jetcode wrote in post #11412321
You know Jim the blueness is likely more true to the scene. I don't spend much time in the snow.
You're right Joe and it's a difficult one to get to grips with (regarding photography) and difficult to explain. I still get this feeling of awe at times in snowy/icy mountains where everything looks surreal. Sometimes it's all blue but on other occasions - such as a setting/rising sun - I've seen everything appearing yellow/orange/red, (I'm not talking photographically, but how it appears to the eye). I once sat on a summit in Glen Coe, totally spellbound at the orange world I was in (snow/ice/sky), for over an hour which resulted in having to make a horrible, steep descent in the dark... not very bright, but we just couldn't leave because the whole scene was so 'freaky'.
This often causes a problem when I get back and review the shots on my PC, because you get all sorts of weird colour casts, but... that's exactly what you saw. Others looking at it see bad colour casts! I have read about it and apparently it's to do with the purity of light in relation to altitude and remoteness (lack of pollution), the ambient light and the reflective properties of light on ice, or something. Ultra violet light comes into it somewhere too... I'm sure there are others here who could explain it (and understand it) a lot better than I do! 
Always appreciate your comments Joe, thanks mate.
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