Mallin Alto Sled Skiing
Mallin Alto is a magical experience. It’s the complete antithesis of the Cerro Catedral Ski Resort, with its busy slopes and frenzied lift lines. At Mallin Alto you can completely disconnect from it all, time doesn’t really matter, and there’s no competition for fresh lines.
Pros
- Staying way up deep in the mountains is pretty special. The views are phenomenal and the refugio very charming.
- The food and beverage offerings are delightful, especially when you consider the remote location and that everything is cooked with a wood stove. Some meals include ranch produced meats cooked the Argentine way, which adds to the cultural experience.
- Mallin Alto is a boutique experience that only caters to a small number of guests. With a large staff to guest ratio, the service is attentive, and the team have a beautiful enthusiasm for what they do.
- Heading up the hill on a snowmobile is fast and plenty of fun and a great way to get fresh tracks.
- The snow conditions tend to be better than those at Cerro Catedral, and obviously you don’t have to share the powder with thousands of people, just a handful.
Pro or Con Depending on Your Perspective
- The ascents are fast and you can get in plenty of runs. The skiing and snowboarding may only go for a half day, leaving plenty of time for relaxation and enjoying the lodge. If you want to chase an abundance of vertical all day or shred the extreme gnar, you may not feel adequately satisfied.
- Whilst the experience now includes lots of pampered elements, the trip is still suited to those with an adventurous spirit. For example, getting there is a fun adventure with the bumpy drive, slippery tracks and river crossings, yet princesses may not enjoy it.
- The experience doesn’t come cheaply, but considering it’s a boutique experience where often there are more staff than guests, and you realise the logistics of the remote mountain location, plus all those fresh lines of snow, you see the value in it.
- The program for each day is very relaxed and you’ll have to get into the Argentina culture and go with the flow.
August 2023
We rate Mallin Alto as being one of our top 10 skiing experiences, so it must have been pretty special!
Staying way up in a remote part of the mountains, in unique lodging with beautiful food, phenomenal views, great skiing, and delightful people was truly magnificent and a definite highlight of our ski trip to South America! It was amazing and a special way to disconnect from the world.
Mallin Alto has evolved so much in the 7 years since we last visited. It used to be a wild trip that was high on the adventure spectrum and included a bit of roughing it. Now it still has enough adventure, a little bit of wild, and lots of luxuries thrown in.
Back then, the machine wasn’t too well oiled and the refugio was like glamping. There was one stand-alone dome tent with plastic windows, other guests slept in the mezzanine level above the kitchen, the dining area was tiny, and there was one communal bathroom. Now the handmade lodge has expanded a lot and it’s become rather glam but remained very rustic. It has been a labour of love for Kao and plenty of love has gone into it. The dome tents have large glass windows and are fully integrated with the main building, so they’re not really “tents” anymore and the guest rooms have ensuite bathrooms that have views. The upstairs dining area was somewhat new and the large downstairs dining area and bar were brand new. The views from both were impressive and we have no idea how they got those large windows up there (they didn’t use a helicopter). The food and beverage offerings used to be good and now they’re really impressive. Miguel the chef (who looks just like George Clooney) created masterpieces and entertained the guests with his showmanship, whilst Kao the owner was truly in charge of making sure everyone had a fun time. Overall, the lodging was superb!
Whilst the 4WD drive to get to the snowline was still a bumpy adventure, the on-snow transport has become very comfortable. Rather than sitting on the back of a snowmobile, they now have a UTV with a heater and covered sides.
We’d come from Cerro Catedral where it had been raining and we were worried that the snow at Mallin Alto would be naff considering that both areas are reasonably close and at a similar elevation. However it had been snowing up at Mallin Alto, which apparently is quite common because its location deeper into the mountains provides a bit of a fridge effect. It got colder over the next couple of days and we had a reset each night, mostly from fresh snow plus some wind to provide some extra powder. It wasn’t knee deep powder, but we felt pretty lucky to have lovely boot-deep fresh lines on every run. Most of the terrain consisted of fun open bowls of about 30-35 degrees that usually mellowed out before the snowmobile pick-up.
The guiding was good without being exceptional. Generally the guide +/- the owner on a sled would cut a slope initially, and then on subsequent runs on the same slope the guide would stay at the top and observe from above which seemed appropriate. In addition to slope testing, a snow pit was dug on a couple of occasions. The safety factors were there but they weren't always really obvious to guests.
The snowcat rating doesn’t apply but the snowmobiles were great and an efficient way to get up the hill that provided adrenaline for those that sought it, or the ATV was a comfortable ascent.
On the face of it, the sled skiing may seem a little expensive. However once there we could see the value associated with it, especially considering how special and remote the setting was, and the high staff to guest ratio. The value became more apparent too after staying at Cerro Catedral where a hotel stay with meh accommodation, lift passes, and food prices had sky rocketed. Mallin Alto costs about the equivalent of cat skiing in Canada and is significantly cheaper than heli skiing in South America. It’s pretty special!