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Time, Terrain, and Change – Reflections From the Mountains

Feb 23, 2026

Early Season Rock Climbing in California: Where to Climb When Spring Comes Early

An unusually warm early spring across California has launched rock climbing season ahead of schedule. As the snow quickly melts and the granite dries out, climbers are already flocking to the crags to seize long sunny days and perfect climbing on Sierra granite. For...

SNACKS AND MOUNTAIN CLIMBING

Climbing Mount Shasta is an incredible adventure, but it is also very physically demanding. Having the right snacks/lunch food can make or break your energy levels. The right foods will help keep you fueled, focused, and ready to push through long...

To Hire A Guide Or To Not Hire A Guide: That Is The Question

It’s a question that comes up often for Mount Shasta - “Do I really need a guide, or can I manage it on my own?” The answer depends on your background, your goals, and how comfortable you are making decisions at altitude, and when the environmental variables or...

Spring Came Early: Corn Skiing on Mt. Shasta

Spring’s arrival on the West Coast this year has caught everyone off guard. With temperatures nearly 20 degrees above average, skiers are left wondering if winter slipped away before it truly began. But on Mount Shasta, the story is different: the early warmth has...

Choosing A Backcountry Ski Boot

Having just completed a quick ski tour up to 10k in Avalanche Gulch on Mt Shasta, I thought it timely to address the issue of finding the right backcountry ski boot (the spring-like conditions were phenomenal by the way!!). Choosing the right backcountry ski boot is...

The Mountain That Moves Within Us

Caleb here - I wrote this piece over the last year, and submitted it to the American Avalanche Association’s publication, The Avalanche Review.  It was published in the most recent TAR released in early February. It goes out to members throughout the year, and I...

3 Avalanche Courses, 3 Perspectives: A Road Trip About Snow, Risk, and Strategy

I’m finally home after three back-to-back avalanche courses, and the quiet feels earned. The past few weeks have been a blur of long drives, endless coffee, and a steady rotation of different snowpacks. I started with a ski patrol–specific Pro 1 at Palisades Tahoe,...

Climbing Mt. Shasta in the Winter

With the unseasonably mild winter we are experiencing here on Mt. Shasta, we have been fielding a fair number of calls from people inquiring about attempting the summit this season. Because of this, I thought it would be instructive to write a brief overview of what...

Exploring Avalanche Beacon Parks: Where to Find Them and How to Use Them

What is a beacon park? It is a designated training area containing up to eight buried beacon-transmitting units. These parks feature a control box that allows you to turn on or off all (or some) of the transmitters to simulate different search scenarios. Avalanche...

Let’s Geek Out About When Snow Gets Sketchy: Seeing The Signs Of Instability Before The Slide

Much of my previous writing has focused on the subject of risk. I’ve written a good amount about how we perceive it, tolerate it, manage it, and sometimes misjudge it. Over the years, my interest in human psychology and physiology has led me to think deeply about how...

Read our latest posts!

Spending time in the mountains as a guide or outdoor professional offers a kind of perspective that is hard to find elsewhere. When you are not just moving through a landscape, but having to pay close attention to it, watching the subtle shifts in a glacier, noticing how storms roll over Mount Shasta, or feeling the changing rhythm of the seasons. In this, you begin to notice patterns (not answers or conclusions), just observations. Small, quiet details that add up over time and become part of a story we are fortunate to witness if we are willing to slow down and look.

I remember my first climb on Pico de Orizaba in Mexico, working as a shadow guide and learning the route. As part of that process, I began marking points along the way. These were usually practical notes, places to slow down, specific hazards to watch for in areas, or spots where the route splits in confusing ways. One of those points was at the base of the Jamapa Glacier.

Over the years, I have returned to that same peak many times and marked that same point each time. I did not intend for it to become a record of change, but it is now clear that the glacier has shifted significantly during that period. It is a tangible change I have personally recorded, trip after trip. Whether this is normal in a geological sense, I do not know. It is simply what I have seen and tracked.

While it is true that mountains have always changed, what has been standing out to me more and more is how storms seem to move differently than they did when I was a child. I once hoped for clear skies so I could head out to my local ski areas, Mount Ashland or Shasta Ski Park. Now it seems, I find myself hoping for storms to arrive.

More often than not, we are seeing heavy storms that drop large amounts of snow in very short periods of time. Growing up, I remember storms that lasted longer, with shorter breaks between them. The difference is not just nostalgia. It’s clear when you spend enough time out there, season after season.

As an avalanche educator, I understand the effects of this shift can be striking and at times concerning. Mount Shasta has experienced multiple extremely large and destructive avalanches in the last decade, events once considered rare and unlikely. Is this directly connected to the way storms have changed? We cannot say for certain at this time, but it is possible. What I do know is that the timing, intensity, and frequency of storms now seem to produce larger and more pronounced avalanche cycles than I remember from my youth. Guides often witness these patterns firsthand because our work places us directly in these environments, day after day.

It is not just the snow itself, but the interaction between storms, terrain, and time. A heavy storm followed by long stretches of clear skies creates very different conditions than a slow, steady accumulation spread over several days, even if the total snowfall ends up being the same. The way snow is layered over time influences how it behaves. That interaction affects avalanches, glaciers, and how the mountains respond as a whole. Sometimes the changes are subtle and prolonged over a long period of time. Other times, they are more dramatic and rapid in nature.

From town, a sunny winter day might feel like a gift. In the mountains, that same day can have a large impact on the snowpack, glaciers, and the broader ecosystem. These shifts can carry both immediate consequences and long-term effects.

I am not trying to make predictions or political statements. I am simply sharing what I have seen, what I have measured, and what feels different now compared to when I was a child. Glaciers are changing, seasons are shifting, and the mountains are showing us these changes as they happen. These are observations, facts of experience, and pieces of a much larger story the mountains are continuing to tell.

I do not claim to know what it all means for the world at large. However, for those of us who work, and guide in these places, it feels worth paying attention. Worth reflecting on, worth allowing these observations to spark conversation, curiosity, and a deeper respect for the landscapes we move through every day.

Written By Caleb Burns

Early Season Rock Climbing in California: Where to Climb When Spring Comes Early

An unusually warm early spring across California has launched rock climbing season ahead of schedule. As the snow quickly melts and the granite dries out, climbers are already flocking to the crags to seize long sunny days and perfect climbing on Sierra granite. For...

SNACKS AND MOUNTAIN CLIMBING

Climbing Mount Shasta is an incredible adventure, but it is also very physically demanding. Having the right snacks/lunch food can make or break your energy levels. The right foods will help keep you fueled, focused, and ready to push through long...

To Hire A Guide Or To Not Hire A Guide: That Is The Question

It’s a question that comes up often for Mount Shasta - “Do I really need a guide, or can I manage it on my own?” The answer depends on your background, your goals, and how comfortable you are making decisions at altitude, and when the environmental variables or...

Spring Came Early: Corn Skiing on Mt. Shasta

Spring’s arrival on the West Coast this year has caught everyone off guard. With temperatures nearly 20 degrees above average, skiers are left wondering if winter slipped away before it truly began. But on Mount Shasta, the story is different: the early warmth has...

Choosing A Backcountry Ski Boot

Having just completed a quick ski tour up to 10k in Avalanche Gulch on Mt Shasta, I thought it timely to address the issue of finding the right backcountry ski boot (the spring-like conditions were phenomenal by the way!!). Choosing the right backcountry ski boot is...

The Mountain That Moves Within Us

Caleb here - I wrote this piece over the last year, and submitted it to the American Avalanche Association’s publication, The Avalanche Review.  It was published in the most recent TAR released in early February. It goes out to members throughout the year, and I...

3 Avalanche Courses, 3 Perspectives: A Road Trip About Snow, Risk, and Strategy

I’m finally home after three back-to-back avalanche courses, and the quiet feels earned. The past few weeks have been a blur of long drives, endless coffee, and a steady rotation of different snowpacks. I started with a ski patrol–specific Pro 1 at Palisades Tahoe,...

Climbing Mt. Shasta in the Winter

With the unseasonably mild winter we are experiencing here on Mt. Shasta, we have been fielding a fair number of calls from people inquiring about attempting the summit this season. Because of this, I thought it would be instructive to write a brief overview of what...

Exploring Avalanche Beacon Parks: Where to Find Them and How to Use Them

What is a beacon park? It is a designated training area containing up to eight buried beacon-transmitting units. These parks feature a control box that allows you to turn on or off all (or some) of the transmitters to simulate different search scenarios. Avalanche...

Let’s Geek Out About When Snow Gets Sketchy: Seeing The Signs Of Instability Before The Slide

Much of my previous writing has focused on the subject of risk. I’ve written a good amount about how we perceive it, tolerate it, manage it, and sometimes misjudge it. Over the years, my interest in human psychology and physiology has led me to think deeply about how...

Read our latest posts!