Zell am See
After a skiing vacation in Zell am See we would recommend the place to everyone. The town is located in a picturesque valley beside a big lake. The essential advantage of the place is that it consists of two separate ski areas, unified in one region called Europa Sport Region. This offers you a vast variety of slopes and guarantees snow in any winter. The first area is called Schmittenh?he. Its upper level is about 2000 m. Cable cars to this zone start from several points, one of them being right in the city center. The pistes vary from blue to black. In lower parts they come through fir forest.  The total capacity of 29 lifts and cable cars is about 40,000 persons/hour, so the lines are usually quite symbolic even when the place is crowded. On some upper stations  there are big signs, indicating the waiting time at the starting level, enabling you to plan where to go next. The period before we arrived to Zell am See had been rather warm. The lake was free from ice and the streets were clean and dry. Still there was plenty of snow  in the upper zones,  but down from midpoint snow cannons were actively used, so that we could ski down to the base.

The other zone is called Kaprun (by the name of the nearest town) or Kitzsteinhorn (by the name of the 3200-m peak). The skiing area is also referred to as gletscher (glacier). The highest point  here is 3029 m. The snow is guaranteed even in the worst years. For a few weeks before our arrival Kaprun had been holding 1-2 places for snow depth (320 cm)! You can get to the skiing area by two lifts, one of which is cable-car with cabins for 8 people, and the other looks like TGV train. Starting at 35 degrees angle it dives into a tunnel and gets out only at 2750 m amidst the giant rocky circus with other lifts and runs going in all directions.

The ski-pass system is rather flexible. We bought passes for 10 days out of 14 for $240 which covered both areas and unlimited ski bus + discounts to swimming pool and sauna. As it came out later that was a great bargain!

Hotel
We stayed at an inn located midway between 2 main lift stations to Schmittenh?he. The usual morning routine was to wake up, get a shower, see the live picture from both areas on TV (to make up our minds as to where to go), have breakfast and walk 50 m to the nearest bus stop. Buses go every 20 min. The ride takes 3-4 min. if you go to Schmittenh?he, or +35 min. in case of Kitzsteinhorn. The inn "Gasthof Schmittental" is famous for its excellent cuisine. With a pint of Puntigamer ("das bierische bier") it was nice to relax during the evening meal after a day of glorious skiing.

Treatment
On the second day of skiing at Kitzsteinhorn, just on the finishing run as I was escaping a dangerously nearing guy,  I made  a wrong movement and felt a suspicious pain in my right knee. Bad premonitions grew stronger by night. In the morning I was hardly  able to come downstairs for breakfast. That was an old injury I first got 10 years ago in Terskol. But for the last 2 years I almost forgot about it particularly as I used to keep myself in some kind of shape by running each morning upstairs to the 17th floor of our house. I bought an ointment in a drugstore and  bandaged the joint but next morning the pain was almost as strong as before. A local orthopedist asked  me some questions and then it became clear that the diagnosis I had had back in Moscow was utterly wrong. There were no  problems with 'meniscus' but just stretched side ligament. The Austrian brought a model of a knee joint and showed me the faulty detail. After that I felt immediate relief, particularly when he told me that I could go on skiing.  Then we went to Salzburg, the city of Mozart,  for  a sightseeing  tour. The next days I was skiing just as if nothing had happened. But going downstairs was still a difficult event.

Germany
Yet in Moscow we planned to rent a car and go to Munich.We took a discounted weekend package from Hertz (about $90 for a Fiat Punto from 12 a.m. Friday till 9 a.m. Monday) and started Saturday morning to Munich. To the delight of us Russians Austria is now a Shengen state so we were facing no problems with our passports. All the way to Munich the weather was sunny but quite near the city the sky went cloudy and then the heavy snowfall began. We were lucky to find a small hotel with a parking not far from the center. The city is nice but surely it does not come into the list of world's most beautiful places. But its famous Pinakothek is definitely worth visiting. Unfortunately the Old Pinakothek was closed till  July but part of its collection was being shown in the New Pinakothek.  There are magnificent works by Bosch, Cranach, Durer, Leonardo Da Vinci, Raphael, Titian, Rubens, Rembrandt, as well as Turner, Murillo, Gainsborough, Manet, Degas and many others. The building itself has a very good design in terms of lighting and  artworks arrangement.

Next morning we started southwest to the city of Fussen, more particularly to the fairy castle of Neuschwanstein built by the renowned Bavarian King Ludwig II. The King was famous for his passion for German  mythology and Wagner operas. The murals and paintings in the castle halls depict scenes from Lohengrin, Tannh?user, Tristan and Isolde and Parsifal.

Special Treatment
As I mentioned before we had a discount for swimming pool and sauna. When we got there for the first time and started to undress before our lockers we were surprised when a stout Austrian came in followed by an attractive lady, presumably his wife. They put their bags right besides ours and also began to undress. Our initial thought was  that we got to the wrong place. We made a quick tour around the hall just to find that the place was right. The default sauna is unisex, though there is another one, which works alternatively for men and women. 

In the steam room the temperature was not too high – the modest 90 o C. It was empty, so we got in and began to accumulate the heat. Other people gathered one by one. Suddenly a man flung the door wide open. It became almost cold. We were bewildered. Just before we were about to leave the room a saunameister appeared with kind of a dipper full of water which he put besides the heater and left having shut the door and posted up a sign “No entrance”. Half a minute passed and then a woman came in. It seemed like materialization of what we had earlier saw in the Pinakothek. Her grand-grand-grand (…) mother must have certainly been posing for Rubens when he painted “The Union of Earth and Water”. Despite her ample forms she moved with lightness and grace. She poured some water from the dipper over the heated stones, waited a little, then took a towel and began to rotate it over her head like some ancient weapon. (Her grand-grand…(100 times) mother might have been Athena or Minerva…). It became hot. The steam was whirling around the steam-room. The girl started to flap the towel in different directions. Her breasts were swinging with the movement. This was even more effective. The heat went on rising. She poured more water over the stones and repeated the magic dance. When she finished the audience burst with applause. The girl waved her hand and smiled then lay down on a bench and relaxed. Everybody was exhausted. Olympic performance was over. 


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