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Journal2024-02-26T14:37:21-05:00

Mount Washington Observatory Observer Blog

Back From Vacation

Back From Vacation 2012-10-24 18:59:16.000 - Rebecca Scholand,  Weather Observer/Education Specialist NULL Well I am back on the summit after my vacation and ready for winter. The past few weeks I have been calling Long Island home where I have been relaxing. Although my definition of relaxing took me through 11 states, a river, numerous beaches, a old live fire military range, and involved every form of transportation I am back and feeling refreshed. I visited with friends and made new ones along the way all while never feeling too far from the Observatory. On one particular instance I was

October 24th, 2012|

My Stay at MWO: A Volunteer’s Perspective

My Stay at MWO: A Volunteer's Perspective 2012-10-23 17:31:49.000 - Brad Chapin,  Summit Volunteer NULL Finishing my 3rd tour of duty as a volunteer on the summit of Mt. Washington with the Observatory, I'm frequently asked, why? Why tolerate the nasty weather, the many fix-it jobs, and the endless meals? Well, when the weather is nice the views are breath taking, the stars at night are flashlight bright....and I love to cook. Besides, what could be more fun than tackling 100mph winds, -20 degrees, all in a white out? It's also a matter of giving back. My brother and I

October 23rd, 2012|

Electrical Work

Electrical Work 2012-10-22 15:29:24.000 - Steve Welsh,  Weather Observer/IT Specialist NULL State Park will be performing essential maintenance work, here at the summit of Mount Washington, starting early tomorrow morning. The work will entail major changes to their electrical sub-system. They have transferred all essential systems over to 'temporary power' including our instrument network, computer servers and radio equipment. All being well there should be no outages affecting the data feed to our website, however, as with any major transition we could experience some downtime, if this occurs please be patient and we'll be back on line as soon as

October 22nd, 2012|

So Long Summer

So Long Summer 2012-10-21 16:43:01.000 - Steve Welsh,  Weather Observer/IT Specialist NULL Well it's that time of year again. After a really busy summer season the Sherman Adams building is now closed to the public. The Auto Road is also closed to the summit, however, they'll be running Snow Coach tours to treeline starting in December. Weather permitting the Cog Railway will be running trains to the summit until conditions prevent them from doing so.Anyone planning on hiking Mount Washington should now be prepared for winter conditions and realize that there are no facilities available to them once they reach

October 21st, 2012|

Work Hard Play Hard

Work Hard Play Hard 2012-10-20 19:35:48.000 - Mike Dorfman,  Summit Intern NULL Here on the summit of Mount Washington, we have a very unique work schedule. With shifts between 6 and 8 people, we work for 8 days straight and then can enjoy 6 days off. Many nine-to-fivers might drool at this schedule, but it is not as incredible as it looks. When we're on the summit, work is nonstop and there is always something to fix, de-ice, digitize, observe or otherwise work on. We take observations once an hour, every hour of the day, every day of the year.

October 20th, 2012|

Thoughts from the Newest Observer

Thoughts from the Newest Observer 2012-10-19 22:06:25.000 - Brian Fitzgerald,  Weather Observer/Education Specialist Sometimes snow angels on the deck are part of work Life and work on top of Mount Washington can be as exhilarating as it is brutal. In the early days of the Observatory, observers would spend two three or four weeks at a time working around the clock to make sure a weather observation was made every hour of the day. In the 1930s observers were essentially unpaid volunteers to boot, but since the Great Depression had hit, staffers felt themselves more than lucky to have room

October 19th, 2012|

Climate Prediction

Climate Prediction 2012-10-18 23:33:35.000 - Mike Carmon,  Weather Observer/Meteorologist Graphics from the CPC Will the upcoming winter be snowy or not? Warmer than average, or colder?Today, the Climate Prediction Center (CPC) released their official predictions for the upcoming winter.As far as New England is concerned, there is a lot of uncertainty with respect to temperature and precipitation. In both areas, there is an equal chance of an above- (warmer/wetter) versus a below- (colder/drier) average winter season. The uncertainty is due to the inability of the CPC to nail down the behavior of El Nino. El Nino conditions (or a lack

October 18th, 2012|

168 Hours on Mt. Washington

168 Hours on Mt. Washington 2012-10-17 22:20:58.000 - Bill Ofsiany,  Summit Volunteer NULL Over the past 50 years of hiking this area, summer and winter, Barbara Althen and I have probably been on the top of Mt. Washington about 30 times. Because it is the halfway point in a day hike, we only spent about an hour on the summit each time, before heading down. That hour was a biased one though, since we picked the day and the weather, be it July or January. This week, we lived up here, and were fortunate enough to be here during the

October 17th, 2012|

Happy 80th!!

Happy 80th!! 2012-10-16 18:26:19.000 - Brian Fitzgerald,  Weather Observer/Education Specialist L to R: McKenzie, Monahan, Pagliuca and Dodge Eighty years ago yesterday, Alex McKenzie, Robert Scott Monahan, Salvatore Pagliuca and Joe Dodge with the help of many supporters took their very first weather observation under a newly formed group of citizen-scientists known as the Mount Washington Observatory. Picking up where the U.S. Signal Service (the precursor to the Weather Bureau) had left off decades earlier, the new observers began settling in for their first winter at the home of the world's worst weather in the cramped quarters of the Auto

October 16th, 2012|

My Final Comment…

My Final Comment... 2012-10-15 18:36:07.000 - Anthony Grimes,  Summit Museum Supervisor Marty, trying to take over my job. Today is one of my last remaining days working in the summit museum. It's hard to believe that the season is coming to an end, but the recent blast of frosty weather that paralyzed the summit was a reminder that winter is just around the corner. It has been awesome getting a chance to live and work at such an extraordinary place. Joining the Observatory crew for the summer has allowed me to meet several amazing people and see some of the

October 15th, 2012|

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