Elisa, ENTS.

Very beautiful! That first one reminds me of one I took in Paris Woods
outside of Dana NC two winters ago. If anyone wants to see it I will
upload it to the file page for viewing.

I do wonder how those ice crystals formed that way.

James P.

On Dec 26, 4:55 pm, Elisa Campbell <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Christmas morning I hiked up part of the Mt Holyoke Range in the
> middle portion of the Connecticut River valley of Massachusetts. The
> weather was foggy - as I approached the range, I couldn't see any
> mountains at all.
>
> Apparently during the night the air was both humid and warmer than the
> trees - creating the most amazing ice show I've ever seen. I don't have
> a GPS, but based on the maps, it was between about 450 feet above sea
> level and the ridge (about 700 feet - these are small "mountains"!) in
> the places where the sun had not had any effect.
>
> It wasn't like when we get freezing rain and it looks as if the twigs
> have been encased in glass; instead, there were millions of little ice
> crystals attached to things like spikes, thorns, or needles; some were
> attached to each other, forming a dangling chain like a Christmas tree
> decoration (harder to photograph with my little pocket camera). Beech
> branches looked as if they had sprouted a multitude of protective spiky
> thorns.
>
> Here are some of the photos I got. I hope you enjoy them. (and if you
> have any comments on how it happened, I'd be delighted to hear them!)
>
> woods3_hemlock1-v-e.jpg - the overall look of the woods
>
> beech-leaf-close2A-e.jpg - some of the beech leaves that caught our eyes
>
> beech-leaf-close1crop-h-3.jpg -- closeup of some beech leaves
>
> beech leaf-close1-v-3.jpg - more closeups of beech leaves
>
> beech-leaves1crop-h-e.jpg - a bunch of leaves and the trunk (if you look
> closely, you may see a free-dangling "string" of ice crystals near the
> trunk)
>
> This morning, all the crystals were off the trees, but some were still
> visible on the ground, rocks and leaves where the sun had not hit them
> On the ground, they look more like very small grains of rice.
>
>  woods3+hemlock1-v-e.jpg
> 237KViewDownload
>
>  beech-leaf-close2A-e.jpg
> 155KViewDownload
>
>  beech&leaf-close1crop-h-e.jpg
> 127KViewDownload
>
>  beechleaf-close1-v-e.jpg
> 153KViewDownload
>
>  beech-leaves1crop-h-e.jpg
> 123KViewDownload
>
>  beechleaf2-ice-close-e.jpg
> 181KViewDownload

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