I'd like to point out a more general reason for the difference in blanket behavior between us and objects/substances: we're constantly generating heat. Objects usually aren't. The blanket traps the heat with us, so it accumulates and we specifically become warmer. But for objects, they reduce the movement of heat, so the object stays near whatever temperature it was previously.
@JamieElli2 ай бұрын
Melting snow technically even generates cooling.
@ashtonhoward55822 ай бұрын
@@JamieElli nah. Cold isn't something that is generated. Not even by technicality.
@_entrxpy2 ай бұрын
@@JamieEllitechnically you just said a monstrosity.
@sriramn18092 ай бұрын
He just means to say that the object has a tendency to not melt, coz it causes "cold", or i guess endothermic is a better way to out it, which aims to refreeze it again.
@grechri48312 ай бұрын
Nah he means that the surrounding area gets colder when snow melts. That is a reason why ski races sometimes salt the run, so the top parts melt. The rest then stays colder and doesn’t melt. It is counter intuitive, but the energy for the melting “reaction” comes from the surrounding area. Therefore, taking that energy/heat away.
@jakejuracka2 ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="330">5:30</a> HAI has clearly been wronged by handheld sewing machines in the past, and needed to vent about it here for us.
@sirBrouwer2 ай бұрын
Sam is just bitter because his mom does not allow him to touch one.
@Joepser2 ай бұрын
I will not tolerate the Celcius hating in this video
@TheLikeys2 ай бұрын
This! Celsius is fun!
@Gamer34272 ай бұрын
Why? Just because Celsius makes more sense, is simpler, is more widely used, and is just all around better, doesn't mean it doesn't deserve some hate.
@Tuepp2 ай бұрын
This: I stopped playing and unsubscribe.
@Joepser2 ай бұрын
@@Gamer3427 huh
@CAG832 ай бұрын
@@Gamer3427 most of the metric system is objectively better than imperial systems, but Celsius isn't as strong of a case. If you need to do scientific measurements, you should be using Kelvins most of the time, not Celsius. If a common person needs to boil water, they don't need to know it's at 100 C. They just heat the water til it boils. Fahrenheit has two redeeming qualities. 1) 0 is super cold and 100 is super hot. Thats pretty intuitive. 2) 1 degree Fahrenheit is more specific than 1 degree celsius, which adds a bit more specificity in describing temperature. Fahrenheit isn't objectively better than Celsius, but it's a bit more of a gray area on which is better, as compared to other Imperial vs metric systems comparisons.
@victornunes9002 ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="61">1:01</a> Lesotho is in the southern hemisphere, so July is on the coldest part of the year.
@BegbertBiggs2 ай бұрын
Oregon isn't though.
@perhaps15242 ай бұрын
Reverse-searched the image shown and found that 1. that photograph of the Lesotho ski resort WAS taken in July & 2. theres not much snowfall in those mountains so they use artificial snow in the winter. so technically nothing in that sentence was wrong.
@arden77132 ай бұрын
He only said Oregon in July, Lesotho was mentioned just because they are too close to the equator for usual snow
@IchorX2 ай бұрын
That part of the world is a psy-op.
@frmcf2 ай бұрын
Kilowatts can't be "per hour". Power consumption is an instantaneous property. I guess you mean to say uses 23kW. So if you run it for an hour, that's 23kWh - kilowatt hours - of *energy* that you've used.
@loafer19892 ай бұрын
Mount Hood doesn't have snowmaking. They don't cover the snow with thermal blankets. Though they do salt the snow when grooming at night. This freezes the top layer. Levi Finland is opening on October 4th with snow saved from last May.
@cantstoptommy70772 ай бұрын
Almost right. No snowmaking on Mt Hood, no blankets either, but they don’t salt at night while grooming. They do it first thing in the morning right before setting courses. (I know this because I used to do it)
@Mt.Dwezzy2 ай бұрын
Used to live and work there and wondering who told him we use snow guns on the apocalyptic section of palmer 😂
@zaphod42452 ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="116">1:56</a> That's not what a kilowatt hour is, it doesn't use 23 kW of energy per hour, because Watts are a unit of power not energy. 23 kW means it uses 23 kiloJOULES of energy per second. A kilowatt hour is a measure of energy though, specifically it's the amount of energy that a 1kW device uses in an hour (which is 3.6MJ). So these guns use 23kW of POWER, which means that by definition each hour they use 23kWh, but at that point you may as well just call them 23kW machines as saying that they use 23kWh per hour is redundant.
@chax02082 ай бұрын
Was about to say the same, it uses 23 kW or 23kWh per hour (which would be stupid to say because it's redundant)
@fancypesto36472 ай бұрын
I heard that and did a whole double take lol, had to pause and rewind to make any sense of what he said.
@tetra70612 ай бұрын
🤓
@cruisinguy60242 ай бұрын
You beat me to it, I flew to the comments when he said that!
@200milesaway62 ай бұрын
I felt itchy for a moment
@TBrady2 ай бұрын
You should do an episode on Snow Cats. I work with one of the manufacturers, Prinoth, and they are super interesting machines. Winch cats are particularly cool.
@snowkatyoutube14192 ай бұрын
Hey why u calling me out 😮 ???
@thegoodobserver2 ай бұрын
I love watching the snow cats get after it. I work on a ski mountain every winter. I'm determined to ride in one this winter. Would be bad ass.
@laurahermans42422 ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="118">1:58</a> kilowatts doesnt measure energy but power. You can't use kilowatts per hour, you can use, as the unit on screen indicates, kilowatthours per hour. The snowgun would thus use 23 kWh per hour which would be equivalent to a consumption of 82800 kilojoules per hour
@GoldClav2 ай бұрын
U need to part of hai’s writers for the script lol
@Technoguyfication2 ай бұрын
Yeah, kilowatt-hours per hour just cancels out to kilowatts lol
@zig9132 ай бұрын
Or you could just say the gun has a power consumption of 23 kW
@ryancraig27952 ай бұрын
kWh per hour is just kW. So does each of these guns draw 23 kW when running? That seems like a lot for essentially running a fan, even including the energy to pump water (and maybe compress air, if those guns use compressed air) to feed the guns. Like about 30 HP continuous to run one gun?
@votekyle30002 ай бұрын
Energy bills charge the customer per kWh. In my town, that’s 10¢ per kWh. If I ran a snow gun on my roof 24 hours a day for 30 days, I would expect a $1656 increase in my energy bill.
@perhaps15242 ай бұрын
to everyone pointing out lesotho’s in the southern hemisphere: if you search that image you’ll see it was taken in july & that the article states it’s artificial snow. so nothing in that sentence was wrong, july may be winter there but doesn’t mean that afriski gets much snowfall
@matt-roden2 ай бұрын
Missed a couple key points with man-made snow. You can’t just shoot water into the air and expect to make snow. The water droplets will not freeze quick enough before hitting the ground. For that reason, compressed air is also used to help “nucleate” the water droplet. Droplet becomes more of a globe like an ornament, not a solid frozen bead. Also, 28F for making snow is only true when using a wet bulb thermometer. Wet bulb factors in humidity. Amount of moisture in the air is extremely important when it comes to snow making. At 39F and 10% humidity, you can make snow. 20F and 100% humidity, you can’t make snow. Side note, I’ve worked at a couple of ski areas in Michigan. Depending on the size of the ski area, snowmaking can cost $100k-$1M a day if running the guns wide open non-stop. When I worked at my local hill, it wasn’t uncommon for us to cause a brownouts when we were running full tilt.
@bubbabigmin2 ай бұрын
A million a day? Sure thing bro.
@bradnewton16802 ай бұрын
@@bubbabigmin I was like ...what? myself.. I read an interview of the owner of SUgar Mtn in NC. 125 acres and tons of snowmaking...he said his budget for snow was 1.2 mill for the season...that was a few years ago so maybe 1.5 now....so how about $8 to 10k a day
@bjornmu2 ай бұрын
Snow is also being stored in huge piles here in Trondheim, for cross-country skiing (World Championships coming winter). But it's not covered in those white blankets, it's covered in thick layers of sawdust. And some blankets on top of that to keep the rain out.
@StarlightNightflame2 ай бұрын
Yeah, same in various places just across the border from there in Jämtland, Sweden.
@joona40212 ай бұрын
Just wondering, how do you clean that up?
@bjornmuАй бұрын
@@joona4021 Good question, I don't really know how they separate the sawdust from the snow without messing up the snow. Maybe a thin layer of something under the sawdust? 🤷♂
@Respectable_Username2 ай бұрын
The fact you didn't send Amy out on a ski trip to confirm the effectiveness of these measures is a travesty 😜
@fordderek24292 ай бұрын
Casually destroys the fresh water table for an entire state. "It's ok rich people asked me to do it."
@donaldhobson88732 ай бұрын
Desalination. Because if your making artificial snow, why not start with artificial water. And this won't increase the price that much.
@utkarsharyan2 ай бұрын
@@donaldhobson8873 Yeah because famously ski resorts are located in seaside locations \s
@mnntropy56152 ай бұрын
The ski area I ski at pumps water from the river. The snow lays on the hills in the winter, and melts back into to river in the summer.
@fordderek24292 ай бұрын
@@mnntropy5615 dude in the video they talk about them keeping snow through summer that water should be miles away by now.
@andybrinegar88612 ай бұрын
My home resort of Copper usually uses the slab of summer snow for a terrain park (jumps and rails). The work that cat drivers put in to make it happen is truly insane. Absolute giga-chads
@augustineshako15402 ай бұрын
One mistake. Lesotho is in the southern hemisphere so it is winter in July and thus storing snow is not how they survive in July. <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="59">0:59</a>
@heisen-bones2 ай бұрын
he was talking about Oregon in july
@EebstertheGreat2 ай бұрын
@@heisen-bones It's still a mistake though, just a different mistake. Timberline doesn't use artificial snow or snow storage. Mount Hood just naturally has snow year-round.
@steviejoe662 ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="65">1:05</a> Mt hood resorts don't use snowmaking, Timberline has a single run open that is a glacier.
@thatfatman69782 ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="417">6:57</a> Good thing 4 x 0 = 0 hey? ;-)
@Thehermderm2 ай бұрын
lol the ski resorts here in Oregon usually have mtn biking, hiking and if you go to ski bowl they have an “alpine slide” which If you’re not careful can go fast enough to fly off of 😂
@auntiefan42022 ай бұрын
I got pretty messed up on that slide last year 😂
@GoldClav2 ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="418">6:58</a> “We will quadruple our writer’s salary” good luck HAI 😂😂😂
@GuidelinesViolator2 ай бұрын
not ruSSia moment
@gfrewqpoiu2 ай бұрын
Video written by Ben Doyle. Oh Ben 😅
@GuidelinesViolator2 ай бұрын
@@gfrewqpoiu no
@pursuitofexcitement2 ай бұрын
Amy's gotta make rent
@d.b.cooper12 ай бұрын
Lmao good old HAI paying NYC wages for a remote job....whilst a lot of the other KZbinrs who write scripts have outsourced them & pay people like $5 an hour
@smokeonthis84072 ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="64">1:04</a> the information being given out is incorrect. When talking about Mt.Hood Oregon the picture shown is of the Palmer ski lift at Timberline lodge that is known for its summer skiing, this lift is on a naturally occurring snowfield. This lift is one of the most unique in North America because it was built on a glacier, since then the glacier has shrunk so much that it was reclassified as a snowfield. I have lived and worked on this about 6 years now, our snow is 100% naturally occurring! Love the video
@writergrrlxox2 ай бұрын
Artificial snow guns were also used by firefighters at the Heavenly Ski Resort to stop the Caldor fire from burning down South Lake Tahoe in 2021
@atimelord8522 ай бұрын
Had a feeling I recognised who wrote this episode from the tone. And I was right - Ben
@michaela.7542 ай бұрын
Ben's wife's boyfriend approves of this video.
@owenpenning15972 ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="116">1:56</a> HAI said 23 kW/hour which is a rate of power instead of rate of energy. The units on the screen are also confusing showing a unit of energy 23kWh, but still not power. What should be said is 23 kW or 23kWh/h.
@AidanRatnage2 ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="20">0:20</a> I used to ski outside when there was no snow on a fancy thing called a dryslope, I'm sure it's much more cost effective than this.
@samkossak90862 ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="66">1:06</a> That is Timberline lodge at Mt Hood Oregon. The lift pictured is Palmer lift. It doesn’t open during the winter season not due to lack of snowmaking but due to too much snow. That lift is usually only open during the summer for skiing on Palmer glacier. This had nothing to due with the statement he is making during this clip.
@AugustusTitus2 ай бұрын
That ski resort in Alabama isn't far from Valley Head, AL which is always the coldest place in the state. As pointed out, they can make snow when it is cold but no one attempts to maintain the snow unless it stays below 32F. Cloudmont Ski Resort 721 Co Rd 614, Mentone, AL 35984. Also the home of Riverview Camp for Girls, and Nature's Classroom atop Lookout Mountain.
@shredandenjoy73112 ай бұрын
Oregon goes through August actually, and without snow making! It's less and less every year though, and someday the hundreds of tons of salt they put on that glacier a summer is going to come back to haunt us...
@TheMazzive2 ай бұрын
In my hometown Rovaniemi, Finland, the snow is stored for the ski resort but also for the cross country skiing. It is a big deal around here because skiing is an important sport and hobby around here. One year some local skiers were almost violently hostile when the city didn't open the early ski route on late October because of economic reasons. So yeah, in Finland we store snow to open ski resorts early but also to keep local people happy.
@VanislavHadzhipetkov2 ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="22">0:22</a> Cool shot of Borovets you've got there Sam
@youtube-p4204 күн бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="63">1:03</a> why Oregon catch a stray
@auntiefan42022 ай бұрын
Oregon in July (and August) = Mt. Hood Timberline Lodge Ski area. The summer snow is partially farmed, but not man-made.
@aromaticsnail2 ай бұрын
Turn the Arctic into a ski resort! Ice sheet and glacier melting solved👍
@Werdna123452 ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="400">6:40</a> not sure why the wood chips is mentioned. That would be less economically, harder to install where needed logistically, would need a water repellent plastic barrier anyway, and would need a second sealed plastic barrier to avoid getting wood chips on the precious snow ❄️
@Lhop2 ай бұрын
Not really, the snow is covered with about 50-100cm of sawdust at my local skiing place and they keep very well. No plastic barriers are needed.
@TeachAManToAngle2 ай бұрын
Mt Hood does not have snowmaking or blankets. Just lots and lots of natural snow.
@Homiesandco-32112 күн бұрын
Im so happy you included davos because thats where I go sking ever year but its normally used for the cross country skiing and not the actual mountain because its snows more than enough there and is snow secure until 2050. They've been doing this strategy for a long time now.
@forgottenfamily2 ай бұрын
I wonder what the environmental impact would be of using those blankets on glaciers to try stabilizing them...
@МихайлоСєльський2 ай бұрын
- We're losing snow due to climate change. - Not a big deal, we can create artificial snow by using a lot of energy. And also accelerating climate change.
@donaldhobson88732 ай бұрын
Not a big deal. We can get our energy from renewables instead. This sort of stuff shows the extent to which modern humans can outright reject natures weather and substitute their own.
@renammartinez2 ай бұрын
Love to see Sam informing temperatures in both degrees C(orrect) and F(reaking hell!!)
@LawAndBedlumАй бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="67">1:07</a> July in Lesotho is the dead of winter
@derekconstantino7759Ай бұрын
Lol
@vladimirs.39632 ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="180">3:00</a> I did expect this footage to appear in the video, but the context is actually absoultely wrong. This was shot on a yearly Grelka Fest in Sheregesh ski resort, Russia and (a) they don't use snow guns there at all, (b) it always happens in mid-April, when the natural snow is still intact and air temperature is high enough for cold-tolerant people to ski in bikinis and (c) Kemerovo oblast in the deep of Siberia, where Sheregesh is located definitely isn't "getting warmer year-round" round now. So, booo, HaI, bad-bad fact checking
@liambanks2482 ай бұрын
Hey Half as Interesting Writers keep trying maybe one day he won’t catch it fast enough.
@dongiovanni43312 ай бұрын
They should run a little faster, as Sam keeps catching them.
@marcopohl48752 ай бұрын
Could those blankets be used to slow down the melting polar regions?
@oadka2 ай бұрын
Damn rich people don't give a shit about anything huh I like the shade being thrown at skiing in this video tbh. Such a huge environmental impact for a source of entertainment that can leave you brain dead if you do it wrong.
@johnshort58302 ай бұрын
I'm just happy that my favorite KZbinr seems to enjoy portmanteaus as much as I do.
@christopherg23472 ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="408">6:48</a> Jokes on the writers: The international Ski Community will increase the salaries of their writers. Not HAI.
@GoldClav2 ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="188">3:08</a> -HAI making up another word called skeason lol 😂😂😂-
@jamesk3702 ай бұрын
I'm not sure what is more amazing: snow being stored over the summer outside or that Alabama has a ski resort.
@randomtinypotatocried2 ай бұрын
Alabama freaked out last time I was there over a little bit of snow on the road. The idea of them having ski resorts confuses me
@lisahoshowsky42512 ай бұрын
I’m glad you acknowledged that hand held sewing machines will self destruct if you slightly look at them wrong😂😂 as soon as you said that’s what was used I’m like, oh they must have some purpose made ones because they’re not really designed the best, even on a commercial level, they’re really just more of an in pinch machine not something I’d expect to be used for sewing snow blankets under less than ideal conditions.
@cassieoz17022 ай бұрын
If you wanna ski in July, come to Australia 😁
@MegaLokopo2 ай бұрын
How do you use that little power in july? I live by myself in a small one bedroom apartment and use more power than that on air conditioning while I am asleep.
@HarpaxA2 ай бұрын
@<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="180">3:00</a> What's with swimsuit in the snow ? 😂
@TS_Mind_Swept2 ай бұрын
Pplr massochists
@JulianSildenLanglo2 ай бұрын
Probably summer skiing.
@CarFreeSegnitz2 ай бұрын
Spring skiing conditions. Every ski resort in the northern hemisphere encourages it in April/May, the last few days of the ski season.
@vladimirs.39632 ай бұрын
That's yearly Grelka Fest in Sheregesh ski restort, Russia in mid-April. They've been doing it for years
@Jake-pi3yh2 ай бұрын
Spring skiing. Plenty of people doing this in Colorado the last few weeks of the season in late April and May
@connecticutaggie2 ай бұрын
I looked at making a DIY snow maker when I liked in CT. The tech is really simple - it is a fan, a pressure washer, and a air compressor - all if which I had. So, what stopped me? As it turns out, you can only make snow when both the temperature and humidity are low and I noticed that most of the times when I wanted to make snow, the the conditions would not let me make snow even if I had a snow maker.
@Logan111-2 ай бұрын
Never thought I would see Oregon get mentioned
@ronblack78702 ай бұрын
so then the slopes that get blanketted can't be used for skiing once they are covered. so if it takes 3 months then you lose the 3 months of skiing. so either you get it done faster at the end of winter before it gets too warm or you lose use time in winter.
@victorl2252 ай бұрын
I didn’t even know storing snow was a thing. Learned something new.
@davidisonyt2 ай бұрын
You say that snow guns won't work above freezing, however that's not true: "Snow machines can function at air temperatures as high as 40°F (4.4°C) with appropriate humidity levels." - i believe it works based on evaporational cooling.
@KelFertАй бұрын
I was really surprised to see a familiar place in footage <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="169">2:49</a> of snow machines working. this resort isn’t really popular, and moreover is located in eastern part of russia. i wonder how you found this videos and choose them
@logancox82522 ай бұрын
In Canmore Ab Canada they just burry a big pile of snow under saw dust and spread it around end of October. However it is nordic skiing.
@gwynm85062 ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="114">1:54</a> killowatts of energy per hour is not a valid measurement, did you mean kilowatt hours per hour? Thats equal to just being 23 kw
@Prestonbuzzard2 ай бұрын
For timberline they have snow cats everyday packing the snowfield up at the Palmer ski lift, even in the middle of the winter at before sun rise I watch the snow cats go up and down packing the snow, because I like to get there a little early and pregame
@Mike__B2 ай бұрын
Me listening to the snow machines : Yeah that's expensive, but I can make snow at my home?!!!! Hearing that they don't work above freezing : Awwwwww
@grzegorzkapica79302 ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="124">2:04</a> 24kWh is also how much an electric car uses to travel 100km.
@colephelps62022 ай бұрын
I was kind of vaguely curious about snow storage, but noped out amongst the long boring screed on snow-making equipment.
@joaovitormatos81472 ай бұрын
"23 kilowatts per hour" only Sam can give us this fine units of measurement
@lonelyPorterCH2 ай бұрын
I go to Davos for a weekend every year to go skiing, I didn't know they store snow somewhere for next year^^ But I've seen the blanket to save snow at glaciers on other swiss mountains
@jeromebergeron92862 ай бұрын
The "foret montmorency" which is a research center for Université Laval in Quebec used to do the same thing but with sawdust.
@Juliantdf2 ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="227">3:47</a> I think its unfair to say FIS need to cancel so many races due to a lack of Snow. Thats just not true. Sölden and Zermatt were canceled due to the bad weather situation at race day. You also mentioned that there is snowfarming for too early races. But is this really true ? Sölden Worldcup takes place in the end of october, but the skiresort is already open since early september 🤔. Same goes for Levi, worldcup is in november, skiresort opening is first weekend of october. This argument doesnt make too much sense for me.
@TricaGamer2 ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="62">1:02</a>, Lesotho snow stay there in July because its winter in the south hemisphere...?
@NasTwice2 ай бұрын
HAI is slowly becoming Wendover Light
@lukasklister72062 ай бұрын
In Davos they actually use woodchips instead of blankets and they store it in a deep Valley, where it is naturally quite cool even in summer
@jimmyelsen47872 ай бұрын
At sunlight we just make the dudes in the shop hike up and down the mountain with water bottles all night for free passes
@SuprSBG2 ай бұрын
The only downside of nebula- I still have to come to the YT vids sometimes, otherwise I don’t get vids like this recommended lol
@jimbolino2 ай бұрын
Fahrenheit and the melting point of water are so random
@Tuepp2 ай бұрын
...or cooking point... of course, because Fahrenheit just failed trying what Kelvin succeeded in... There's no other reason for Kelvin scale but this mistake.
@Beycrash2 ай бұрын
Actually the drop in pressure/expansion of the liquid from the nozzles cooles it further, so in fact snowguns work above 0 degrees CELCIUS.
@KasperLidegaard2 ай бұрын
Great to see you use Celsius like the rest of the world❤️
@taotaoliu22292 ай бұрын
I hope someday I can travel to a ski resort and learn to snowboard. If only it wasn’t so expensive :(
@PierceTrey16 күн бұрын
I WENT SKIING AT THAT ONE PLACE IN ALABAMA ONCE! It was bizarre, there was a green golf course at the bottom, and they had a pile of old ski rentals from other crappy reaorts (like Peoli Peaks) that appeared to go there for one last dying hurrah 😂 I skiied in jeans, as that felt appropriate...
@crowonthepowerlines2 ай бұрын
Snow guns actually can work above freezing temperatures when adjusted correctly. I have seen them operate at up to 40F.
@PsRohrbaugh2 ай бұрын
Before refrigeration, we had iceboxes, where ice was cut from frozen lakes and stored in insulated "icehouses" over the summer.
@idoesstuff2 ай бұрын
i love staring into stock images/photos
@annaselbdritt79162 ай бұрын
They heard of ice boxes and thought “yes. Incredible. Amazing. Let’s do it.”
@westend2732 ай бұрын
Can a snow blanket run a few stirling engines in the flat artic in the summer?
@artistwithouttalent2 ай бұрын
I remember being a child: lawn water rations, shower flow reducers, dead tomato plants, yet somehow the golf courses were evergreen and the ski lodge opened no later than November.
@donaldhobson88732 ай бұрын
A lot of those restrictions were rather performative. Most water goes to agriculture.
@hillppari2 ай бұрын
In finland they just use mountains of sawdust to insulate the snow during summer
@lels36182 ай бұрын
the logistics of water for the snow machines is crazy too - most ski resorts build lakes just to store the water!
@koppadasao2 ай бұрын
It's *not* fake snow! It's just artificially produced snow
@dundee28582 ай бұрын
It’s fake, it does not produce the fluffy “snowflake shaped” snow. It’s tiny ice shards. Riding on it/through it you know immediately cause it’s much harder packed and icyer. If you ride through a snow maker then a ton of tiny little ice dots. It’s not even fake snow, it’s tiny bits of ice
@EebstertheGreat2 ай бұрын
@@dundee2858 It's closer to snow than any to any other form of precipitation. Most natural snow is not in the form of pretty hexagonal flakes either. And it is produced in roughly the same manner as natural snow. Sure, it's fairly dense, but old snowpacks are also dense. So I guess the question is if ice on the ground that fell as snow 3 months ago is still snow or if it has transformed into something else. If it has, then it has effectively transformed into the same thing as artificially-produced snow.
@dundee28582 ай бұрын
@@EebstertheGreat yea you can argue about how "it's closer to snow than any other precipitation" but at the end of the day it's not snow, it is literally tiny drops of ice, that's just what it is and you can't spin it any other way, close only counts in horse shoes and hand grenades
@EebstertheGreat2 ай бұрын
@@dundee2858 Snow is "literally tiny drops of ice."
@dundee28582 ай бұрын
@@EebstertheGreat my fucking guy, have you ever seen snow before? I am Canadian I know what know is and looks like. Snow is defined as “ atmospheric water vapour frozen into ice CRYSTALS (not droplets you might notice) and falling in light white flakes. I’m not sure if you’re from a place that doesn’t have snow but we get it all the time and I have also been snowboarding for 7 years in eastern Ontario, home of the snow maker in Canada. I’m sorry but you are wrong in every sense of the word, I’m not sure if this is a troll or a bot at this point but I’ll say it one more time real slow. Snow is crystals of ice forming in the atmosphere, fake snow is tiny ice droplets forming 5 meters above the ground. It is not true, real snow
@dupittaja29672 ай бұрын
Finland mentioned🇫🇮🇫🇮🇫🇮
@DevinSloan2 ай бұрын
I want Amy to be a competitor on Jet Lag.
@ejmazzi14992 ай бұрын
Bro the music is...um...an interesting choice.
@innb2 ай бұрын
why do you hate celsius that much?
@RokkuAni2 ай бұрын
Taste bad🎉
@AgentM1242 ай бұрын
Because using water's freezing and boiling point at a certain atmospheric pressure is too much difficulty. Much easier to use frozen and liquid water and amonium chloride as 0 and some random guy in the 18th century's blood
@gregoryshipley46372 ай бұрын
It's a joke Americans make out our own expense. Despite claims to the contrary most of us understand most metric units. We learn them all in school, and use them for enough things. Almost no Americans though can think in Celsius as applied to weather. We lack the benchmarks to just know what any particular temperature "feels" like.q
@drcgaming41952 ай бұрын
@@gregoryshipley4637 q
@crabser22532 ай бұрын
It's cringe
@DJstarrfish2 ай бұрын
Skiing is probably the most "global north" thing I can think of, in every sense of the phrase
@crazysanta66412 ай бұрын
people ski in chile
@CD3MC2 ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="226">3:46</a> -in fairness one of those races was cancelled because the resort's staff housing burnt down. (Lake Louise)
@patrickshaw411Ай бұрын
It’s pretty on brand that the only time rich people care about albedo is when it inconveniences their entertainment.
@superJ58582 ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="119">1:59</a> -kWh are a unit of power not energy. Power is already energy over time, and so to say “23 kWh/h” doesn’t make much sense.- Edit: whoops kW (kilowatts) is power kWh (kilowatt hours) is energy. He still said kilowatts and saying 23kWh/h still doesn’t make much sense as the units would cancel out to 23kW.
@Luzgar2 ай бұрын
I guess it uses 23 kW. But, that kind of mistake is disappointing.
@HK417A12 ай бұрын
kWh is a unit of energy, kW is a unit of power, because watts are energy * time, and watt hours are energy * time * time, you are left with energy
@superJ58582 ай бұрын
@@HK417A1 yeah I realized that just after I posted my comment and added an edit, but unfortunately the edit is cut off, and people have to click to see it. I’ve edited my comment again to cross out the original comment.
@yannickvaara86822 ай бұрын
Damn #withinaminute cheers from finland
@sammyb75832 ай бұрын
Always more skiing content!
@kimsmoke172 ай бұрын
Just keep the units in metric. Mixing units between metric and US customary units, makes my head hurt. And by the way, are those tons? Are those metric, short, or long?
@Johnforreal2 ай бұрын
skiing content is the best keep it up
@WyvernYT2 ай бұрын
This was a perfect excuse to send Outside Correspondent Amy to go slide down a mountain at company expense.
@ACPilot2 ай бұрын
It really manmade snow, not artificial. It is still just frozen water, just like natural snow. The flakes though are formed differently.