Travelling in The Alps in winter can be a trial; a trial in patience while others struggle and a trial of your own driving skills. Living in areas where with only little snow fall brings travellers to underestimate what mountains are able to throw at them. While Britain collapses under a few inches of snow, Alpine travel may make you face several feet of new snow during a single day. Equipment, therefore, is all.
Winter tyres are a must (or at a minimum tyres that are guaranteed to be able to deal with snow and slush). With winter tyres on you might confidently expect to deal with most weather conditions. They will serve you excellently on snow and slush, but they dont do a lot for you on blank ice. If you have to drive in icy conditions, slow is better than sorry.
If you plan to travel mountain passes, keep easy to install snow chains in your boot. Keep them on top of your bags or youll end up unloading your boot to get at them. The chains are mounted onto the tyres to give additional grip in heavy snow and additional bite on ice. Mount them on all tyres; while two will do the trick to propel the car, you really dont want to go straight out over the next bend in the road. Once you reach cleared roads you should take them off again; the hard surface will make them damage your tyres otherwise.
Generally when travelling in winter, take enough blankets with you inside the car. You never know where you might get stuck and for how long. Spending an hour in your car when the motor is not running is less of a trial snuggled up than otherwise. A blanket will also double up as a garment in the cold should you have to leave your car for any reason.
While these tips sound like common sense to most of us, Germany, France, Italy, and Austria felt constrained to pass laws making winter gear on your car mandatory and backed up with heavy fines. Switzerland in turn is relying on common sense to tell you what to do and how to do it properly.
You should be aware, though, that the proper fittings of your car are your responsibility. Insurances are able, allowed to, and encouraged to reject part or all of your claims if you venture forth unprepared. Saving on tyres could be an expensive mistake. Apart from that, sliding slowly over the edge of a mountain pass over a 300 ft drop is not my idea of a happy holyday.
Related articles:Forgotten Dangers Inside Your CarTravelling in The Alps: Bernina PassTravelling in The Alps: Julier PassTravelling in The Alps: Septimer PassTravelling in The Alps: Forcellina and Lunghin PassesTravelling in The Alps: Maloja PassTravelling in The Alps: Albula PassTravelling in The Alps: Flela Pass
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