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From a developed, connected part of SEA - oh, let's say, Thailand - where is the nearest skiing? Mostly thinking of shortest travel time (eg, to go for a long weekend), but would also be interested in physically closest. Japan jumped to mind, as I know there is skiing in Hokkaido.

I heard a rumor about a ski place in Burma, which would be interesting; when I tried to find information about it online, though, I only come up with references to plans/ideas to develop a fairly remote mountain (Hkakabo Razi) that don't seem near fruition.

Ideally, information about the development-level, difficulty, and approximate costs of the place(s) would be great. (I imagine that anywhere in Japan is going to be developed to a typical US/EU standard, maybe on the easy side (groomers), and fairly pricey. Once upon a time, I read about skiing in Kashmir with pack-mules for 'chairlifts' - which would be interesting, although maybe too remote for a short trip.)

pnuts
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hunter2
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3 Answers3

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The practical answers are Japan and South Korea, both ~6 hours away (plus connections) from Thailand, Korea being a smidgen closer. Both have very developed, mature ski facilities -- you may recall that Nagano, Japan hosted the 1998 Winter Olympics, and Pyeongchang, Korea will follow in 2018 -- that cater to all levels and needs. In Hokkaido, in particular, the skiing is sufficiently epic that there's a town called Niseko that caters pretty much exclusively to a hard core of international ski nuts. Start with Snow Japan and this random KNTO page.

But since taking the easy way out would be too boring for Travel.SE, here's some random alternatives:

  • Yulong/Jade Dragon Snow Mountain (玉龙雪山) ski resort near Lijiang in Yunnan, China is probably the closest place to Thailand you could actually ski. Major downside is that information and facilities in English are basically non-existent. China Eastern flies direct to Lijiang from Bangkok in 3 hours.
  • India has an embryonic but fast-growing ski scene, with Gulmarg in Jammu & Kashmir being the best-known resort, and English is spoken.
  • A dishonorable mention goes to Snow City in Singapore, which has snow and lets you sled downhill for a few not particularly exhilarating seconds, but bans skiing -- not particularly surprising given that it's all of 60 meters long.
lambshaanxy
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If you want to go south of the equator, there's Australia and New Zealand. Both of them speak English.

The most common complaints about Australian ski resorts are the high prices, long lift lines, and poor quality snow. On the other hand, I find snow gums very pretty.

I've heard that New Zealand tend to have club skifields that are smaller and not so much profit-oriented as the ski resorts in Australia.

Some Aussies go to NZ ski fields, but I haven't heard of New Zealanders going to Aussie ski fields. Draw your own conclusions.

Golden Cuy
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Almaty, Kazakhstan is 4 hours away from Bangkok, beautiful and high mountains around 4 skiing resorts, and on of them considered the largest “Chimbulak” in Central Asia! At an elevation of 2,200 metres (7,200 ft) above sea level. The resort area is about 25 kilometres (16 mi) south of Almaty city by Medeo road. It is popular for its mild climate, large quantity of sunny days and great amount of snow through the winter (from November till May).

Meir
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