Winter

I think often people think the only way to be warm is with artificial heat

I think often people think the only way to be warm is with artificial heat. But actually I prefer to sleep without heat – only my own body heat under the covers.

I never heat or insulate my truck cap – I’ve camped down to about ten degrees. Likewise when I winter tent – including during the coldest time of the year, Martin Luther King Day in the Adirondacks , I only use the heater before bed and when I awake in the morning, not while I’m sleeping.

The key is insulation and blocking drafts. Now they sell fancy below zero sleeping bags but they are unnecessary if you have enough layers. I use multiple, old sleeping bags. Many are ripped and old. I haul them back in the woods on a plastic sled in garbage bags. I wear long johns, wool socks and several layers of clothes to bed. They sell fancy winter tents and maybe they’re good for heavy snow expected to fall but unnecessary for ordinary a few inches of snow. Remember body heat will tend to melt a lot of snow from the roof of a tent. My winter tent is just an ordinary Kmart end of season special I got for $30 about a decade and a half old.

Staying warm in the woods is actually quite simple. Wear multiple insulating layers. Block drafts from your body. Stay dry or if you get wet quickly change into dry clothes. Wool stays drier then cotton. Use a heavy duty tarp for a ground cloth. Exposure to wind is much quicker to cool then exposure to cold – wind pull heat from the body. Focus most importantly on  insulating your toes and fingers first – they’ll get cold first. Hand lotion is essential – you’ll have cracked and bloody hands otherwise. Doesn’t have to be expensive girly stuff, just the big bottle from Wally World I’ve used for decades. 

You don’t need much if any heat to be warm except for your body, although I will be the first to admit being able to warm my hands and legs on the Big Buddy Heater first thing in the morning when I get up is nice – and makes winter camping all the more bearable.

Shorter Days, the Farther You Go North

Today is the first day of winter …

Staten Island, NY has the longest daylight in New York today, 9 hours, 16 minutes and 17 seconds.

Length of Day: 9 hours, 16 minutes and 17 seconds
Sunrise: 7:17 am
Sunset: 4:33 pm
Transit of the Sun: 11:55 am
Dawn: 6:46 am
Dusk:Β  5:04 pm
Nautical Twilight Begins: 06:11 am
Nautical Twilight Ends: 05:38 pm
Astronomic Twilight Begins: 05:38 am
Astronomic Twilight Ends: 06:11 pm

Massena, NY has the shortest daylight, 8 hours, 46 minutes and 25 seconds.

Length of Day: 8 hours, 46 minutes and 25 seconds
Sunrise: 7:34 am
Sunset: 4:21 pm
Transit of the Sun: 11:58 am
Dawn: 7:01 am
Dusk: 4:54 pm
Nautical Twilight Begins: 6:23 am
Nautical Twilight Ends: 5:32 pm
Astronomic Twilight Begins: 5:48 am
Astronomic Twilight Ends: 6:07 pm

Remembering the Ice Storm ’08

Notes on the Re-Run for Tuesday, December 6th.

— Andy

Throughout Friday, freezing rain, sleet, and snow came down, covering the State Capitol and surrounding building with a layer of ice.

Snow Capitol

The ice weighted down trees and made everything look “wet”, but it did not pile up all fluffy like we think of snow being.

Snow Across Hudson

Here are the Heldeberg Mountains covered with ice and beauty.

Heldebergs in Ice

The next morning walking through the woods, covered with ice and beauty at Cole Hill State Forest.

Ice Beauty

The swamp at Cole Hill was just shimmering in light.

Ice Swamp

While driving the pickup for a while got the ice melted off the doors, it kept freezing shut, and I had to keep cracking the ice off the doors.

Pickup with Ice

Ice on a Pine Tree at Thatcher Park.

 Ice Pine

Branches covered with ice where so pretty.

Ice Limbs

Even when it was on the power lines and knocked out power to thousands.

Ice on Power Lines

The Ice Storm of 2008 was so beautiful, even if it did knock out power and close down roads.

I was so chilled through at home I took a long time to get out and hiking today

I was so chilled through at home I took a long time to get out and hiking today. 😨

I should have turned up the heat this morning, I make good money but I got my first winter heating bill yesterday and I wasn’t prepared to spend much more money.

I am not ready for winter. Maybe if I had a small cabin and a wood stove for heat I’d feel different about the winter. But with no real snow fall this winter yet and relatively mild weather predicted I just find it hard to accept its already winter.

It supposedly is around 50 degrees outside but it feels much colder on the Dickinson Hill Fire Tower. It probably is. But I like the views and looking out at the rural countryside at the farms, the forests and the mountains. The not pretty land but the rough and cold land that waits for spring time to come. 

Snow Depth – Sunday December 12

Last night’s rain along with warmer temperatures have really put a damper on the snow outside of the highest peaks in the Green Mountains and Western Adirondacks. β›„ And it doesn’t look much new snow is on the way.