Shoot raw, instead of jpeg, to help with highlight recovery if you do blow the highlights a little. It will also mean you can sort out WB back home. If you want to get WB correct in camera then try a daylight or flash preset, or around 6,000 Kelvin manual setting (for sunny weather), or shoot a custom white balance.
If your lighting conditions are constant (e.g. clear blue skies all day), shoot with manual exposure, using the "Sunny 16" Rule" as a guideline, and modify aperture and shutter speed (and ISO if you need to) to maintain the exposure. e.g. For sunny conditions and 100 ISO you can shoot at....
f/16 and 1/100 (good for landscapes)
f/11 and 1/200 (good for landscapes)
f/8 and 1/400 (good for landscapes and general shots)
f/5.6 and 1/800 (good for sports/action and general shots)
f/4 and 1/1600 (good for sports/action)
By using manual exposure your metering won't be thrown off just because you have more or less sky/snow/forest/rock/skier(s) in the frame. Chimp the histogram to make sure you got it right and then you're all set to take a bunch of photos without worrying about exposure until the lighting changes.
Here are a couple of examples taken with a manual exposure setting based on the sunny 16 rule as a starting point, then widening the aperture and speeding the shutter to compensate and making final adjustment after a quick chimp of the histogram from a test shot....
I took over 200 shots of jumping skiers/boarders and didn't have to change the exposure at all or even give it a thought during half an hour of shooting. Once it was set correctly it was good for the next hour at least.