After years of snowboarding in Colorado, I went on a ski trip to Italy. Here are 7 differences I noticed.
- I've spent seasons snowboarding in Colorado, and this winter, I went on my first European ski trip.
- While in Italy, I noticed several ways skiing and snowboarding vary between regions.
- From how slopes are labeled and designed to the overall cost, here are the differences I spotted.
As I heaved my snowboard bag out of the trunk, onto my back, and across the Denver airport, I debated if the effort was worth it.
Inside the awkwardly heavy bag was everything I needed for my first European ski trip — my snowboard, boots, base layers, ski pants, and ski jacket.
Bringing the 35-pound bag was a debated effort, especially since I have a dozen or so ski resorts just a drive away from my Denver apartment.
I knew snowboarding in Italy's Dolomites mountain range was an opportunity I couldn't pass up. I'd seen the striking, jagged mountains in articles, scrolling through videos, and in images across social media.
Snowboarding down them was going to be an entirely different experience.
Along with the views, I hoped to discover how the sport and culture in towns like Cortina d'Ampezzo and Brixen differ from what I've experienced in the past four ski seasons in Colorado.