A great last week atop the rockpile!
2014-11-02 20:29:00.000 – Christine Welsh, Summit Museum Attendant
My boyfriend called me a weather geek. He was teasing because he knows how happy I am to say, I’m back! I just could not stay away. The MWObs living quarters are undergoing a much needed remodel and the kitchen was short a cook, so guess who’s wearing her best Gortex chef’s hat this week? Your friendly museum attendant, that’s who, and what a fun week it has been!
Between having a ball in the kitchen creating yummy meals for the masses, aliens from outer space dropping in on Halloween, and the upcoming Wilderness First Aid training, I don’t know how I could be more excited, but I am! My boyfriend is right. I have become a weather nerd! I feel I need to invest in my very own anemometer. I hear the wind roaring in the exhaust hood over the kitchen stove and it is just too much. I cannot sit inside and listen any longer; I must go out and play.
I bundle up. I wear my hat AND my mittens.I step outside and think, ohhh this is nice! This is living! I take a step away from the building and feel the push of the wind. I push back. I know that the building is sheltering me from the direct force of it, so I remove my fogged up glasses, cover my eyes with my neck gaiter, and walk confidently around the corner. I walk, I feel myself wobble, I stagger. That gust, it turns out, was around 96 miles per hour.
It reached 99.2 mph just after I came back inside and is showing no signs of slowing down. I am rooting for a new record, 232 mph, but I’ll settle for sustained over one hundred. I am so ready for this. Although I may need more practice actually staying upright against the force of such a strong wind, I am booted and suited and ready for The Big One. Oh, and MWObs, if you ever need a chef again!
Christine Welsh, Summit Museum Attendant
Highlights from the Observatory’s 2025 Annual Meeting
Highlights from the Observatory's 2025 Annual Meeting By Drew Bush, Executive Director Every year, we gather for Mount Washington Observatory’s Annual Meeting. This year, the event saw record attendance, with more than 70 of
Meet MWOBS’ 2025 Seek the Peak Teams
Meet MWOBS' 2025 Seek the Peak Teams By MWOBS Staff Another year, another epic Seek the Peak. To celebrate our 25th Anniversary year, the staff at Mount Washington Observatory have created their own fundraising
Full Circle on the Summit
Full Circle on the Summit By Peter Edwards Growing up in New England as a weather enthusiast, I always viewed the Mount Washington Observatory as a mythical place of meteorological extremes that inspired endless