And a bunch of snow-cave pictures. This was from a Mountaineers class on winter camping last weekend; we went out to Snoqualmie Pass and riddled a hillside with caves.
Well, depends what you've got with you, but I'd guess go into the trees, if there are trees, to get out of the wind, and to get shelter -- fallen logs, even propped-up ones to get under, or just a tree well (the pit that forms around each trunk), maybe with snow-covered branches bowed down to the ground -- and improve it with a tarp, piled-up snow, snow blocks if you have a snow saw.
If there's no shelter, just an expanse of snow, then you work with what you've got... a snow-trench shelter is probably the quickest to build, and could be done even solo (which I think would be very hard with a snow cave, trying to move the snow out).
I imagine it's a trade-off to make between how much shelter you expect you need to survive, and how much exhausted (and sweaty) you'd get building it.
Re: Hmmm.
Date: 2006-03-05 06:58 am (UTC)If there's no shelter, just an expanse of snow, then you work with what you've got... a snow-trench shelter is probably the quickest to build, and could be done even solo (which I think would be very hard with a snow cave, trying to move the snow out).
I imagine it's a trade-off to make between how much shelter you expect you need to survive, and how much exhausted (and sweaty) you'd get building it.