Alpine flying is spectacular but demands specific knowledge and skills not covered in standard PPL training. Key challenges: rapidly changing mountain weather (Föhn winds, valley fog, thunderstorms), reduced aircraft performance at high altitude (density altitude effects on climb rate and engine power), turbulence and downdrafts near ridges and in valleys, navigation in mountainous terrain with limited emergency landing options, and airspace complexity (restricted military areas, national park zones). A mountain flying course (6-10 hours, EUR2,000-4,000) is highly recommended before flying in the Alps even if not legally required in your country. Never fly into a valley you can't turn around in, and always maintain terrain clearance margins well above minimums.
Airspace infringements (busting controlled airspace without clearance) are one of the most common GA incidents in Europe and are taken very seriously by aviation authorities. If you realise you've infringed: immediately turn away from the controlled airspace, contact ATC on the frequency for that area, squawk 7700 if you're in a dangerous situation, and be honest when you explain. Consequences range from a warning letter to mandatory retraining, fines, or licence suspension depending on severity and your national authority. Prevention: use a GPS/moving map with airspace alerts (SkyDemon), plan your route carefully avoiding controlled airspace with adequate margins, and always be aware of your position. Honest reporting and contrition generally result in more lenient treatment.
Island flying adds the over-water consideration. For flights over water beyond gliding distance from shore: carry life jackets for all occupants (legally required in many European countries), consider a life raft for longer overwater sectors, file a VFR flight plan (activates SAR if needed), and ensure your ELT is serviceable. Practically: plan fuel carefully with adequate reserves, check destination weather including sea fog and crosswinds (island airfields often have challenging wind conditions), be aware of slot requirements and PPR (Prior Permission Required) for popular island airfields, and check customs/immigration requirements if crossing national borders. Popular European island flights include Texel (EHTX, Netherlands), the Channel Islands (Jersey/Guernsey), and Greek island-hopping.