National Geographic Traveller (UK)

Ski, swim, repeat

THE SALZBURGER VILLAGE OF LEOGANG IS NOW LINKED TO ONE OF AUSTRIA’S LARGEST SKI AREAS, WHERE LAKES, POOLS AND ONSEN ABOUND

- WORDS: NICK DALTON

It’s midwinter, and I’m doing lengths in a rooftop infinity pool in the Austrian Alps. The steaming stretch of water is 80ft long, set at eyeballing level with the craggy Leogang Rockies. It’s the jewel in Naturhotel Forsthofgu­t’s watery crown, an oasis of muscle-soothing calm in the little Salzburger village of Leogang. Here, nature — and water — reigns supreme. Below my lofty swimming pool, the Lakehouse area was a new Forsthofgu­t addition last season: a swimmer’s idyll and ice-dunking spot in winter. A Japanese-style onsen pool with water at 42C juts out from the glass lakehouse building and merging with the lake itself is a heated indoor/outdoor swimming pool and floating sauna where you can gaze at the world through the glass wall before retreating to a sprawling relaxation room filled with loungers, and yet another panoramic glass wall.

It might be the height of Alpine spa chic now, but Naturhotel Forsthofgu­t started out as a family farm. The original 400-year-old building is still on site, and so is the family — the Schmucks. The first couple of rooms were rented out in 1960 and it became a hotel proper in 1990. After a €12m (£10.5m) lockdown makeover, behind the traditiona­l facade today is a contempora­ry water and wellbeing wonderland. Angular modern buildings were added from reclaimed wood, punctuated by steel and glass in a constructi­on that seems to drift down the mountains.

Much of the spa area is for adults only, but as generation­s of the Schmuck family have been born and raised here, children are pampered, too. There’s a kids’ club, a vast family pool and a fantastica­l 230ft-long waterslide that looks like something out of a Victorian ironworks, twirling through three floors among Amazonian greenery.

Just outside the door, you’ll find all the fun of the Skicircus: Leogang is jumping off point for Austria’s second largest ski area, linked by some of the world’s most impressive lift systems. A few paces away, I find Leogang’s nursery slopes, and Leo’s Kinderland, a fabulous children’s area run by Skiszene Altenberge­r ski school, with six magic carpet lifts, a ski carousel and igloo. In Austria, children are on skis as soon as they can walk, with snow-play childcare from the age of two and lessons from age three.

Leogang’s slopes are some of the most tranquil around — a boon for novices. But I need something more challengin­g. I hop on the nearby Asitz gondola and soar up to the point where Leogang gives way to the central Skicircus resort of Saalbach and its lengthy valley, which is an intermedia­te’s paradise. In total, 168 miles of slopes crisscross Skicircus Saalbach Hinterglem­m Leogang Fieberbrun­n (its official mouthful of a name).

Some easy cruises and a chairlift later, I’m above Saalbach. From here, I take a sunny run down one side of the long valley, through Hinterglem­m, then double back for the return leg. It’s an easy day out — perfect for even modest skiers as the loop can be done on blue runs.

The following day, I seek out Skicircus’s most recent addition, the lakeside resort of Zell am See. Setting off just as the lifts open, I find the long, meandering blue all the way down to the Zell am See Xpress gondola. This long-awaited link, whose opening fanfare got lost in early pandemic lockdowns, adds even more miles to Skicircus’s vast reaches, all included on the mega Ski Alpin lift pass that stretches out to Zell’s neighbouri­ng Kaprun ski area.

There’s hardly anyone around and I’m mesmerised by the waters below, glistening in the sun. Is this Austria’s most beautiful ski resort? There’s stiff competitio­n in this part of the world, but with its car-free cobbled streets set between lake and mountains, Zell is a picture.

I ski all the way down with the slopes to myself, nipping back up to ski the Xpress route before being drawn in by music at the Asitzbahn peak. It’s Skicircus’s White Pearl Mountain Days spring festival, which brings DJs, live music and special menus to mountain venues. At Hendl Fischerei, an elaboratel­y carved wooden bar-restaurant akin to a hobbit den, I join one of the festival’s numerous free parties. A glass of fizz and live music (saxophone, dancers) proves an unexpected lunchtime diversion.

Back at the hotel it’s Strudel Time, a jolly (and filling) take on afternoon tea, with classic apple strudel and cakes, as well as savoury and vegan options. Dinner is a three-menu choice of Alpine produce using ingredient­s sourced from the hotel’s 54-acre farm or within 30 miles. Subsequent days provide enough skiing to warrant an appetite-sating Japanese feast at the Forsthofgu­t’s lakeside Mizumi restaurant, where fare includes maki and sashimi with Leogang lake trout. There are also hearty, cheesy Austrian classics at cosy Restaurant 1617, and chef’s table fine-dining at Echt. But this being a ‘nature hotel’, Forsthofgu­t is always serving creative activities to tempt you back outside.

This autumn, the hotel opened a horse-riding centre offering indoor lessons and summer treks. It’s an enchanting forest-backed spot adjoining the sizeable farm. Evening walks hosted by the Schmuck family take guests out to greet the animals, making this perhaps the only hotel where grown men rush home from a day’s skiing so they can feed the deer.

HOW TO DO IT:

Naturhotel Forsthofgu­t has double rooms from €200 (£180) per night for five-night stays, including bed, breakfast, Strudel Time, and spa access. forsthofgu­t.at

More info: saalfelden-leogang.com salzburger­land.com

 ?? ?? Naturhotel Forsthofgu­t’s outdoor spa area
blends seamlessly with the slopes
Naturhotel Forsthofgu­t’s outdoor spa area blends seamlessly with the slopes
 ?? ?? Below, from left: An outdoor pool at Forsthofgu­t; St Anna’s Chapel, Leogang
Below, from left: An outdoor pool at Forsthofgu­t; St Anna’s Chapel, Leogang
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