Skiing interrupted by snow

It’s a standing joke in the UK that the country can be paralysed by a little snow. It may come as some comfort therefore to find that it can happen here too. There was a big storm overnight and the village needs digging out.

There were no trains or lifts running until lunchtime, and therefore no skiing. Kids played in the snow on the tennis courts. 

We decided to pop down to Interlaken for some shopping while the ploughs did their work. Here is snowy Lauterbrunnen where we had our walk yesterday. 

When we got back to Wengen the path to our house still hadn’t been cleared. We struggled to the door with our shopping. Eventually the plough arrived.

It’s still snowing with more forecast tonight. 

Happy birthday 

More live music last night with Uptown Lights. It was Ibe’s birthday a few days ago and Ally has baked a cake.

Lots of fun as usual.

After all that excitement it’s nice that Val has a day off work today, and in any case there’s a big storm up the hill which has stopped the trains. We buy lunch from the little bakery in Lauterbrunnen and catch the bus to Stechelberg. The pond behind the hydro station is full of frogspawn and is alive with frogs.

More signs of spring under some of the trees.

Lunch. It’s very mild today.

New band

Actually, this lot have been having Wednesday evening practice sessions for the last seven years. This, however is their first public performance. 

Rachel is almost hidden in the corner.

There was a good turnout to see them Rich and Colin tried a three litre cylinder of beer.

It all went well and everyone had a good night out. I wonder whether we’ll have to wait another seven years before we see them again.

Another poor day today – very few people went up the hill. Val took this pic of the normally busy Bahnhof restaurant at Scheidegg. 

More gloom

Val’s clients have been pretty diverse this season. The Dutch kids who came in February are to be expected, but this week she’s had kids from Angola and now a family from Dubai has turned up. They won’t have been very impressed with our recent weather that’s for sure – we had yet another damp, gloomy day today, with rain all the way to the summits. 

Piste machines are beginning to prepare the ground for the Snowpenair concert.

More live music tonight. Bob, Rachel, Ozzie, Steve and George have formed  a band. No idea how a five-piece band will squeeze in at the Sunstar but we’ll soon find out.

Saturday Night Fever

Cast your mind back to 1978. James Callaghan is UK prime minister, and 1.5 million people are unemployed. I had a dreary job in an office in Walsall, but we did our best to have a bit of fun. As a cocky 19 year-old I liked to have a dance whenever one our local pubs had a disco night, and when Saturday Night Fever arrived at the cinema the number of these events increased tenfold. 

As luck would have it one of the girls at my office was also a dance instructor, and a group of us would spend our lunchtimes learning the moves that we’d seen in the film. While I was never going to be John Travolta, I never missed a session and I reckoned I was pretty handy.

Fast forward forty years, and I am sat in my favourite spot at the bar in the Sunstar last night when I hear Steve and Colin calling my name. They’re playing a slow number and I must dance with Val as it was our anniversary a couple of days ago.

It’s probably a good thing that I can’t remember how to dance the ‘Manhattan Bus Stop Shuffle’ from Saturday Night Fever, and in any case Duo Centrale don’t play any Bee Gees numbers, but we had our annual dance and very nice it was too.

Vote with your duvet

This morning the weather was damp and dreary, and I didn’t envy Val as she set off for work. It looks like most folk stayed in bed judging by the number of people waiting for the 8.24 to Scheidegg this morning.

Apart from Val there were precisely zero skiers. Apparently it was a similar story up at the top. Duvet days all round.

Vertical Up 

Each year, just before Easter we have a race called the Vertical Up. The course is the downhill ski race course in reverse – racers start at the bottom and run up to the start hut at the top of the Lauberhorn. 

Any equipment can be used – skis, crampons etc, but the fastest competitors use running shoes fitted with spikes and a pair of long poles. Last year’s race was a bit of a disaster as a storm rolled in just before the start meaning that only the first third of the course was safe to use. Today the race started earlier and everything was fine. Here are the girls getting their prizes. Victoria from Zermatt was the winner.