[at-l] a wee bit a' history

David Addleton dfaddleton at gmail.com
Tue Feb 27 19:24:55 CST 2007


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070227/ap_on_re_us/extreme_weather_workplace;_ylt=AgkhF9pG4vix6G0CSlioWEHMWM0F

 The wind is wild on N.H. mountaintop

By BEVERLEY WANG, Associated Press Writer *Tue Feb 27, 5:09 PM ET*

MOUNT WASHINGTON, N.H. - It's a curious fact to know about yourself — how
much wind you can withstand before you get knocked off your feet.But it's
information that can save your life if your office is the weather station at
the top of Mount Washington, where hurricane-force winds blow more than 100
days a year, and where the wind has been clocked at a world-record 231 mph.

Meteorologist Ryan Knapp's limit has been calculated at 112 mph, based in
part on his body size. And he knows what can happen when he exceeds it: In
October, he was walking alone around midnight outside the Mount Washington
Observatory when the wind flattened him and the precipitation measurement
container he was carrying went flying.

He was able to grab the container and finish the job. Back inside 15 minutes
later, Knapp watched the instruments surge as the wind kicked up to 158 mph,
or 23 mph faster than Hurricane Katrina when it came ashore.

"If I had been out there during that, I probably would not have been making
it back to the building," said Knapp, one of four weather observers who live
and work at the observatory on the Northeast's highest mountain.

At 6,288 feet, Mount Washington is only one-third the size of Mount
McKinley, North America's highest peak. But Mount Washington sticks up like
a big toe at a point where storms from the north, south and west collide. As
a result, it has some of the most ferocious weather on Earth, with snow and
ice even in the summer.

Observers began recording the weather there 137 years ago, when the U.S.
Signal Service, the military precursor to the      National Weather
Service<http://search.news.yahoo.com/search/news/?p=National+Weather+Service>,
set up shop at the peak, long before winter woolens gave way to Gore-Tex.
The building where the men worked still stands, with thick chains buckling
it to the mountain rock.

Nicholas Howe wrote about one storm in January 1877 in the book "Not Without
Peril." Winds of 150 mph knocked out windows and lifted a carpet a foot off
the floor. Fearful of being swept away, the men "wrapped themselves in
blankets and quilts secured with ropes and then they tied on iron crowbars
lengthwise as further strengthening against the long fall that seemed
inevitable."

The Signal Service's tenure on the peak ended in 1892. Forty years later,
volunteers revived the observatory, setting up quarters in an old stage
coach building. In April 1934, observers working there clocked the wind at
231 mph, the world's highest recorded wind speed along the ground.

The nonprofit observatory is the heir to that project. They young staff
members are paid little and work 12-hour shifts, seven days a week,
performing hourly outdoor observations and maintaining equipment.

They also issue hiking forecasts describing conditions in the Presidential
mountain range, where the rapidly changing weather has claimed 139 lives
since 1849, many from the cold even in summer. Two observers died during the
Signal Service operation; but no one working for the current operation has
been killed or seriously hurt.

The staff members live in relative luxury, in part of a 1980s state-owned
building made of reinforced concrete and steel, with 2-foot-thick walls and
triple-layer windows four inches thick. Their lair beneath the observatory
work room is cozy, with the communal air of a college dormitory suite.
Living room shelves hold meteorology textbooks and movies; the pantry is
well-stocked and a cat named Nin keeps them company.

"The job description isn't just being a good meteorologist or being good at
computers. You have to have passion for experiencing the weather and a real
ability to experience the weather," said observer Jim Salge, 25.

The observers get free food, long vacations, every other week off, and when
conditions are right, the longest ski run in the Northeast at their feet.
They also are minor media stars. Their daily radio forecasts, broadcast in
New Hampshire and Maine, are known for their quirky, monotone delivery.

"I love the excitement of a snowstorm; the anticipation of world soon
transformed to cushioned white," observer Neil Lareau wrote in a Jan. 16
blog entry. "I love the dampened sound in a forest when it snows, the slow
hiss of steady snow piling up, the smell in the air the hour before the snow
starts, the leaden grey of the nimbostratus. All of it, I love it, I live
for it."

Weather junkies who want to get beaten up by the wind can pay a $45
membership fee, plus $459 for lectures, hikes and a bunk for one night at
the observatory. Members can also visit free in return for a week's worth of
cooking, cleaning or maintenance work. But there is a waiting list.

Volunteer John Lind of Huntington, N.Y., spent a week in January, building
office cabinets. "It's like being on a ship at sea," he said. "When you
crack 100, the building vibrates and the hair kind of stands on the back of
your head."

That was when Lind headed outside to the observation deck.

"You get blown around out there," he said. "You don't get to feel that at
home."

___

On the Net:

Observatory: http://www.mountwashington.org<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/ap/ap_on_re_us/storytext/extreme_weather_workplace/22088251/SIG=11042e2ja/*http://www.mountwashington.org>


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