Originally Posted by
Drew Wiley
Alan ... I've spent my entire life going into the mountains, and once even lived there. Circumstances vary. Right now, we're experiencing a totally different kind of storm than what just happened back East. It's called a "Pineapple Express", with warm air containing a lot of moisture coming across the Pacific from Hawaii, rather than from Canada or the arctic. Here on the coast it dumps rain, and in the mountains deep snowfall, but with a high water content. It's what skiers contemptuously call "Sierra cement", as opposed to the drier powder snow they prefer. Different kinds of temperature, snow, and humidity conditions can even occur on the fore versus aft sides of the same storm, or on one side of a high range versus another. Avalanche forecasters stake the lives of skiers, road travelers, and trains on forecasting the specific avalanche hazards correctly, their own lives too.
And for those of us who have photographed in different mountain ranges, it takes awhile to read the seasonal personality of each. Being prepared for anything is what is important, including how to reliably keep optics from condensation. In many areas of the West there can be tremendous differences in climate within just a few miles due to great elevation changes. Where I lived, the same road at the top of the pass was 9,000 feet higher than down in the canyon; and the actual mountain summits could be even 4000 ft higher than that. In much of the Southwest, the difference between sheer desert and being up in the aspens might be only a ten mile drive. That's the only kind of air conditioning I knew about growing up. We had dry summer heat, not humid, and it could get up to 115F. Want relief? - drive uphill to high altitude and spend the day there, or maybe the week, and return after dark.
Interiors vary too. Lots of mountain homes use wood fires which create dry air. Gas heat does that too. We don't even need heat today here, despite a large storm being underway. Last week it was a totally different story. Sometime today, I need to check the condition of my desiccant canisters in the lab and darkroom, to make sure they're handling the fluctuating humidity levels correctly. I only use electric heating in that building, which doesn't dry out anything, including the interior air itself.
Even the manner in which houses need to be insulated and duly ventilated differs dramatically with climate itself; what works in one region well might induce dry-rot or termites in another. And here it's all about micro-climates. Ten miles inland, and it's an entirely different climate than here on the foggy coast. Get up in the mountains, or out in the desert, and its something else again.
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