I spent 7 days on Kopaonik. Nice Ski resort. I was in village Treska, about 3-4km from Ski centar. I spent 7 days with my girlfriend and one more couple in nice house with 2 apartments. I reserve it over internet on site www .kucaperisica.com.
Go wisit Kopaonik, no mistake. :D
Everything about last ski season was bad, starting with snow. But we had a great time at one of the hostels at Kopaonik! Log house with fireplace, wine and great food:)
Went to Kopaonik with my husband after years of stories by Serbian friend of ours. We are a serious skiing couple having skied almost everything to be skied in Europe and North America. Some places we liked we skied even twice. Normally we ski twice a year and the problem we had was that this year we couldn't. Once it was, and after years of promising to D. it came down to Kopaonik. And what a disappointment it was. It is a weekend resort, two days tops. We skied it all in 2,5 hours and in horror realised that we are stuck here for a week. Our friend was not happy that we did not like it at Kopaonik. Told him the truth and then decided to go to join a group of our friends in Zermmat because there was not time for a second holiday this year.
Have anyone ever been to a proper French, Swiss, Austrian or Italian resort? Kopaonik is a joke of a resort. Local Italian resorts offer more on their slopes than this place. Slope marking should be at least two colors down. Their black slope, in France, would not be a blue. We joke in places like this "its not black but dark blue". It is picturesque in a way but skiing is terribly boring. Food is all about meat, after a while you can't take it any more.
Everybody is welcome in this fantastic resort (Kopaonik), where you can ski and have fun in the protected nature's resort with unique flora. However, I do not regret, not even a little bit, that protecting our land and our children, gets in the way of some good skiing. Some people should carry a name tag when skiing on Kopaonik, so that few of us can appoligise kindly when we see them.
I visited Kop (Kopaonik) last year. We traveled by car from Athens, Greece to Kopaonik (Athens-Thessaloniki-skopje-Nis-brus-Kop). It took us about 12 hours. I was really very pleased with the facilities.
Kopaonik offers everything (tennis, spa, basketball, football na salu) for skiers/snowboarders. You shouldn't bother to travel to Kopaonik if you'll not stay at least for a week.
The people are very friendly and everything was cheap. The quality of the food was excellent. Don't forget to drink cetnik tea at the chalet right next to the fireplace.
I wish Kopaonik wasn't so remote from Athens where I live, and also between Fyrom-Kossovo, that we should make a giant round trip to reach town of bus.
I can't wait to get back to Kopaonik.
Hvala srbija
My impressions of Kopaonik are great. I had about 3 months of great fun over there during the last couple of years. People are friendly, they speak English and everything is quite cheap. Ski and Snowboard lessons were around 25eur per hour if you have individual lessons and around 150eur for 6 days of group lessons (you have 4 hours with instructor every day in a group of up to 6 people). The food is good, and if you are not going over there via touristic agency, check out "Vila Runolist" - it's a small private hotel, quite cheap - great food, nice rooms. It's in the near-by village, but you can get a cab for 3 pounds or mini-bus ride for less than a pound. If you're a snowboard-freak like me, check out the Jaram- slope and their snowboard school for some free-style lessons.
And don't miss out on night life. :)
Mette
We go from Pristina to Kopaonik all the time but you have to have a Serbian entry stamp due to Serbian politics. Annoying as it means going out into Macedonia and into Serbia and then into Kosovo. It's because Serbs don't recognise the Kosovo UNMIK borders.
A pity that politics gets in the way of a good ski.
There is another way to get to Kopaonik if you don't have a stamp and that's along with Kosovar serbs - they will make sure you get across the border. Ask a friendly K Serb in Mitrovica and they would find you a taxi driver to sort this out. Technically it's not really legal but...you would be spending money in Serbia.
Sorry you didn't like the Pristina hotels. You probably had the wrong hotel - Ambasador, Royal, Ora, Prishtina are VERY nice indeed catering to internationals.
Answer - buy the Bradt travel guides - one for Serbia and one for Kosovo. Then you don't make the stamp or hotel mistakes! I wrote the Kosovo guide. It is very detailed with lots of places to go.
Pristina is no war zone. I have lived as an international for 5 years and plenty of my Danish friends enjoy it. OK, so it's not Belgrade but it's a lot better than some other towns in, say, Southern Serbia or Northern Albania.
Gail
January 21, 2008
juliette langford
from
United Kingdom
Came home yesterday, January 19th 2008. Very pretty resort with lovely skiing through the trees as well as some very good pistes. Not the best for advanced skiers as there are only a few black runs of which most seemed to be closed. Great for intermediates and a wonderful area for the children. Ski instructors speak good English and are very dedicated to teaching. Away from the pistes the resort is low key, not a lot to do in the evening unless you stay at the Grand which I did. There they have a pool and very good sports hall. There is quite a language problem, most locals do not have any English knowledge and ,of course, us the lazy Brits have no language skills either so cannot complain too much.
The Grand hotel was ok. However, I would recommend staying in one of the many apartments instead, much better value and there are some excellent supermarkets. Overall, a lovely holiday with good, if not limited skiing. If you are thinking of Kopaonik, I am sure you will enjoy what it has to offer.