Winter in the high Rockies finally gets plowed

From the International Herald Tribune, a reminder of just what a significant winter we’ve had.

“So much snow still remains that the Park Service had to move the 75th-anniversary celebration of the highway, held last Friday, off the pass to lower elevations.”

From the EU Referendum:

The Going-to-the-Sun Road, which connects the two sides of Glacier National Park in the Northern Rockies, is usually open by the first week of June. But huge amounts of snow still blanket the high country, in part because of record snowfalls in Montana this year. Now, the opening was delayed to today, the latest on record by a day, except for World War II, when the road was not plowed at all.

Crews have been working on the Big Drift near the top of the road. At 70 feet deep, the drift was the plougher’s biggest obstacle. It was also next to a cliff, making snow even more challenging to remove. A storm in mid-June dumped three to four feet of snow in the mountains.

It’s not all bad news though – the farmers get more water – but the tourist industry is not having a good time of it. In Yellowstone National Park, some backcountry areas are blocked by snow and some rivers are high and muddy. “Our ongoing challenge is backcountry access,” said Al Nash, a park spokesman. “We have high flowing water, mud and, in shady areas, snow. It just isn’t accessible right now. It could easily be another month before we have access.”

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Don B
July 3, 2008 5:34 pm

A Montanan, (21:18) I already posted this on a later thread, but on page 19 of your referenced study of Glacier National Park is shown that the bulk of Sperry Glacier’s post-LIA shrinkage happened by 1945. No typo, 1945.