January 30, 2024
Amal Pilendiram
from
United Kingdom
Cauterets is a family resort. We have been skiing here with our kids and extended family for 20 years. It’s an annual pilgrimage for generations of French families grand parents, parents, kids and toddlers. There’s not a lot to entertain teens/advanced alpine skiers either on or off piste unless you’re into the particularly superb cuisine of south west France, spa time, ice skating, snow shoeing, ski de fond or walking. Come to teach your kids or friends how to ski or board and you won’t be disappointed. If someone in your party can’t or doesn’t want to ski (?) neither will they, as this pretty Napoleonic spa town has plenty to keep them busy. Cauterets is a beautiful village (views over the Pyrenees up the mountain are stunning as well), no ugly concrete ski hotels here, for brutalist but stunning concrete and advanced skiing checkout Bond themed snow sure Piau Engalay. For a week, as a family holiday it’s a hidden gem!
February 24, 2015
Andy Eastham
from
United Kingdom
I really like Cauterets. We've been on three separate occasions and skied two days of a week mixed with Luz-Ardiden, Bareges/La Mongie and Piau Engaly. What I particularly like about Cauterets (apart from the great snow) is that the bowl offers loads of in-bounds off-piste options without ever getting that far away from everyone. You can jump off the top ridge in many different places and choose lots of different routes down before joining marked runs. I think it's a great place to get into relatively safe off-piste skiing and learning how to set off into steeps.
We come here every couple of years and thoroughly enjoy it.
We stay in a self contained apartment which is spacious at 70m2 and quite cheap (500 euro per week) by international standards. Plenty of good skiing, we have been here 3 times over 6 years and have not been disappointed with the snow. We come in the first weeks of Jan when it's school holidays in Australia and is "low" season here. It's like having your own ski resort! Skiing is as good as anywhere in Australia at a fraction of the cost with almost guaranteed snow. Small local cafes, restaurants and brasseries are quite good. No night life though.
Not many people speak English so brush up on your French before you come. Ski lifts are quite cheap at A$50 per day which is a fraction of the cost in Australia.
Will definitely come again and again. Suitable for kids at learner/intermediate level.
December 05, 2012
Tony Tollinton
from
United Kingdom
Cauterets is a great little resort ideal for a few days skiing, and when you want a change there are resorts such as Bareges/La Mongie and Luz Ardiden that are no more than 45 minutes drive away.
Cauterets has not been discovered by the Brits yet, but it is great to visit at all times of the year. It has a good snow record and this probably explains why there is a longer skiing season than most resorts in the Alps. In the summer it becomes one of the premier mountaineering centres of the Pyrenees and has some fabulous walking on its doorstep.
Cauterets itself is at under 1000m, but the main skiing area is served by a gondola that goes up to 1850m. There are a good mix of blue and red runs and some blacks. There is also a small skiing area that is a short bus-ride/drive away at Pont d'Espagne, but this is more suited to cross-country skiing.
The appeal of Cauterets is not just the skiing but the resort itself. It developed as a spa town where people came to take the waters, and it retains a charm that is missing in most French Alpine resorts. Lots of restaurants and bars, but probably not much to appeal to anyone looking for exciting nightlife.
Yep, Cauterets is a small resort, mainly for families who are beginners/intermediates. It's very French, and is popular with the French themselves, rather than the Brits. Despite that, we've been twice and always found everyone to be very friendly. There are also some nice little bars and restaurants, ranging from a Pizza takeaway, to some places with seriously good cuisine. There's also a great market where you can buy local cheese, bread and wine, as well as gourmet takeaway to microwave back at your apartment. Quite inexpensive, and easy to reach from Pau, Lourdes, Toulouse and even Carcassonne airports. We love it.
Skied here for the last couple of years, beautiful village, quite good run's, although not really that challenging. Good for beginners and intermediates, very friendly place with good selection of restaurants and bars. Very family orientated place, nice not to be 'herded' around, just left to your own devices.
Mountain has snow making on, so there's usually something to ski on! Very reasonably priced, and recently modernised lifts and cable car. All in all, a great place to go!
Small, compact ski area reached by gondola from the village. Skied there for 2 days in Feb 2007 whilst in the area. Preferred the skiing at Luz Ardiden, but the bowl at Cauterets holds snow well and would be good for families with kids.
Cheap compared with the Alps as well and the Pyrenees do have a charm of their own!
Cauteret is a little village,and the skiing resort is small, but very "alpin".
This place is very snowy,and you can ski from November to May. The view all over the French Pyrenees from the top of Cauteret is incredible.
Good little restaurants with famous french south westerner food, nice prices; it's not Val d'Isere or Megève, but skiing is cheap and cool.
Near Cauteret, try to visit a very sportive ski resort named Gourette, 50 KM south of Pau and its "low costed airline companies airport". In Gourette,70 KM of skiing tracks, red, black, blue and green slopes from 1400 metres to 2400!
Very snowy place from November to end of April.