Ski Resort Reviews  
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Cauterets Le Cirque du Lys
Altitude: 1730-2450m

Downhill Ski Terrain: 36km:
Piste percentages at Cauterets.
10 Blue • 8 Red • 7 Green • 2 Black
Freestyle Park with 3 freestyle zones,
a mini cross and C-Park.
15 Lifts:
2 gondolas • 5 chair-lifts
11 Drag-lifts • 1 Magic carpet

Cauterets Pont d'Espagne
Altitude: 1500m

Cross-country skiing / downhill
in the Parc National des Pyrénées
36.5kms cross-country over 5 circuits
Downhill Terrain:
Piste percentages
2 Green • 1 Blue • 1 Red • 1 Black
3 Lifts:
1 chair-lift • 2 drag-lifts
6km signed snowshoe walks
1 taboggan run

To ski...

  • 4 out of 5 Beginners/Families
  • 3 out of 5 Intermediates
  • 2 out of 5Advanced/Expert
  • 3 out of 5 Mountain Scenery

Pont d’Espagne is a worthwhile bonus.

To stay...

  • 4 out of 5 Value
  • 3 out of 5 Accommodation
  • 2 out of 5 Dining Out
  • 2 out of 5 Nightlife
  • 4 out of 5 Village Charm

Handiski

  • • Drop-off point just outside the Lys gondola loading area (adpated toilets) and ticket office. No adapted parking spaces.
  • • Direct access to the slopes from the Lys gondola. Grand Barbat and Crêtes chairlifts are accessible plus the beginners magic-carpet.
  • • Covered area, ESF, adapted toilets and snack bar all accessible, lift to restaurant and picnic room on first floor.
  • • Ski pass 100% free for a disabled skier (proof required) and 50% for a companion.
  • • Qualified specialist instructors and equipment at ESF and ESI.
  • • Equipment available for hire at the 'Boule de Neige' in Luz-St-Sauveur, tel: +33(0)5 92 94 17 78
  • • See Haute Pyrénées website for further details.

Yes, please..

  • • Good value skiing and dining.
  • • Interesting, historic town.
  • • Plenty of French ambiance.
  • • Amazing mountain scenery.
  • • Friendly, relaxed vibe.
  • • Thermal spa centre Les Bains du Rocher.
  • • Snow often abundant.
  • • Modern, high-speed gondola lift.

Yes, but..

  • • No ski-in, ski-out accommodation.
  • • Still a few drag-lifts.
  • • Not one for mileage-seekers.
  • • Link to Luz Ardiden, please...

Our Tip..

  • • There’s a whole lot more skiing on offer nearby in Luz Ardiden, so get to know it while you’re here.

Children’s ski school.
It’s a real family ski area.

The Télécabine du Lys high-speed gondola.
High-speed gondola access direct to
the ski area from the heart of the town.

Editor's Choice

Where to Stay

Seen, tried and tested - Seen, tried and tested.

Seen or tried and testedHotel Lion d'Or
Logis de France **

12 rue Richelieu & 1 Ave Dr. Domer, 65110 Cauterets
+33(0)5 62 92 52 87
Visit website
Hotel Lion d'Or, Cauterets Lovely family-run hotel just minutes from the Lys gondola. The hotel is noted for its charm and character and the recently renovated rooms have added extra comfort and style. We opted for half-board and enjoyed evening meals with plentiful home-cooked food. While serving an apéritif or after-dinner coffee at the hotel bar, the owners’ son was happy to offer advice about where to find the best skiing. A qualified ski instructor, his knowledge of the surrounding area proved invaluable.

Seen or tried and testedMulcares in the Pyrenees
44 Rue de la Raillère
65110 Cauterets
+33(0)5 62 92 23 29
Visit website

Mulcares in the Pyrenees

Based in the town centre and overlooking the river and mountains is the stylish English run Mulcares in the Pyrenees self-catering apartments. Here you can choose from a range of 7 modern and comfortable apartments with private riverside balconies.

Apartment Vignemale, Mulcares in the Pyrenees

The largest and most spacious 3 bedroom apartment Vignemale, named after the nearby mountain, sleeps 6-8 people. At the other end of the scale is the smaller well equipped studio apartment Mamelon Vert, perfect for 2 people. The English family hosts are on hand every day in the Welcome Room to help you organise any of your activities or skiing requirements, provide you with the all important local knowledge and to offer the essential free tea and locally made cakes at the end of a good days skiing.
Described by past guests as “simply the best in town”.

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For Cauterets accommodation and packages:
Ski Collection
0844 576 0175 (UK)
or +44 23 9289 0960
reservations@skicollection.co.uk

Where to Eat

Recommendations from Mulcares in the Pyrenees:
There is a wide range of good restaurants in town to choose from, one that has been getting rave reviews is the excellent En So de Bedau, run by the larger than life character and owner, David (look out for the large black beret and pictures of goats!). This little restaurant serves up a mouth watering menu of some of the best regional foods in a friendly atmosphere and at great prices. A firm favourite with real Pyrenean mountain food is the excellent Les Trois Couronnes. The friendly owners serve a selection of both traditional fare and some more contemporary takes on classics all in a cosy atmosphere.
For a more upmarket eating experience but one that doesn’t break the budget you can try just out of town on the way up to Pont d’Espagne L’abri du Benquès located by a waterfall. This restaurant with a log fire inside, serves a beautifully presented menu of local specialities with a more modern take.
For a rustic, mountain experience and one that requires a walk (often in snow shoes) to get to, is the superb Reine Hortense. Overlooking the town up at 1500m the owner serves up hearty mountain food cooked on an open fire. Not great for vegetarians, but if you like real steaks, duck and delicious potatoes cooked in loads of garlic then the effort to get here is well worth it.
For an après-ski drink why not have a vin chaud at the Ski Bar in the town centre, either inside in the wooden alpine style bar or outside whilst watching the world go by. The trendy set often go to the lively Café du Commerce after a days skiing to enjoy the music and buzzy atmosphere of this great little bar.

Spend a day in the beautiful and remote Pont d’Espagne in the Parc National des Pyrénées. There is some easy downhill skiing but it’s perhaps better appreciated with cross-country skis or snow-shoes.

Seen, tried and testedLe Chalet Refuge du Clot
Tel: +33 (0)5 62 92 61 27
Opening variable but a welcome sight when you need a warming hot chocolate or a midday meal.

Berlingots
Making sweets known as berlingots, a Cauterets specialityFormerly used by spa patients to overpower the after-taste of the sulphurised water, the sweets have become a speciality in Cauterets with countless flavours. There are four berlingot makers in the town and you’ll often see them making batches of sweets. Naturally, you can also sample the results.

Seen, tried and testedAux Délices
Place de la Mairie
65110 Cauterets
Tel: +33(0)5 62 92 07 08
Visit website

Things To Do

Seen, tried and testedLes Bains du Rocher
Ave du Docteur Domer
65112 Cauterets
Tel: +33 (0)5 62 92 51 60
Visit website
Open every day (times vary)
Pass 2 hrs Adult €16, family (2 ad+ 2 ch) €41

Interior pool, Bains du Rocher, Cauterets

Naturally hot spa waters flow through both interior and exterior pools in this recently developed spa and well-being centre in the heart of Cauterets. Inside, a round pool contains a variety of relaxing water treatments with bubble beds, geysers, Jacuzzi and massage jets. Outside, a stainless steel lagoon with relaxation beds, has 2 Jacuzzi, bubble beds, and swim against the current. People can also enjoy a sauna, hammam and very hot bath (38°C). We thought the pools were well-designed and felt very relaxed after taking advantage of all the treatments. We then headed upstairs and enjoyed a wonderful massage in the wellbeing centre (prices from €28 for 30 min). There's a great locker system which uses a wrist band with a unique code, no small change required!

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When it snows here, it snows...

Skiers, mountain, blue sky at Cauterets.

The Location

Access is relatively speedy from Pau and Toulouse airports (or Lourdes TGV for rail travellers) and the village is also a popular spa destination with much retro charm.

There’s plenty of accommodation in the town, which boasts high-speed gondola access to the ski terrain. Further up the valley is the Pont d’Espagne, offering downhill and cross-country skiing, walking, etc., in beautiful natural surroundings.


The Ski Area

The family ski station of Cauterets is one of the most popular in the French Pyrénées. Its well-planned selection of groomed pistes is served by an efficient lift system and will appeal to recreational skiers looking for a relaxed (but not too relaxed), uncomplicated experience. Although slightly limited in overall size, it has safe debutant and children’s areas. The rest is Blue- and Red-graded scenic cruising, with a few steeper Blacks. 2010/2011 aside, Cauterets has had an excellent snow record over the past few years. Finally, the presence nearby of Luz Ardiden expands the possibilities for anyone looking for more terrain and a worthwhile change of scenery.
The beautiful, unspoilt Pont d’Espagne area offers a couple more downhill pistes, and is superb for cross-country skiers. It's also the perfect setting for easy snow-shoe walks.


Colourful hotel facades in Cauterets, French Pyrenees.

The Ski Village

Cauterets’ pleasant town centre has plenty of shops and cafés plus the welcoming spa and wellbeing facilities to relax those aching muscles. Apparently the old spa town has more visitor beds than any other tourist town in France - around 25,000, in fact. So there should be something for everyone, from traditional family hotels to renovated apartments. Evenings, while hardly riotous, are nevertheless engagingly convivial.


Skiers leaving gondola lift arrival area, Cauterets.

Ideal for:

Familes looking for good value skiing. The gondola from the town centre is really convenient and the beginners terrain is great for children. Intermediates will increase their confidence on the well groomed slopes. Experienced skiers will find it limiting after a few days but could head over to Luz Ardiden for a change of scene.


Our Experience

For many years Cauterets was known not as a ski resort but as a spa town. This, along with a slightly over-the-hill casino, still gives it something of a genteel quality. But the town is on the up, with new construction integrating nicely with the old, as we observe while gliding slightly incongruously over the rooftops in the modern gondola lift, en-route to the ski terrain.

It won’t be long until the season draws to a close, but the snow-line remains reassuringly low, and as we climb ever higher it becomes clear that conditions are indeed better than we’d dare to hope. The journey takes us to the 1850m mark, where we step out of our cosy Perspex bubble and into the now-familiar chill-factor world of the Hautes-Pyrénées. As the sun slips behind the clouds we waste no time heading off to warm things up on the run down the Sacca blue piste to the next lift, the six-seater Crètes detachable chair.

Crettes six-place ski-lift.
The six-seater Crettes chair-lift assures rapid access to the higher terrain.

Time for take-off...

Not surprisingly, it turns out to be a real flyer, hauling us smoothly up to around 2300m. This time we glide straight off and head down to our final lift, the Brèches four-seater, for a ride up to 2415m. From here virtually the whole of the ski terrain is laid before us like a giant three-dimensional piste-map, but without a fold in sight.

Over to our left we can see Touvarolles, another four-seater lift, which is particularly interesting as it accesses red pistes offering the chance to rack up 640m of vertical drop in a single run. Sadly, though, the sector we had been particularly looking forward to turns out to be closed during our visit due to gusting winds.

View of ski area from chair-lift, Cauterets.

Plan B...

So we content ourselves instead with the generally more sheltered bowl which makes up the remainder of the ski area. As the piste-map suggests, the scenic cruiser of choice proves to be the blue-graded Crètes, which provides even relatively timid skiers with a bracing top-of-the-mountain experience, complete with vast, panoramic views.

“there’s a lot of enjoyment to be had like this, particularly for those who are still building their confidence...”

Along the way, the run passes another three lifts, and clearly-signed departure points for a choice of blue, red and black runs which drop back down to the Cirque du Lys. We follow the main blue all the way, though, before climbing a few more times to enjoy a few of the variations set within the long, sweeping arc of our early run on Crètes.

It’s clear that there’s a lot of enjoyment to be had like this, particularly for those who are still building their confidence before moving on to sterner tests. But we also get the feeling that there just might not be enough on offer for more demanding skiers without recourse to further terrain to keep their interest.

Skier on the Crettes piste.
Crettes - a scenic, Blue-graded cruise high above the Cirque du Lys.

Fortunately, the lift-pass also takes in a little more downhill terrain some 7km further up the valley at Pont d’Espagne (1450m). Here, in a hauntingly beautiful setting high in the Parc National des Pyrénées, we find another gondola designed to get even non-skiers into the heart of this otherwise remote spot. The downhill terrain at the far end is quite modest, but served by a pretty capable high-speed chairlift. At the top is a choice of red or blue-graded runs which wind their way back down through the silent pine forest. There's also a couple of safer-than-safe debutant runs on the valley floor, set beside the welcoming Chalet Refuge du Clot, into which we tumble in search of reviving chocolat-chauds.

Outside the snow is falling hard now, visibility is dropping and the beginner area is silent. There are a handfull of skiers, though, skating determinedly along the ski-de-fond (cross-country) routes with broad smiles, which we return, noting two of them working hard in their regular carving skis.

Skiers on cross-country piste, Pont d’Espagne.
Exploring some of Pont d’Espagne’s peaceful cross-country terrain – there’s some downhill, too.

Although conditions are turning out to be far short of the ideal ski weather, we’re really glad we came and chanced upon this very special place, and are in no hurry to get back to the car. Quite the reverse, in fact. We’re more than happy just walking in the mystical silence which only falling snow can produce, and decide to take the long way back down... Passions icon

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Getting There

By car
From the A64 autoroute between Toulouse and Pau, take the exit for Lourdes and follow the signs for Cauterets (about 45km). For drivers from western France, the new A65 between Langon and Pau will shave an hour off the old journey time (péage)

By air
Ryanair offer winter flights from London Stansted to Lourdes (only 30mins from Cauterets). You can also fly into Pau (90km/1½hrs) and Toulouse-Blagnac (210km/2½hrs).

Find . They monitor competitor prices daily to ensure lowest prices in ALL European "low cost" flight destinations.

By train
Take the Eurostar
to Paris then
Paris - Lourdes TGV
Transfer by an SNCF coach in front of the station.

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Cauterets, Hautes Pyrenees

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