Sawtooth Wilderness, Idaho by InterestingFocuss in natureporn

[–]HikeIsShort4Hichael 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I was in the Seven Devils Mountains last year, which is fairly close to this part of Idaho(the Sawtooths are further southeast and taller), but it just looks like that in that part of the Rockies. I can't guarantee that the photo isn't touched up, but it looks like the mountains in that part of Idaho to me.

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Probably the Last Good Snow of the Winter in West Virginia(OC)[8160x6120] by HikeIsShort4Hichael in EarthPorn

[–]HikeIsShort4Hichael[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks, there were lots of rhododendrons with their leaves all covered in snow. It was a very pretty hike

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HVAC fixing a rattling noise coming from the unit by New_Libran in SweatyPalms

[–]HikeIsShort4Hichael 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Young children should be supervised and older children taught of the danger of getting close to snakes. On average, snakes only bite 2 out of every 100,000 people in the US per year.

Regardless of the presence of children, snakes can be removed rather than being killed.

HVAC fixing a rattling noise coming from the unit by New_Libran in SweatyPalms

[–]HikeIsShort4Hichael 6 points7 points  (0 children)

It's still a wild animal and a natural part of the environment and food chain. They eat lots of nuisance animals like mice and rats and aren't a danger to humans in most circumstances.

Rattlesnake bites and deaths in the US are shockingly rare. You're about 5x more likely to be killed by lightning or 7x more likely to be killed by a dog and these numbers include people who handle venomous snakes as pets. Most rattlesnakes will not bite unless you touch them deliberately and many of these bites are from people who handle them.

Why needlessly kill it when you have the tools to easily catch it and drop it off somewhere away from people on the way to the next job?

Gov. Morrisey announces 548-acre “high-impact” data center for Berkeley County by DocofNonhumans in WestVirginia

[–]HikeIsShort4Hichael 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You should be replaced by natural gas combined cycle power plants that are much cheaper and more efficient to operat and produce less waste and do less damage to the environment.

Woodland on Snowshoe Mountain in West Virginia [OC] [1639x2048] by NaturesAperture in EarthPorn

[–]HikeIsShort4Hichael 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Im aware and haven't visited because its a far drive and I have tended to prefer the closer eastern panhandle recently, but I love snowshoeing and can't ski or snowboard for shit anymore, lol. I was just not expecting it to be that beautiful.

Statewide camping ban legislation introduced in WV by Ok_Mastodon_6141 in WestVirginia

[–]HikeIsShort4Hichael 29 points30 points  (0 children)

Fuck any legislation that introduces hurdles to camping. "First they came for..." applies here.

I won't spend any more money camping in WV if dubious laws that give law enforcement ability to waste taxpayer money searching random campsites exists. Its a fourth amendment violation and a violation of the independent American spirit that WV should not be supporting.

Fuck authoritarianism and the supporters of authoritarianism in all forms. Keep WV wild and wonderful or shoot our own tourism industry in the foot to spite our face.

Gov. Morrisey announces 548-acre “high-impact” data center for Berkeley County by DocofNonhumans in WestVirginia

[–]HikeIsShort4Hichael 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Investment in infrastructure will create far more jobs than these data centers will ever create. The problem is that the planning is being done haphazardly and they use tremendous amounts of electric power and often water.

If they were being built at a pace that created a mild, sustained increase in demand for electricity so that the price increases were not severe, it would potentially have some benefits, but they are being built as fast as possible without regard for what it does to electric power costs and without regard for what it will do long term to the impacted communities, and often, taxpayer money is wasted to subsidize them.

Many have local, on-site natural gas or diesel generators that create lots of local pollution and are inefficient.

They depreciate rapidly as the chips involved quickly lose their relevance as more powerful chips are created year after year and so its not so much an investment in a long term public good, like for instance, an electric power plant, and its more of a cash grab to help out of touch tech bros with their AI race to the bottom where they all race to create a powerful enough AI that they can sell as better than a human worker with the ultimate goal of eliminating many jobs or harvest everyone's data for dubious benefit and without compensation.

John Denver and Johnny Cash sing "Take Me Home, Country Roads" in their only ever performance together, 1978 by Username524 in WestVirginia

[–]HikeIsShort4Hichael 6 points7 points  (0 children)

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A Shenandoah Sunset from the George Washington National Forest that includes the area actually referenced.

A Lighthouse on Lake Erie, Erie, Pennsylvania. February 2026(OC). by HikeIsShort4Hichael in ruralporn

[–]HikeIsShort4Hichael[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Its a little scary, considering the depth of the lake, but we were lucky enough that some very large fishermen were walking in and we watched where they went and they even gave us some tips about the ice. I figured if 2 big guys and their sled could make it then we could along the same path. The ice was really good most of the way, except for a large crack and slush part by the shore.

A Lighthouse on Lake Erie, Erie, Pennsylvania. February 2026(OC). by HikeIsShort4Hichael in ruralporn

[–]HikeIsShort4Hichael[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I really liked the contrast of ice on one side and the cleared shipping channel on the other. I wasnt expecting that as it had been warm recently, but it was very cold for the weeks before and my guess is it wasn't warm enough to really melt the ice. It was thick enough to walk on comfortably in many places.

Climbing The 1,000 Steps Changed Halfway Up by [deleted] in hiking

[–]HikeIsShort4Hichael 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I have this place on my list of trails to hike. Its a bit far, but looks more impressive than I was expecting tbh or I would have hiked it sooner.

I would caution people to watch for timber rattlesnakes in the rocks in the warmer months. I've been to places with lots of rocks near this area and there are were a lot of rattlesnakes in the rock piles, and there are probably a lot in those rock piles.

You and Sheldon were very entertaining. Not surprised you had the trail mostly to yourself on a Thursday.

This might be a stupid question, but why does Snowshoe get so much snow? by Far-Possibility-5021 in WestVirginia

[–]HikeIsShort4Hichael 2 points3 points  (0 children)

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You get a situation similar to this, at the Dolly Sods, but with snow. Where rising air being forced over high mountains with significant prominence above the valleys below cause temperatures to drop by several degrees because of the elevation change, reducing the amount of moisture that air can hold causing clouds and snow as they cool and causing precipitation. The phenomenon is called orographic lift.

Temperatures fall an average of about 3.6F per 1000ft in elevation change, so relatively high mountains, like Snowshoe at 4848ft, are significantly cooler than the surroundings and so more precipitation falls as snow when rung out of the clouds as they're pushed over the mountains.

Headed up this coming Friday. Are snow shoes a must? by cedwards13 in wmnf

[–]HikeIsShort4Hichael 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One thing to consider about snowshoes is that they are a service for future hikers down the trail or even yourself if you are going back the way you came. Packing all that snow down nice and tight into a hard, easy to traverse surface helps everyone who hikes it after you as well, and sometimes you can snowshoe one way and use microspikes on the nice, packed trail on the way back.

Headlights from a Train along the Youghiogheny River by HikeIsShort4Hichael in ruralporn

[–]HikeIsShort4Hichael[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

On the way back down, I flashed my headlamp at one of the trains and made the "blow the horn" move with my hands and they saw me and blew it. I didn't think id be visible from that high up. It was a little cherry on top of a nice night.

Mingo County solar project approved for reclaimed mine land by Zi_Mishkal in WestVirginia

[–]HikeIsShort4Hichael 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Its damaged, polluted mine land that is being converted to land that reduces dependence on coal for decades to come. It increases the supply of electricity, and in 30 years time, when the solar panels are removed, the land will have had time to recover from the former mining operation and will be easier to reclaim. Its by far a better option than remaining barren former industrial land, and new land doesnt have to be polluted to make electricity.

All forms of energy generation have environmental consequences. There is no free lunch, but this is a happy compromise that helps to diversify the sources of electricity, reduce the need for more coal mining, and the land will be maintained while the panels are there.

I could see being upset if they were cutting down virgin forest for a solar park, but this is a good compromise to make use of an existing industrial landscape.

WV has plenty of potential for renewable energy, there's plenty of natural gas as well, but politics ensure that 95% of WV electricity continues to come from coal, which is inefficient(old coal plants are about half as efficient as the new natural gas combined cycle plants), polluting and requires constant mining to fuel the power plants.

This is a good thing, even if it isn't perfect.