Russia · up to 253 m

Парковая гора

Ski among the snow monsters, then soak in thousand-year-old sulfur springs.

3

Bonvo Score

4
Marked runs
0 named
2.5 km
Total slopes
1
Lifts
177 m
Vertical drop
253 m
Top elevation
76 m
Base elevation
Blue 2.5 km

The story of Zao Onsen

Zao Onsen offers something no other ski resort on Earth quite matches: in deep winter, the fir trees along its upper mountain vanish beneath layer after layer of rime ice and wind-driven snow until they become juhyō — 'snow monsters' — a summit forest of hulking white figures that you ski between, and that glow under coloured floodlights at night. The phenomenon peaks in February and draws visitors from around the world.

The village below is one of Japan's oldest hot-spring settlements, its discovery dated by tradition to the second century AD. Steam rises between ryokan roofs, the streets smell faintly of sulfur, and the milky, strongly acidic waters of its public baths have been easing muscles for centuries — the perfect counterpart to a cold Tōhoku ski day.

The skiing itself is old-school Japan: a sprawling web of ropeways and courses down the flank of the Zao range, long meandering descents (the top-to-bottom stretches close to 9 km), and a pace that favours atmosphere over adrenaline. You come to Zao for the monsters, the baths and the feeling of skiing inside a woodblock print.

Great for scenery loversGreat for onsen fansGreat for relaxed cruisersGreat for photographers

Signature runs

Juhyōgen Course

The 'snow monster field' — a gentle course threading directly through the rime-ice figures at the summit.

Zangezaka to the village

The long top-to-bottom journey, nearly 9 km winding from the monsters back to steaming onsen rooftops.

Omori course

Quiet, rolling cruising on the resort's flank — the locals' choice for uncrowded laps.

Local tips

  • Visit in February for peak snow monsters; ride the ropeway at dusk for the illuminations even if you're done skiing.
  • The public sulfur baths are strong stuff — remove silver jewellery unless you want it blackened.
  • Zao's lifts are a patchwork of generations; study the map or you'll spend the day on connector tracks.
  • Try the local konnyaku balls and Yamagata beef after skiing — Tōhoku's food quietly outclasses its fame.

Did you know?

Zao's snow monsters form when supercooled water droplets freeze onto Maries firs, building metre-thick ice armour.
The onsen village is said to have been founded in AD 110, making it one of Japan's oldest hot-spring resorts.
At night the monsters are illuminated in shifting colours — skiing among them feels like another planet.

Lifts at Парковая гора

1× drag lift
LiftTypeLengthRiseSeatsRide time

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