AFTER ALL COSTS Flights+transfer+Pass+equipment+Accomodation in europe it will cost you about 1000 Euro per person Minus Food/etc to go to the BEST resorts on the planet, or about 700 per person minus food/etc to go To a bad one. If your gonna be spending this much money anyways, save another 20-30% and go to the best ones
Good point. Especially when you consider that the amount of holidays in most people's life is very limited. So better pay 200-300€ more to use your limited resources (time&energy) as good as possible
corrections for Vogel. The resort is quite literally ON lake Bohinj, and it takes about 30 minutes to Bled, not an hour. And it's 1 hour from Ljubljana airport, not 90 minutes :) Current prices (feb24) are 42/day for an adult.
"Yes, a ski resort in Spain!" It never ceases to amaze me the idea that people have about Spain. Dude, there are several ski resorts in Spain, and not only in the Pyrenees. La Molina, Cerler, Astún, Formigal, Alto Campoo, Manzaneda, Pajares, Baqueira, Sierra Nevada, Valdesqui, Candanchú... Some of them very small and all that, but this video says it like it was the Sahara or something. You know what we also have? electricity, street lamps, running water, hospitals... yeah, I swear, and since forever! I know right? crazy! lol
The same goes for Greece. The two biggest skiing resorts of the country are located hardly 2 hours from Athens by Car, meanwhile 90% of the country's population has a direct access to at least one of the 25 skiing resorts. But everybody thinks Greece=santorini
Problem with Spain resorts for me is the difficulty getting to them by train or bus. I have been to Val Thorens, Val D'isere, St Anton and going to Zermatt, all with a bus or train a walk away from where I stayed. The US is basically impossible to some resorts.
@@robertplant2059it's basically impossible to most resorts in the US, especially by train. And most busses will be private charters for groups, rather than public transit.
I was gonna say complete BS, but just checked the Ski Pass prices December 17th for 6 days pass costs 120 Euro, it's variable depending on the dates, a lot for 150 for 6 days
how on earth Bosnia is not on this list is beyond me. Lift pass for a week 130GBP (150 euro), 75km of slopes, accomodation for a week around 400 euro or less, 40 minute transfer, food on the slopes less than 10 euro and beer for less than 4 euro
I came here to say the same thing! I wonder how they were travelling, cause not even walking to Bohinj is gonna take that long. Stunning area with the chillest people. One of my favourite places in the world.
Be aware that some of the clips shown for each location is not actually from that location. I recognize a few clips from other locations blended in with the resorts mentioned
I think the maker of this video should tryand listen to the pronunciation of the places mentioned to correct several of them. The most hilarious is the youth hostel at the end (Jugendherberge). But still a nice effort to show us affordable places.
Why are you not even linking our Videocontent by telling your sources? Thats just more than unfair. We produce in Sudelfeld and you guys are using it to make money. An easy and fair link of our Video or your sources would be nice, but you obviously didn't feel like it. 😣
I was considering Jasna but skipass at 342 euros for an adult for 6 days was pretty much matching Alps so I chose there. The prices on the vid are BS or the cheapest you can get outside season. But then why not to mention Livigno where you have free ski weeks and ski passes for 0 euros!?
Jasna was cheap like 20yrs ago. I had no problem to buy flexible 14days skipass fresh after school, even local food etc. was cheap. Now its even more expensive than Austria Alps, so not sure why its on this list.
If you are a senior, 70 or above then Baqueira in the Pyrenees charges for a 6day ticket 36 euros or in English £5 a day. For others about 260euros for 6 days plus a large ski area.
We own an apartment literally connected to one of the cable cars in serre chevalier, its a great resort been there every year since i was 2, but it doesnt cost 255 euro its more
From whos ass did you get these prices? Borovets - 500 BGN (256€), 178€ in video Val Cenis - varies ~150-220€, 90€ in video Jasna - 262€, 136€ in video
Popova Shapka, Kolasin, Bjelasnica, Stara Planina. All very much cheaper in both ski pass prices and the accommodation prices then the ski resorts in this video...
How about a list of ski resorts easily accessible by public transport, preferrably train? It is very difficult to find ones that are convenient, especially when travelling with skis - and some (despite their false marketing) are almost ridiculously difficult to get to (Livigno for example runs a marketing campaign for a bus to St. Moritz - which is great, but St. Moritz isn't exactly on the main line either :D )
By law, all lifts in austria tat are on a public road, are accessible by public transprt. St.Anton is very convenient to reach even with the fastest train.
I know your pain, I've been trying to find ski resorts that are easily accessible by public transport and are near an international airport... I would suggest Poiana Brasov, Romania its cheap and you can find a train route on google maps right from Bucharest international airport!
This selection seems pretty arbitrary to me. There are dozens of other medium-sized French and Swiss ski resorts easily accessible where a day pass is around 50 to 60 euros. And if you get the Swiss magicpass during pre-selling in March / early April, it's 389 euros for 69 resorts for one year. In average, my skiing in Switzerland is less than 20 euros a day and if you book early you can easily get bnb (with private bathroom) for approximately 50 to 70 euros a night in a manageable distance to the skiing area.
I’ve been to Jasna this year and I am (un)happy to report that a day skipass there is €100 (€92 with gopass) so not sure where you got the prices from. Also, everything around Jasna (restaurants, accommodation) is shockingly expensive for where it is. It easily rivals Austria price-wise and is not far off St Moritz. The resort is fantastic btw, really has it all, but I was left agape nearly every time it came to paying (burger? That’d be €19,80… 200ml Cuba libre? €8.20 please. Etc etc etc). We did some quick and dirty maths and a family of 4 will easily drop €3,5 - €4,5k for a week’s worth of skiing there.
I'm planning a road trip driving to Venice in Easter this year (from UK), but I would love to learn to ski somewhere in the Alps - what's a good place to learn the basics? I will only have time to spend 1 day.
I would recommend going to Austria or Germany. These prices are outdated. There are many places in Germany and Austria that can be in-expensive. I would look for a city with a lot of pistes according to your- and your son's ski level. There are small or big ski areas, the smaller ones are often cheaper and less crowded (if you go outside of the lesson season, which is mostly in February). And it's good to look for estimated snowfall to make sure that there will be enough snow where you're going. Have you skied before? Do you know what ski level you and your son are? Are you planning to do lessons or go without them? Those are important things to factor in. Lessons make it more expensive, but it's helpful to learn from someone experienced. And if you go grocery shopping and make your own food that's less expensive, but if you do that make sure you have a kitchen in your accommodation. If you have questions you can ask them, I've been skiing for 14 years (with 2 two year breaks in between). Mostly my parents have booked the trips, but I do know how it works and what to pay attention to even though I don't always know the exact pricing.
@@Leo_Elisabeth_Alexanderhi thanks for the reply. We are both looking to snowboard no lessons required. He has had some at an indoor slope here in the U.K. and I’ve got experience of Andorra, Spain Sierra Nevada over the years. First time not going as a group and looking for self catering with green to red routes. I’m looking to book flights and hotel separately instead of a package holiday
@ I recommend you look into beginner ski resorts in Austria and Germany. Most ski area's don't have green routes, so you have to look for those specifically. (Most area's do have a kids place, which is a small part of a piste where beginners can practice, but it's usually small and crowded with kids.) You can then look up the ski maps of those cities and find a few that you both feel good about. Then look for places to stay at in those areas. And once you've found the place you want to stay at in the city you want to stay at you can book the flights and train/bus trip. Usually you can't go directly from the airport to an accommodation, unless you book a taxi or rent a car. But renting a car is not recommended. You can always get around by bus or by walking, and a car is just not practical. You can look up bus routes or walking routes to the pistes from your accommodation beforehand, but you don't have to. There are always buses close by and they usually go every hour or more often. December is pretty fast, but there's not a lot of people who go during that time so you still have a chance of being able to book a hotel. But I would recommend trying to book fast. I hope this all helps.
Honestly Minus Val Cenis, none of this was 'budget', just the word being repeated, and accomodation very similar as in all of alps. Pay $100 extra for the ski pass and $150 extra for the resort per person and your going to the top resorts in the world, the trip will cost you about 1,500 per person in reality regardless of resort for a week. Flights $250 + Transfers $150 + Accomodation $250 + Ski Pass $400 + Equipment $150 = $1200 per person Minus food/Restaurants/Activities
Ski passes are quite cheap ~100 eur per week. Accomodation depends, Guduari has quite european accomodation prices. Mestia (hatsvali / tetnuldi) has really affordable accomodation as well. Though requires extra transport to get to tetnuldi. Food is exceptional
@@schummyka been there last month I agree not easy to get there. I don’t use road instead the mighty Ukrainian trains 🚂 Going to dragobrat again next week from 🇬🇧
I see no relation to affordability 😅One or two of them actually are affordable, but more likely this list is the preference of the narrator who did not find a better title to show his favourites. However, everyone finds affordable ski resorts in their vicinity so cannot understand this thing globally.
You missed bialka poland. Its £20 full day ski pass and gets cheaper the more days you do. Also accommodation around (if you book in advance) can be as little as £300 for 6 nights.
Yes to size, maybe variety, no to quality and a very strong NO to prices ! Prices for everything in France have rocketed in recent years. Prices in Italy are now much lower.
Yes they do. Austria is certainly comparable, and much cheaper than France, crucially Austrian resorts have the best lift infrastructure in the entire world.
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@@mountain_sightDunno, man. People say the same about Bulgaria. But a Bulgarian guy told me not to go there because "the people are crazy and he was ashamed that he used to be like that". 🤷🏿 Prices are getting stupid though now, so I might have to try places like this and just keep my balaclava on. 😂
I was considering Jasna but skipass at 342 euros for an adult for 6 days was pretty much matching Alps so I chose there. The prices on the vid are BS or the cheapest you can get outside season. But then why not to mention Livigno where you have free ski weeks and ski passes for 0 euros!?
AFTER ALL COSTS Flights+transfer+Pass+equipment+Accomodation in europe it will cost you about 1000 Euro per person Minus Food/etc to go to the BEST resorts on the planet, or about 700 per person minus food/etc to go To a bad one. If your gonna be spending this much money anyways, save another 20-30% and go to the best ones
Good point. Especially when you consider that the amount of holidays in most people's life is very limited. So better pay 200-300€ more to use your limited resources (time&energy) as good as possible
corrections for Vogel.
The resort is quite literally ON lake Bohinj, and it takes about 30 minutes to Bled, not an hour.
And it's 1 hour from Ljubljana airport, not 90 minutes :)
Current prices (feb24) are 42/day for an adult.
Well.. Jasna is anything, but not cheap. For that price, travell anywhere in Austria.
1:32 you talk about Borovets, Bulgaria, but you show the Mooserwirt in Arlberg, Austria.
"Yes, a ski resort in Spain!"
It never ceases to amaze me the idea that people have about Spain. Dude, there are several ski resorts in Spain, and not only in the Pyrenees. La Molina, Cerler, Astún, Formigal, Alto Campoo, Manzaneda, Pajares, Baqueira, Sierra Nevada, Valdesqui, Candanchú... Some of them very small and all that, but this video says it like it was the Sahara or something.
You know what we also have? electricity, street lamps, running water, hospitals... yeah, I swear, and since forever! I know right? crazy! lol
Exactly why he said it like that... Most people don't know
The same goes for Greece. The two biggest skiing resorts of the country are located hardly 2 hours from Athens by Car, meanwhile 90% of the country's population has a direct access to at least one of the 25 skiing resorts. But everybody thinks Greece=santorini
Problem with Spain resorts for me is the difficulty getting to them by train or bus. I have been to Val Thorens, Val D'isere, St Anton and going to Zermatt, all with a bus or train a walk away from where I stayed.
The US is basically impossible to some resorts.
@@robertplant2059it's basically impossible to most resorts in the US, especially by train. And most busses will be private charters for groups, rather than public transit.
@@robertplant2059I think you can go to La Molina from Barcelona by bus.
Where are you getting these prices? Val Cenis is about €250 for 6 days.
I was gonna say complete BS, but just checked the Ski Pass prices December 17th for 6 days pass costs 120 Euro, it's variable depending on the dates, a lot for 150 for 6 days
@@ekay4495 yes in periods where there is no snow it doestn cost that much... lol
more 560e for 4 days Val Cenis
how on earth Bosnia is not on this list is beyond me. Lift pass for a week 130GBP (150 euro), 75km of slopes, accomodation for a week around 400 euro or less, 40 minute transfer, food on the slopes less than 10 euro and beer for less than 4 euro
Which resort
@@footlong4769
Jahorina, republic of Srpska
100% agree! Ive been and its brilliant!!!! I can’t believe more people don’t go!!!
Dunno, one bedroom on booking is 800-900...
Also, Tornik at Zlatibor in Serbia. Great for families. Been there 3 times. Small, but really affordable.
The pricing is outdated. Last year borovets Bulgaria increased day pass to 45€ a day.
yes been 90e lately a day
Regarding Vogel: Lake Bohinj is 5 minutes walk away from bottom lift station! Not 40! Lake Bled is 20 minutes away from lift bottom station by car.
I came here to say the same thing! I wonder how they were travelling, cause not even walking to Bohinj is gonna take that long.
Stunning area with the chillest people. One of my favourite places in the world.
Borovets where do you get that price? I see on the internet around €300 for 6 days lift pass. Lower end Hotel is €600
Borovets ain't as cheap as it was a few years ago.
Be aware that some of the clips shown for each location is not actually from that location. I recognize a few clips from other locations blended in with the resorts mentioned
I think the maker of this video should tryand listen to the pronunciation of the places mentioned to correct several of them. The most hilarious is the youth hostel at the end (Jugendherberge). But still a nice effort to show us affordable places.
Why are you not even linking our Videocontent by telling your sources? Thats just more than unfair. We produce in Sudelfeld and you guys are using it to make money. An easy and fair link of our Video or your sources would be nice, but you obviously didn't feel like it. 😣
Hi Marius, sorry about that. We've tagged your channel and video both in the video and in the description as well.
I was considering Jasna but skipass at 342 euros for an adult for 6 days was pretty much matching Alps so I chose there. The prices on the vid are BS or the cheapest you can get outside season. But then why not to mention Livigno where you have free ski weeks and ski passes for 0 euros!?
Jasna was cheap like 20yrs ago. I had no problem to buy flexible 14days skipass fresh after school, even local food etc. was cheap. Now its even more expensive than Austria Alps, so not sure why its on this list.
Lierally been there a few weeks ago…. Family of four, ski pass for 6 days was just over 600 Euro. Fantastic place for skiing!
Where did u get the skipass prices? For example Jasna - Slovakia costs around 60 euros for one day.
Jasna will cost this season even more then 60 Euros a day its not cheap at all I dont know how slovaks can afford this
I bough mine literally today. 3 days for 115 eur. Kids go cheaper.
Val Cenis day pass is cheaper than supposed to be cheap Jasna!
@@KrebsHDI thought the same. Poland felt expensive but Slovakia was just mad. What do people there do for a living??
If you are a senior, 70 or above then Baqueira in the Pyrenees charges for a 6day ticket 36 euros or in English £5 a day. For others about 260euros for 6 days plus a large ski area.
Checkout Gudauri guys 🙌🏽
We own an apartment literally connected to one of the cable cars in serre chevalier, its a great resort been there every year since i was 2, but it doesnt cost 255 euro its more
From whos ass did you get these prices?
Borovets - 500 BGN (256€), 178€ in video
Val Cenis - varies ~150-220€, 90€ in video
Jasna - 262€, 136€ in video
Zlatibor in Serbia is also a good one
We love Zlatibor! True, its only small, but great for families. Also, best food in the world!
Also in Germany and worth checking out: Garmisch, Oberjoch, Nebelhorn. Easily accessible from Memmingen or Munich airport. Small but cheap!
08:19: schuschenderbertsch?? 😂😂
It is good that people keep ignoring how cheap skiing is in Greece (in some areas even 7 Euros), because this is going to keep the prices low.
Greece and Turkey, great and fun terrain.
yeah, right... in Parnassos it literally costs 100€ for 4 days...
@@IncomingLegend Parnassos is the most expensive skiing Resort in the entire country. What about Helmos, Vasilitsa, Anilio, Mainalon etc?
08:04 talks about a free-ride area ... but shows the park at the Stubai glacier...
How Jahorina and Kopaonik wasn’t on this list?
Popova Shapka, Kolasin, Bjelasnica, Stara Planina. All very much cheaper in both ski pass prices and the accommodation prices then the ski resorts in this video...
I am on the Val Cenis website and can not see a 6 day pass for 90 euro. I only see 270 euro. Does anyone know something I don't?
how Anglophones pronounce ANY foreign word has been baffling me for ages
Same here.
its like they don't even bother
its ai
GO to Bosnia on Bjelasnica best mountain in world and very cheap ❤🇧🇦❣️
Don't know where do you get your prices from but 6 days skipass in Jasna is around 370Euro
8:15 as a native german speaker this pronounciatiion put shivers down my spine. you can make the argument, it's so far from correct as you can be
jew jenda burj
How about a list of ski resorts easily accessible by public transport, preferrably train? It is very difficult to find ones that are convenient, especially when travelling with skis - and some (despite their false marketing) are almost ridiculously difficult to get to (Livigno for example runs a marketing campaign for a bus to St. Moritz - which is great, but St. Moritz isn't exactly on the main line either :D )
By law, all lifts in austria tat are on a public road, are accessible by public transprt. St.Anton is very convenient to reach even with the fastest train.
I agree with ^ St Anton is a great resort for ease of transport. They have a train which is easy to get to from Geneva or Innsbruck.
I skied Zermatt in 1975 and it was easily accessible by train. It’s probably not affordable by this video’s standards though.
I know your pain, I've been trying to find ski resorts that are easily accessible by public transport and are near an international airport... I would suggest Poiana Brasov, Romania its cheap and you can find a train route on google maps right from Bucharest international airport!
I would recommend Poiana Brasov, Romania
This selection seems pretty arbitrary to me. There are dozens of other medium-sized French and Swiss ski resorts easily accessible where a day pass is around 50 to 60 euros. And if you get the Swiss magicpass during pre-selling in March / early April, it's 389 euros for 69 resorts for one year. In average, my skiing in Switzerland is less than 20 euros a day and if you book early you can easily get bnb (with private bathroom) for approximately 50 to 70 euros a night in a manageable distance to the skiing area.
I’ve been to Jasna this year and I am (un)happy to report that a day skipass there is €100 (€92 with gopass) so not sure where you got the prices from. Also, everything around Jasna (restaurants, accommodation) is shockingly expensive for where it is. It easily rivals Austria price-wise and is not far off St Moritz.
The resort is fantastic btw, really has it all, but I was left agape nearly every time it came to paying (burger? That’d be €19,80… 200ml Cuba libre? €8.20 please. Etc etc etc). We did some quick and dirty maths and a family of 4 will easily drop €3,5 - €4,5k for a week’s worth of skiing there.
excellent and a few places added to my list now, what would be cool is if possible, a pdf to go with the videos. thank you))
I'm planning a road trip driving to Venice in Easter this year (from UK), but I would love to learn to ski somewhere in the Alps - what's a good place to learn the basics? I will only have time to spend 1 day.
Falcade/Passo San Pellegrino or Arabba/Marmolada :)
Are you a complete beginner?
Would you recommend any of these end of December? Looking to go with my 11 year old lad?
I would recommend going to Austria or Germany. These prices are outdated. There are many places in Germany and Austria that can be in-expensive.
I would look for a city with a lot of pistes according to your- and your son's ski level. There are small or big ski areas, the smaller ones are often cheaper and less crowded (if you go outside of the lesson season, which is mostly in February). And it's good to look for estimated snowfall to make sure that there will be enough snow where you're going.
Have you skied before? Do you know what ski level you and your son are? Are you planning to do lessons or go without them? Those are important things to factor in. Lessons make it more expensive, but it's helpful to learn from someone experienced. And if you go grocery shopping and make your own food that's less expensive, but if you do that make sure you have a kitchen in your accommodation.
If you have questions you can ask them, I've been skiing for 14 years (with 2 two year breaks in between). Mostly my parents have booked the trips, but I do know how it works and what to pay attention to even though I don't always know the exact pricing.
@@Leo_Elisabeth_Alexanderhi thanks for the reply. We are both looking to snowboard no lessons required. He has had some at an indoor slope here in the U.K. and I’ve got experience of Andorra, Spain Sierra Nevada over the years. First time not going as a group and looking for self catering with green to red routes. I’m looking to book flights and hotel separately instead of a package holiday
@
I recommend you look into beginner ski resorts in Austria and Germany. Most ski area's don't have green routes, so you have to look for those specifically. (Most area's do have a kids place, which is a small part of a piste where beginners can practice, but it's usually small and crowded with kids.) You can then look up the ski maps of those cities and find a few that you both feel good about. Then look for places to stay at in those areas. And once you've found the place you want to stay at in the city you want to stay at you can book the flights and train/bus trip. Usually you can't go directly from the airport to an accommodation, unless you book a taxi or rent a car. But renting a car is not recommended. You can always get around by bus or by walking, and a car is just not practical. You can look up bus routes or walking routes to the pistes from your accommodation beforehand, but you don't have to. There are always buses close by and they usually go every hour or more often. December is pretty fast, but there's not a lot of people who go during that time so you still have a chance of being able to book a hotel. But I would recommend trying to book fast. I hope this all helps.
Show me where do you get 6day ski pass in Serre Chevalier for 255eu...
Borovitz is lovely for beginners
that is where I started, and love to mess around
Borovets!!
Or buy a magic pass and ski 69 destinations in Switzerland for the season for roughly €400. ....
this year jasna for 3 days cost 144 euro
Honestly Minus Val Cenis, none of this was 'budget', just the word being repeated, and accomodation very similar as in all of alps.
Pay $100 extra for the ski pass and $150 extra for the resort per person and your going to the top resorts in the world, the trip will cost you about 1,500 per person in reality regardless of resort for a week.
Flights $250 + Transfers $150 + Accomodation $250 + Ski Pass $400 + Equipment $150 = $1200 per person Minus food/Restaurants/Activities
I personally would recommend Brauneck over Sudelfeld.
Super interesting! How about Georgia? I've heard about good things about the skiing there :D
Thanks! Will definitely look into skiing destinations in Georgia
Ski passes are quite cheap ~100 eur per week. Accomodation depends, Guduari has quite european accomodation prices. Mestia (hatsvali / tetnuldi) has really affordable accomodation as well. Though requires extra transport to get to tetnuldi. Food is exceptional
Ski passes are very cheap In dragobrat in Ukraine 🇺🇦. Also Bukovel decent price with food and apres ski
Totally agree..! (getting there by road is a horror story but the Bukovel ski resort is "must have category") I hope we could back soon'
@@schummyka been there last month I agree not easy to get there. I don’t use road instead the mighty Ukrainian trains 🚂 Going to dragobrat again next week from 🇬🇧
Beautiful
I see no relation to affordability 😅One or two of them actually are affordable, but more likely this list is the preference of the narrator who did not find a better title to show his favourites.
However, everyone finds affordable ski resorts in their vicinity so cannot understand this thing globally.
February 2023 Jasna : Skipass = 306 Euro.
thanks bro, you just made my day, my mom doesnt want an expensive trip for just skiing and i showed her this and this is a good price
You’re welcome. Hope you find a great destination!
You missed bialka poland. Its £20 full day ski pass and gets cheaper the more days you do. Also accommodation around (if you book in advance) can be as little as £300 for 6 nights.
any recommendations? where did you stay transport etc
Bosnia? Turkey, Way cheaper than a lot of these. Went to jasna in Slovakia though. Worth going.
Nothing compares to the variaty, the size, the quality and the prices of France's ski resorts. Switzerland comes close but it is pricey.
France is a magical place!
Yes to size, maybe variety, no to quality and a very strong NO to prices ! Prices for everything in France have rocketed in recent years. Prices in Italy are now much lower.
for a price of french ski pass I can get a week all included in bulgaria or bosnia...
Yes they do. Austria is certainly comparable, and much cheaper than France, crucially Austrian resorts have the best lift infrastructure in the entire world.
@@sandersson2813taking into account what I've seen I would say the prices in France are rather a bit lower than in Austria. I would estimate 10-20%
Jasna is not affordable. I was 2 weeks ago and for 5 days ski pass i had to pay 204 euro. Accommodation, 800 euro for 5 days....
Kopaonik - Serbia is much much better than all these mentioned above, and cheaper also.
I found Val Cenis quite boring. There are better alternatives in the valley IMO.
Really informative! Didn’t know these resorts but they look great and affordable!
Thanks for watching!
Never compare Val d'isère and Val cenis again please :)
But they both have Val in their name!
£217 for 6 days now
Some absurd attempts at pronunciation. WTF!
There’s so much cheaper options not mentioned
Turkey even cheaper ,£10 a day for ski pass
I wish visit all!!!!
Do it! Just do it!
I invite all citizens and spectators of this channel respectively with love to come to the paradise island Sri Lanka 🇱🇰 during this winter and have the greatest experience of your life time related to the greatest biodiversity in the world where you can meet the most beautiful wildlife, beaches, ancient palaces, amazing hiking, climates, hospitality, culinary ( The best Western and Indigenous + world class food and beverages ) you can have within 3 hours anywhere in the island. You can see the biggest animal in the sea and the biggest on land on land within 3 hours at the same time. Sri lanka 🇱🇰 was nominated as the best travel destination in the world 🌎 in 2018 according to Lonely Planet Magazine 🌎 🎉❤ Believe me. You will thank me later ❤🎉 🇱🇰
Where can I rent my ski's on Sri Lanka?
❤️🇨🇭🇸🇰✌️
This video makes me dizzy… hard to watch.
I wanted to try Slovenia, but i was told that people were super racist there 😢.
I bet the majority of Slovenians are friendly if welcoming people no matter your race 💙
Not more racists than in Africa
@@mountain_sightDunno, man.
People say the same about Bulgaria. But a Bulgarian guy told me not to go there because "the people are crazy and he was ashamed that he used to be like that". 🤷🏿
Prices are getting stupid though now, so I might have to try places like this and just keep my balaclava on. 😂
@@1FlyingfistBulgarians are not crazy. They love to hate each other, but are nice to foreigners, especially to the well behaved ones.
We went to Bulgaria ONCE
Never again
what happened?
I was considering Jasna but skipass at 342 euros for an adult for 6 days was pretty much matching Alps so I chose there. The prices on the vid are BS or the cheapest you can get outside season. But then why not to mention Livigno where you have free ski weeks and ski passes for 0 euros!?