Like in normal life, weather decides most things in the mountains. It influences whether a climb is reasonable, whether the snow has significant instabilities, and whether a day feels straightforward or like a constant problem needing to be managed.
I’ve dealt with adverse weather on Mount Shasta, in the Cascades, on expeditions, and many other places. The forecast might look calm from home, then at the trailhead, feels completely different. That gap between forecast and reality is where most of the decision-making lives when undertaking a climb, ski, or expedition.
You do not need a background in meteorology to understand mountain weather. You just need to focus on a few parts that matter in the field.
Why mountain weather behaves differently
Weather at home, or in valleys is usually described in simple terms.
Clear, cloudy, rain, snow.
In the mountains, those descriptions can break down quickly though. Conditions stack on top of each other by elevation. It is not uncommon to start a climb in mild temperatures, then move through mixed precipitation, just to finish in wind and blowing snow at the summit.
On Mount Shasta we’ve seen days where the Bunny Flat, or another trailhead area felt like spring/summer hiking conditions. A few hours later near camp it felt like mid-winter. Then, while leaving camp for the summit we might have strong wind and low visibility, but end up on the summit with clear and calm conditions. It is strange to think about, but both conditions can exist on a mountain at the same time. Any combination of these conditions can show up on a single trip too!
That is normal, and an indication of how terrain and elevation can dictate weather behavior.
Freezing level matters more than ground temperature
In my opinion, one of the most useful things to track in a mountain forecast is the freezing level. It tells you the elevation where rain generally changes to snow if precipitation is expected. That matters more to me than the temperature at the trailhead because most climbs cover a large vertical range. Freezing level provides me a good idea of what climbing conditions on the ground might be like too.
A rising freezing level usually indicates:
- Snow turning heavier and wetter
- Less stable surface conditions
- Faster changes during the day
A falling freezing level usually means:
- Firming snow surfaces (think “no-fall” conditions)
- More predictable travel early in the day
- Potential for icy conditions later
On paper it sounds technical. In practice it is one of the best tools for understanding what you will be moving through.
Wind is the most underestimated factor
Wind does more than just make things uncomfortable. It changes how the mountain might behave, and if you’re like me, it changes your attitude after a while.
Wind moves snow from one slope to another. It loads it onto leeward aspects (away from the wind). While at the same time, it strips snow off ridges leaving exposed ice. It also increases body heat loss faster than most people would expect.
Even when the temperature is reasonable, wind at elevation can turn a climb into a slow and draining effort. I have personally turned groups around on routes where everything looked reasonable in the forecast, but wind conditions higher on the mountain made movement inefficient and exposure higher than I was comfortable with.
If wind is strong at the elevations of your route, expect conditions to feel more challenging than anything you saw from town. Wind can quickly change a route with little hazard into one that turns into an “epic” in the making.
It’s all about timing
Mountain weather is rarely static throughout the day. It changes minute by minute, but often in predictable patterns.
A common pattern looks like this:
- Cold and firm early in the morning
- Good travel window for a few hours
- Softening snow as the day warms up
- Increasing rockfall and snow instabilities as temps rise
- Increased trend for weather activity later in the day
Most guided climbs are built around that structure. Early starts are not about tradition (I still like sleep). They are about moving through the best conditions before the surface changes or overhead hazards soften and begin to fall.
On Shasta especially, the difference between leaving early and leaving late can be the difference between efficient travel on firm snow or constant post-holing. This alone can affect your ability to summit and descend within the weather window.
The freeze and thaw cycle shapes spring climbing
Spring and early summer climbing in the Cascades and Sierra follows a daily rhythm. At night the surface generally freezes, making the following morning firm and supportive. As the sun climbs during the day, the surface softens and becomes more reactive.
That cycle drives everything from travel speed to the amount of instability in the snowpack. If you have ever been in snow that felt solid in the morning and exhausting by early afternoon, you have experienced this firsthand. Understanding how and why those changes occur helps explain why guided groups tend to move early and finish earlier than most people expect.
Weather and avalanche conditions are connected
Snow stability is directly tied to weather, wind, temperature swings, and precipitation type. Without getting too deep into snow science, all of these factors influence avalanche hazard.
Wind can form slabs on specific slopes while stripping away snow on others. Warm storms can rapidly create heavy, unstable layers in the snowpack. Rapid warming can lead to wet loose avalanches. Rain on snow can destabilize a wide range of terrain quickly. These are not abstract ideas. They are patterns that show up regularly in the field, and they deserve attention.
This is also where education matters. It is important to understand there are few simple “if this, then that” situations in snow science. If you plan to climb mountains, or recreate on snow, taking a course from an American Avalanche Association recognized provider is strongly recommended.
At SWS Mountain Guides we offer:
- Recreational Avalanche Level 1
- Recreational Avalanche Level 2
- Avalanche Rescue
- Professional Level 1 in partnership with the American Avalanche Institute (co-taught by myself)
The focus on these courses is not memorizing theory. It is learning how weather, snow, and terrain interact with one another, and how that interaction influences both stability and decision making.
A simple framework that works in the field
Most mountain weather decisions can be reduced to a few core questions:
- Wind. What is it doing at elevation.
- Temperature. Where is the freezing level sitting.
- Time. When is the best window opening and closing.
- Snow. Where is it, and what are my concerns with it.
Everything else in a forecast supports those four pieces.
Final thoughts
Some of the best and worst days I have had in the mountains looked similar at the start.
What separated them was understanding what the weather was going to become, not just what it was at the moment of checking the forecast. Mountains are not static environments. They shift through the day as well as through elevation. Learning to read them and anticipate that shift is part of moving in them. That skill is refined over time, but it starts with paying attention. You need to recognize which parts of the forecast match what you are seeing, where things differ, and what that means for the bigger picture as the day develops.
Written by Caleb Burns