A winter weekend: 72 hours in the Snowy Mountains with kids
Children enjoying a fun day in the snow at Thredbo
Destination NSW
Macenmist Black Truffles and Wines is located at
Plan on arriving in Bredbo, just north of Cooma, by 10.30am so the kids can meet SongLu and Tawdiffu, the pair of adorable dog mascots that race around the grounds of Macenmist Black Truffles and Wines. The winter months are prime season for black Périgords, and the estate’s sharp-nosed pooches will help you hunt them out where they grow, at the base of oak trees. After the kids have proudly dug up a few nuggets of the prized, aromatic fungus, sit down with your hosts to enjoy a three-course lunch laden with your unearthed treasures.
Continue onto Cooma for a reviving caramel milkshake or Snowy Mountains Coffee at Kettle & Seed, which also sells fluffy warm doughnuts to take away (if you can fit anything else in).
Once you’re sufficiently refuelled, set out on the Kosciuszko Alpine Way with your GPS set for Jindabyne, the gateway to the high country’s major ski fields of Perisher, Thredbo and Charlotte Pass.
The first stop in town is to pick up supplies at The Market, a cafe and provedore selling hyper-local produce like Margaret’s Kitchen jams and pickles, Market Made protein balls and Avonside Alpine Estate eggs. Starting tomorrow morning, you can collect the latter yourself – Avonside is your base for the next two nights.
This postcard-perfect working farm nurtures 400 chickens, wide-eyed Highland cattle and Southdown baby doll sheep, which big and small members of the family can meet while you explore the orchard and veggie gardens. The two- and three-bedroom guest cabins here are completely off-grid (renewably powered) and self-contained, with Scandi-chic furnishings and outdoor firepits for marshmallow roasting.
Channel the European Alps at Bacco Italian Restaurant, a long-time Jindabyne favourite in a wood-panelled dining room reminiscent of a chalet. The kitchen prepares the kind of food you crave after a long day inhaling fresh alpine air – think spaghetti tutto mare with Moreton Bay bug, king prawns and squid; or pizza topped with grilled Vienna sausage and mushrooms – perfect for the kids!
Birchwood Cafe is located at
Jindabyne’s Birchwood Cafe takes its coffee seriously. While you sip an Axis Roasters blend with a Nourish Bowl, make sure to order hot chocolate, pancakes and grilled Vegemite and cheese on toast for the kids – they’ll need the fuel for their big day on the slopes. Check-in at 8.30am for a few hours of snowshoeing through backcountry with K7 Adventures, whose guides offer an off-piste taste of Thredbo along the Ramshead Ramble route, and of Perisher along Porcupine Rocks.
Take your pick of the region’s snow resorts for an afternoon of skiing and boarding. Thredbo’s 50-plus runs include the longest in the country, not to mention terrain parks and Australia’s only mountain gondola – a scenic ride for both skiers and non-skiers, replete with Merritts Mountain House at the top for a hearty late lunch (and cheeky glass of wine).
Perisher and its surrounding snowfields, meanwhile, comprise the largest alpine resort in the Southern Hemisphere, with runs for all experience levels across 1,245 hectares. This expanse also includes five terrain parks, half-pipes, cross-country trails, and fields for tobogganing and tubing on the designated slope beside Perisher Valley Car Park on Pipers Ridge.
And finally, there’s Charlotte Pass, only accessible via over-snow transport from Perisher. The exclusive entrance means that when you arrive, you’ll largely have Australia’s highest snow resort to yourself.
Pull off your boots in time to warm up at Wildbrumby Distillery, the glühwein or baked apple schnapps the only tonic you need to gain a rosy glow. Let the kids loose in the sculpture garden before you drive on to Jindabyne Brewing for hot chips and a Kiandra Golden Ale, brewed using hops grown on the southern side of the range.
In a valley between Jindabyne and Thredbo, Crackenback Farm also comes with a guesthouse. But you don’t have to be checked in to enjoy a paddock-to-plate meal in the restaurant. Book a table by the open fire, and order generous plates of French farmhouse-style fare, whether twice-baked cheese souffle or oxtail pie with red wine jus. The kids will love the hot chocolate mousse for dessert.
Jindabyne Yoga Shala is located at
Leave the kids with dad and stretch snow-weary limbs in a hatha class at Jindabyne Yoga Shala, before grabbing coffees, hot chocolates and cinnamon doughnuts to take away from Nimmitabel Bakery, the aroma of freshly baked pies and sourdough warming the room.
Check out of Avonside, and drive north to Yarrangobilly Caves, a necklace of astonishing limestone stalactites and stalagmites hundreds of thousands of years old. Take the three-kilometre Yarrangobilly River trail loop to reach a natural thermal pool that’s 27°C year round – perfect for a quick dip, even when surrounded by snow, before continuing your journey back to Sydney.
The Snowy Mountains region is closer to Canberra than to Sydney, but nonetheless, the scenic four-hour drive south from the NSW capital can be part of the adventure. Your epic road trip takes you through the mist-draped villages of the Southern Highlands, skirting Lake George and passing Canberra before arriving in Cooma, the largest town in the Snowy Mountains. This is the start of the legendary Kosciuszko Alpine Way, a 170km route carving through the range toward Khancoban, with Australia’s loftiest peak (Mount Kosciuszko) as your backdrop.
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