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Making
tracks in the snowy Med
Many don't put
''Greece''
and ''ski''
together in the same sentence, but cold weather aficionados have known for
years (since 1928 in fact) that alpine wonderlands around the south
Mediterranean's mountainous regions are nothing to be sniffed at. When the
cold sets in from December to April and even later up north, ski and
snowboard fans alike will be up at the crack of dawn making their way to one
of 20- odd Grecian hills that are cheaper than their north European
counterparts, in large part because the vast majority are run by
municipalities and local alpine clubs. The latter have helped care for the
nation's winter heavens more than 70 ears under the Hellenic Ski Federation
umbrella.
While some may not be of Swiss Alpine statue, the ski centers in the
mountains of Greece are all respectable altitudes, ranging from 1400= to
over 2400 meters - well within the range of many of the best resorts
world-wide. Even with the effects of global warming, scientists (and
global-makers) now reckon that 1,500 meters is the critical altitude or
''snow line'' where winter temperatures should remain at or below
freezing.
Here's the run-down then of home-grown
centers, most admittedly in the north of the country but that doesn't mean
southerners are stuck at second-best base camps. The biggest is right here
in our own backyard.

The Telemark Ski Company is run by the UK's leading telemark skiing
teachers and offers telemark ski touring, on- and off-piste telemark
instruction, cross country skiing and Nordic touring throughout
Europe.
GREECE – Mount Parnassos

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