My instructor suggested I straighten my stance to imitate a man peeing but not wanting to wet his boots.) The novice was confident enough to tackle a long descent of blue runs but not quite up to a nocturnal treat - skiing down the mountain by flaming torchlight, whooping in the darkness, our path lit by flickering lights and the powerful beams of a following snow vehicle, shadowing us to make sure we all arrived safely. Joining in the fun was Konrad Bartelski, the first and only British male downhill racer to stand on a World Cup podium. The veteran skiing guru is in love with Sainte Foye. “This is how skiing should be and not as it is,” he says. Skiers and boarders who have discovered Sainte Foye implore: ‘Don’t tell people about this hidden gem or it won’t be hidden anymore.’ Sorry, folks, your secret is out. The Evening News reader holiday service offers a range of holidays to suit all tastes and budgets. For a brochure call: YOUR GUIDE 0131-620 8400 37 ALICANTE: Jet2holidays has a three-night B&B break at the three-star, Tryp Ciudad De Alicante, from Edinburgh on February 27 for £300 per person based on two adults sharing. BENIDORM: Or try the Costa Blanca’s two-star, La Era Park Apartments, for seven nights self-catering on February 23 for £361pp. FUENGIROLA: Seven nights on the Costa Del Sol at the three-star plus, Fuengirola Beach, self-catering from Edinburgh on March 7 costs £428 per person. Visit www. jet2holidays. com, freephone 0800-408 5594. CYPRUS IS BEST: Last-minute bargain hunters looking to escape rainy days in Scotland on a half term break should head for Cyprus, according to Post Office Travel Money. In its latest survey of winter sun family destinations offering flights from Scottish airports, they found a seven-night holiday including meals and drinks costs 44 per cent less than Malta. A one-week holiday package in Paphos, with flights from Edinburgh, was easily the cheapest of eight destinations surveyed, while resort prices for meals and drinks were also lowest there. When these were added together, a oneweek holiday for a family of four in Paphos cost £1216. FLORIDA: Virgin Holidays has seven nights in Florida from £819pp at Lake Buena Vista, including flights with Virgin Atlantic from Glasgow direct to Orlando, room only accommodation at the 3V Clarion Inn Lake Buena Vista andcar hire. Price is per person based on two adults travelling on 25 April. Visit www. virginholidays.co.uk or call 0844-557 3870. ] MALTA: Seven nights allinclusive at the four-star Seabank Resort & Spa with Malta Direct costs from £489 per person with direct flights from Edinburgh, based on two adults sharing on 25 February. Visit www.maltadirect.com or call 0845-604 0035. INDONESIA CRUISE: Cruise Nation has a ten-night Asian adventure cruise and city break from £1199pp, flying fromGlasgow. Book by 8 February 28 for a full- board sevennight Indonesia cruise and receive three nights in Singapore, room only, for free, departing on November 18 on the Costa Victoria.Call 0800408 0758 or visit www. cruisenation.com. SKI FRANCE: Inghams has some late season deals, for seven nights in catered accommodation flying from Edinburgh, including Les Deux Alpes, from £385pp at the Chalet Bouton d’Or departing March 23. LES ARCS: The 4.5 Chalet Marcel costs from £369pp, on March 22. SERRE CHEVALIER: Chalet Amandier costs from £373 per person on March 29. LA PLAGNE: Chalet Almach costs from £379 on March 22. Visit www. inghams.uk or contact 01483 791 114. CARIBBEAN: Sandals are knocking £100 off the cost of seven-night stays at their resorts, booked by midnight on Tuesday, including Jamaica from £1239 pp at Sandals Carlyle all-inclusive, with flights and resort transfers based on departures between April 25 and June 13; Saint Lucia prices from £1399pp at Sandals Halcyon Beach between September 1 and October 17; Antigua from £1565pp at Sandals Grande Antigua Spa & Beach Resort; Grenada from £1579pp at the new Sandals LaSource Grenada Resort & Spa between September 24 and October 15; and The Bahamas from £1589pp at Sandals Royal Bahamian Spa between September 1 and October 15. Visit www. sandals.co.uk or call 0800597 0002.