- Playing in the snow
- Racing
- Walking in the snow
Lady trudging through the snow with a present - Polar bear and flip-up cap
- Girl looking at the birds in a snowstorm
- Children making a snowman
- Bot and girl on a snow sled
- Coasack Encampment on the Champs-Elysees
- Floating Iceburg
Floating Iceburg - Wild Birds
Girl Feeding some wild birds - How the snow did fly as he dug and scraped and shoveled
- To eke out our store of corn and keep the pot boiling, my father hunted much of the time
To eke out our store of corn and keep the pot boiling, my father hunted much of the time. To hunt deer he left the lodge before daybreak, on snowshoes, if the snow was deep. He had a flintlock gun, a smoothbore with a short barrel. The wooden stock was studded with brass nails. For shot he used slugs, bits of lead which he cut from a bar, and chewed to make round like bullets. Powder and shot were hard to get in those days - A heavy wind blew the snow in our faces, nearly blinding us
“We had a hard time,” he said. “Perhaps the gods, for some cause, were angry with us. We had gone five days; evening came and it began to rain. We were on the prairie, and our young men sat all night with their saddles and saddle skins over their heads to keep off the rain. “In the morning, the rain turned to snow. A heavy wind blew the snow in our faces, nearly blinding us. - Skaters on the Reservoir at La Villette
- Skating
- Lady skating
- She finds that exercise does not improve her spirits
- January
January - Laplander on Snow-runners
They have caps on their heads, and fishermen and herders may be distinguished by the style of these. Fishermen’s caps are pointed, while those of herders are square. In going out over the snow in winter, Lapps have long, narrow runners of wood fastened to their feet, and carry a pole in their hand. These runners are five feet or more in length, and only a few inches wide, and on them—aided by their poles—the Lapps glide along finely over the hard snow. - The hockey player's costume
The hockey player's costume - Skating outside
Skating outside - Saint Liedwi, Of Scheidam, Holland, A. D. 1396
The First known skating Illustration - Look at the snowman
Girl showing her little sister that the snowman doesn't bite - Daruma, the Snow-Image