Mt Hermon, Israel, is the world’s least likely ski resort, and possibly one of the most dangerous
ISRAEL has a ski resort? Yes, and it’s not just the icy slopes that’ll wipe you out. Just over the hill lurks a very nasty surprise.
ISRAEL has a ski resort.
Yep, this IS REAL (See what we did there?)
Its name is Mt Hermon and it’s about as far from the north pole as our own Aussie skifields are from the south pole.
It’s also marginally higher than our own Mt Kosciuszko at about 2300m above sea level, so you can see understand why it gets more than the odd flake of snow, especially in winter which is the wet season in Israel’s Mediterranean climate.
All ski resorts are dangerous, we know that. If the rocks and ice and out-of-control beginners don’t get you, the price of the après-ski drinks will.
But Mt Hermon is a little scarier than most ski resorts because the top of the mountain is basically the Syrian border — and the gateway to one of the world’s bloodiest civil wars.
The Israeli-controlled sector of Mt Hermon first became a part of Israel after the Six-Day War in 1967. Syria got it back a few years later in the Yom Kippur war in 1973, then Israel grabbed it back again soon afterwards.
The Israel Defense Forces and the Israel Police patrol the mountain constantly, keeping it safe for the winter throngs, which can number as many as 10,000 on a busy day.
There is even a UN post atop the peak, which is the highest UN post in the world.
For all the threats of violence, Mt Hermon faces a grave threat which many other ski resorts across the world face nowadays — the threat of climate change.
As in Australia, a warming climate has led to a considerably shorter snow season each year. Lifts first turned on Mt Hermon in 1971. The question, for all sorts of reasons, is how long will they keep turning for?