Very nice series!
The highway shot really puts the size of the mountain into perspective.
So is the snow a leftover from the winter months or does it also snow up there in summer (it looks pretty high up so I imagine it would be freezing cold year round)?
Thanks. Most of the snow is from the autumn, winter and spring months. Being that the top of the mountain is over 14,000 feet high, it can snow year round (from what I read), but that would not happen very much in the summer.
I had the privilege of climbing Mt. Shasta once. We camped out on a glacier at the top, and I was fortunate to experience the thrill of seeing a full moon from 14,000 feet up.
Great shots! I didn't even know the story of Rudolf, even though I'm from Austria. 😅 Read up a little bit on him. Unfortunately it all sounds very plausible... 😢 Oh, what a wonderful and at the same time deeply embarassing country Austria is...
Those pictures do make me want to go back to the Alps (austria) or the Canadian Rockies, do miss the mountains, could it be because I'm a Capricorn (Astrological sign)
And some nice almost close ups with that black bird 😉
Is it not so, that, as in Austria and Switzerland, etc, where there are also snow capped mountains, the amount of snow on Mt. Shasta is diminishing every year at present?
@davidwien I'm I right with thinking the Wien region has not those hight mountains like in Ötztal (With the Wildspitze on top)
But seems even with lower mountains a nice region to visit one day!
About the 150-600: it has seen many places (Canada, Iceland, Scotland, Austria) and has been used a lot, I'm not sad it served me well 😁 (thinking about the 60-600 as a replacement)
Wien is in the Donau valley with the land rising to the west. To the east (Burgenland, towards Hungary and Slovakia) is pretty flat. There is Kahlenberg (a mere 484 m) just north of the city and Schneeberg (2000 m) about 80km to the south of Wien; but the real mountains are some way further south and west from Wien.
There is an interesting downloadable pdf file with more about the Heiligenkreuz sundial than you probably want to know. The design is highly symbolic. At 7 metres tall the gnomon is even larger than I estimated. Although the surface looks like glass, it is actually highly polished steel. I must return when the sun shines again!
On Mt. Shasta the amount of snow increased this year and the surrounding lakes are full again. We did have a terrible drought in that region. It's possible that the mountain glaciers are diminishing overall...not sure about that...might be a part of global warming.