SpencerVT
Member
We received 3-4 inches of snow near where I live in Southern Vermont on Mother's Day Weekend.
It got me thinking: If Mount Washington was 1000' taller, would it be permanently glaciated or permanent ice/snow in some capacity? Sometimes when I drive past Washington on Route 302 late in the Spring and see it all encased in snow it is hard to imagine it ever not being winter up there (although obviously summer conditions eventually arrive).
I know year-round ice/snow is more than just a function of elevation, but it has always seemed to me that Mount Washington is really close to having permanent year-round glacier/snow/ice.
It got me thinking: If Mount Washington was 1000' taller, would it be permanently glaciated or permanent ice/snow in some capacity? Sometimes when I drive past Washington on Route 302 late in the Spring and see it all encased in snow it is hard to imagine it ever not being winter up there (although obviously summer conditions eventually arrive).
I know year-round ice/snow is more than just a function of elevation, but it has always seemed to me that Mount Washington is really close to having permanent year-round glacier/snow/ice.