advanced search
Contact Us tayyar.org
 
The Orange Room - forum.tayyar.org
 



Notices
Lebanon Away From Politics For all your non-political topics about Lebanon, including History, Culture, Environment, Tourism and Social issues

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread
  (#1 (permalink)) Old
Orange Room Supporter
 
CedarLb's Avatar
 
Online
Posts: 3,188
Thanks: 891
Thanked 775 Times in 327 Posts
Last Online: 42 Minutes Ago
Join Date: Fri May 2005
View CedarLb's Photo Album
Ski in Faraya-Mzaar - 4th April 2006


When Mart Maastik's friends suggested a ski vacation in Lebanon, he was hesitant and more than a little skeptical, especially about security.


"Skiing in the Middle East? I'd never heard of that," the 41-year-old Estonian said while standing in full skiing gear at the foothills of the Faraya-Mzaar mountains.


But Lebanon, with six ski resorts and a season that generally runs from December through April, is increasingly drawing not just Arab tourists, but Europeans, too, industry officials say.


Maastik, who is in the real estate business back home, has skied in Austria, Andorra, France "and almost everywhere else," but he feels Lebanon's slopes have a different flavor.


"This is quite exotic for us," he said, saying he was taken with Lebanon's hospitality and its good weather.


He said he was worried about security at first. "But I decided to forget about politics and come anyway."


Security is a question for many visitors.


A skier skis down a hill in Faraya-Mzaar. (AP)Business at the area's biggest hotel, the InterContinental Mountain Resort & Spa, plunged more than 30 percent in 2005 because of political instability in Lebanon, general manager Robert Zogbi said. The country has seen at least 16 bombings since October 2004, the largest of which killed former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri a year ago.


But the five-star lodge, sitting only few hundred meters (yards) from the nearest slopes, has managed to offset losses. It had a 98 percent occupancy rate in February, Zogbi said.


Many foreigners come to Lebanon for the cheaper prices and relaxed atmosphere. The weather, less stormy and more sunny during the skiing season than at many European resorts, is also an attraction, as is the mountains' nearness to the coast and Beirut.


"You can ski in the morning and go fishing or shopping or sightseeing in the afternoon. It's a very unique advantage," Zogbi said.


The best equipped and most popular of Lebanon's ski areas is the Faraya- Mzaar area, a one-hour drive northeast of Beirut. The resort has around 20 slopes and 85 kilometers (53 miles) of ski trails. Other areas include Laqlouk, Zaarour and The Cedars -- the highest of the resorts with an altitude above 2,000 meters (6,600 feet).


Sam Waugh, 22, a learning support teacher from Britain, said he'd always wanted to learn skiing but was too intimidated to do it in Europe. So when his brother who works in a refugee camp in Beirut suggested Lebanon, he agreed.


"It's really good. No one laughs when you fall here. No one cares," he said as he struggled in his skis.


Although there are no official figures for the number of visitors, industry officials say the number of visitors is growing, with tourists coming from all over the Arab world and Europe.


With six skiing resorts and a season that usually runs from December to April, Lebanon is increasingly drawing not just Arab tourists, but those from Europe too, industry officials say. (AP)Skiing as a leisure sport is catching on among Arabs, most of whom live in hot, desert countries. "We're getting young people from the UAE (United Arab Emirates), Kuwait, Jordan, as well as Western expatriates living in those countries," said Nicole Wakim, sales and marketing manager for the Faraya-Mzaar resort.


An indoor ski dome was opened last year in Dubai, complete with snowmaking jets and huge air conditioners to simulate the real thing.


Zogbi doesn't view that as competition. On the contrary, he said, it creates new business by encouraging young people from the Persian Gulf to come to Lebanon's slopes for the real thing.


He said Lebanese resorts also have benefited from toughened security in Western nations since the Sept. 11 attacks in the United States.


"All the Arabs who used to go to foreign countries suddenly became subject to intense scrutiny. Arabs do not like that and are choosing to come here instead," he said.


Not everyone comes to Faraya-Mzaar to ski. The snow itself is a big attraction for people from desert countries.


Groups of people ski lifts heading up a hill in the ski resort of Faraya-Mzaar, northeast of Beirut. (AP)Tourists from the Persian Gulf, some of them women wearing traditional black robes, are often seen tossing snowballs at each other, snapping pictures with their mobile phones or enjoying a ride on the ski lifts.


"This is so beautiful," said Maha Suleiman, a Kuwaiti woman sitting with her family on the snow, a dazzling white from the blazing sun.


Suleiman said it was her first time in Lebanon, but said she would return so her daughter could learn to ski.


"Yes, please!" squealed 10-year-old Ruqaya. "I want to."


Many Lebanese also come to the resorts just to hang out. At a restaurant at the foot of the mountains, Lebanese women in tight jeans and designer sunglasses sit side by side with cigar-smoking men, lazily enjoying the view.

"It's a charming place. I love Lebanese food -- and Lebanese women,"

said a smiling Philipe Lafon, a French businessman who sat munching a hamburger under a clear blue sky facing the white mountains. "I will surely be back." (AP)
Reply With Quote
Sponsored Links
  (#2 (permalink)) Old
Registered Member
 
WiseCookie's Avatar
 
Offline
Posts: 4,029
Thanks: 8
Thanked 17 Times in 13 Posts
Last Online: 26th September 2009
Join Date: Tue May 2004
View WiseCookie's Photo Album
Default Re: Ski in Faraya-Mzaar - 4th April 2006

This is great news. I only wish that they would start upgrading their equipment and start using snow makers. I don't know if it's possible to use them in Lebanon's climate, but they can offer a great advantage by making the season longer.
Reply With Quote
  (#3 (permalink)) Old
Registered Member
 
CedarJet's Avatar
 
Offline
Posts: 1,517
Thanks: 76
Thanked 140 Times in 79 Posts
Last Online: 6 Hours Ago
Join Date: Sat Feb 2005
View CedarJet's Photo Album
Default Re: Ski in Faraya-Mzaar - 5th April 2006

Some snow makers, some gondolas, and making the village more happening would really spice up Faraya Mzar.
Reply With Quote
  (#4 (permalink)) Old
Registered Member
 
LeXeU's Avatar
 
Offline
Posts: 1,253
Thanks: 0
Thanked 1 Time in 1 Post
Last Online: 5th July 2008
Join Date: Sun Jun 2005
View LeXeU's Photo Album
Default Re: Ski in Faraya-Mzaar - 5th April 2006

Quote:
Originally Posted by WiseCookie
This is great news. I only wish that they would start upgrading their equipment and start using snow makers. I don't know if it's possible to use them in Lebanon's climate, but they can offer a great advantage by making the season longer.
Southern California's weather is very similar to Lebanon's and there are three big resorts that during the ski season they use snow makers... It helps and you get used to it. It keeps the ski fans always on the slopes and it's not a bad alternative , specially when the snow season is bad...


Reply With Quote
  (#5 (permalink)) Old
Registered Member
 
WiseCookie's Avatar
 
Offline
Posts: 4,029
Thanks: 8
Thanked 17 Times in 13 Posts
Last Online: 26th September 2009
Join Date: Tue May 2004
View WiseCookie's Photo Album
Default Re: Ski in Faraya-Mzaar - 5th April 2006

Quote:
Originally Posted by LeXeU
Southern California's weather is very similar to Lebanon's and there are three big resorts that during the ski season they use snow makers... It helps and you get used to it. It keeps the ski fans always on the slopes and it's not a bad alternative , specially when the snow season is bad...
Generally I'm against concentrating on touristic sites for the benefit of the economy, but this can have a great impact on Lebanon's status in the touristic world. An addition like CedarLB stated would be a great idea, but then again, look at the government we have. Instead of making it easier on the few touristic industries that are still alive they find new ways to tax them. Perhaps they should keep quiet about the sucess of the ski slopes.
Reply With Quote
  (#6 (permalink)) Old
Registered Member
 
lebanese_a's Avatar
 
Offline
Posts: 1,808
Thanks: 0
Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts
Last Online: 13th January 2008
Join Date: Sat Oct 2005
View lebanese_a's Photo Album
Arrow Re: Ski in Faraya-Mzaar - 5th April 2006

This article reminded me of a documentary about the Zahleh War I saw, the guy that was doiing the documentary said during the documentary: A war in the midle east in the middle of jully in snow!!! (Sanine) this phrase if said in a commercial without the word"war" in it (replace it with trip) can atract a lot of tourists!
Reply With Quote
Reply

  The Orange Room - forum.tayyar.org FPM Community Forums Lebanon Away From Politics


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

 
Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On

Forum Jump

Forums Directory