Slavske contains several slopes, not connected to each other.
The easiest and most popular slope is called Politex. Its just outside the village, past the Perlyna Karpat hotel. Two drag lifts. There can be long queues at the lifts – 20 minute wait at weekend afternoons is common, partly because groups let their friends in front of them at the queue, so even if the lift is moving the back of the line is stationary. Last year they charged UAH 4 for the small lift and UAH 6 for the larger, per ride. The lifts also frequently break down, stop and re-start a few minutes later. There’s also an army of jeeps at the bottom of the slope who will drive you up for UAH 10. About 6 people fit in one jeep.
Nearer the middle of town is Pohan, this has few queues but is also rather boring, just a single sope down.
Varshava is out past Politex, no lifts, you have to get a jeep.
Trostyan is the highest mountain, usually the best snow. Accessible from the centre by jeep or flat bed truck that takes you to the bottom of a long chair lift. There’s a choice of several slopes, all with drag lifts. Same system of paying per ride as at Politex and same sort of prices. Trostyan is where the UA national team used to train, not sure if they still do. Some of the slopes are very challenging and its not for beginners.
Zahar Berkut is a newer resort about 5km from Slavske on the road to Volosyanka. Its an integrated development, unlike other slopes where a different family operates each lift, and there’s a system of day passes. Costs UAH 100 workdays, UAH 150 at weekends. Queues can be bad later in the afternoon (there’s a bottleneck at a koliba half way up where several slopes converge with only one way out).
Any more questions, feel free to post. I’ve been visiting Slavske for several years now so I got to know it well. Most of the other foreigners I meet are people who saw my posts on TT!