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May 2006

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NULL 2006-05-24 14:35:00.000 - Christy Schultz,  Summit Intern With a week off the summit at a time, it is quite easy to forget that Mount Washington’s weather is completely different

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NULL 2006-05-23 10:13:56.000 - Cindy Terry,  Summit Volunteer Snowshoes in May!!! What a wonderful way to wake up in the morning! We are seeing intermittent sunshine! My stay here, sadly,

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NULL 2006-05-23 09:04:36.000 - The Summit Crew,  Mount Washington Observatory A full comment is to follow this morning, but here are some pictures taken while wandering the summit briefly this

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NULL 2006-05-22 10:12:50.000 - Walter Sessions,  Summit Intern Back to winter... "I miss warm." opines Jim as more snow piles onto Mount Washington's summit. Over the past 18 hours another

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NULL 2006-05-21 07:26:14.000 - Jim Salge,  Observer Heavy glaze icing...with a twist! Ice and snow continued to pile up yesterday afternoon and through the night last night. Glaze ice now

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NULL 2006-05-20 07:53:23.000 - Jim Salge,  Observer Suprise snowstorm... A big sloppy mess! That's the only way that the ground conditions on the summit can be described this morning after

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NULL 2006-05-19 11:49:09.000 - Jim Salge,  Observer A spring landscape...a dwindling snowpack! In a brief break in the incessant clouds yesterday, we were able to scan the landscape, and specifically

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NULL 2006-05-18 07:54:13.000 - Jim Salge,  Observer Radar estimates from the last storm More rain (and a little wet snow) continues to impact the peak this morning. In the last

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NULL 2006-05-16 13:36:28.000 - Christy Schultz,  Summit Intern One of the side effects of inclement weather at the summit of Mount Washington is difficulty with technology. With the odd weather

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NULL 2006-05-14 14:46:49.000 - Neil Lareau,  Observer Contrast Fleeting glimpses of the sun, mostly seen as a diffuse disk through thinning cloud, has broken the monotony of four days of

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