Earth Changes
Glencoe Mountain and Nevis Range snowsports centres have been among places to report having coverings of snow.
A picture by Mark Trigg for his Facebook page Back Corries shows a thick covering on Aonach Mor.
The picture has been shared on Twitter by Iain Cameron, who studies and writes about snow, and Lomond Mountain Rescue Team.
In a message below the photograph, Mr Cameron said: "This is 1pm on Tuesday the 2nd of June on Aonach Mor and this is just ridiculous. Unprecedented, perhaps."
The rescue team has also asked if anyone can remember a longer winter season.

This was the scene on Highway 50 between Hol and Aurland Tuesday morning. The road had to close because of heavy snow and poor visibility.
"It was incredible to wake up to a full snowstorm in June," Sigurd Bjåen of Hovden, in the mountains of southern Norway, exclaimed on national radio Tuesday morning. The heavy and drifting snow forced closure of several highways, with others open only for convoy-driving behind snowplows.
The state highway department (Statens vegvesen) warned of delays of up to three hours for those waiting to join convoys on Highway 7 over Hardangervidda, for example. The main Highway 134 over Haukelifjell had to close again after briefly reopening Monday evening, and Highway 51 over Valdresflye was also closed.
On Highway 55 over Sognefjellet, emergency crews had to rescue 39 people from 17 vehicles that got caught and partially buried by the snowstorm Monday afternoon. "We couldn't see a thing," Terje Weka, an experienced snowplow driver, told Norwegian Broadcasting (NRK). "There was so much wind and zero visibility. It was difficult to work, we had to just feel our way forward." That highway was closed as well.

A neighbor saw the couple's house get struck by lightning and told the family the bolt went from underneath the house and through the roof, leaving noticeable damage
A teenager was left shocked and temporarily unable to walk after she was struck by lightning while opening the refrigerator inside her Austin home.
Macie Martinez was reaching for an apple sauce when lightning struck her home and passed through the kitchen's appliances.
Misty Villarreal, Macie's mother, was in the living room when she heard what sounded like an explosion, and then a loud gut-wrenching scream.
Villarreal said her husband, Anthony, pulled Macie off the fridge and held her while she 'screamed and screamed and at the same time shook', she described on the family's GoFundMe page.
All the lights in the house had gone off when the lightning struck and Villarreal panicked as she was unable to see if her daughter was bleeding.
'I was shaking, screaming, crying because I was so powerless,' she wrote. 'I couldn't help my child.'
Macie described the moment, which happened on Memorial Day, as the 'most painful thing' she has ever experienced in her life.
'Afterwards, I couldn't feel my legs, and I couldn't walk and I was just shaking,' she told My Fox Austin.
Forty-five minutes before lightning struck, the family was getting reading for a night of movie-watching and playing cards after a tornado warning was lifted and they were able to leave their pantry.
Now they were rushing Macie to the hospital.

A bunch of worms clumps together on a road at Eisenhower State Park in Denison, Texas after heavy rains in a photo released by park rangers on May 29, 2015.
Instead, the piles in the middle of Eisenhower State Park were actually worms, Park Superintendent Ben Herman told ABC News today.
Rangers were checking the back roads of the park in Denison, Texas, found on May 29 when they found the piles lined up in a near-perfect straight line.

A health warning is urging people not to eat anchovy, sardines, crab, or shellfish from the Monterey Bay
Researchers are seeing the highest levels of red tide in more than a decade, and they're worried it will have grave impacts on marine life.
"This is probably the largest domoic acid event they've seen in the last decade, so it is pretty severe," said Scott Kathey of the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary.
Up and down the West Coast, a large algal bloom of Pseudo-nitzschia is growing rapidly. As it gets bigger, it's producing more and more domoic acid, known to most people as red tide. The acid closes shellfish harvesting and can kill some animals.

The Sea Girt Lifeguards Twitter page said the fog bank showed up along the coastline after a storm Sunday.
Sea Girt Lifeguards @SGLifeguardsLifeguards at a New Jersey beach shared photos of a massive fog bank that looked like an extremely slow-moving tsunami wave.
Weekend 2 in the books & ended w a fog bank, some surf & a wicked storm that came through #swimnearalifeguard
10:17 PM - 31 May 2015
The Sea Girt Lifeguards Twitter page shared photos of the fog bank, which sat right on the coastline Sunday following massive storms in the area, giving the appearance of a slow-moving tsunami wave.

The forecast track of Hurricane Blanca shows it heading for Mexico's Baja Peninsula.
Blanca is nearly stationary, but will begin moving northwestward Thursday, the Weather Channel said. There is increasing confidence in a track toward southern Baja California, though it is expected to weaken as comes closer to land.
The hurricane would impact the Baja by the weekend.
Blanca is the second major hurricane to form in eastern Pacific this year. A major hurricane is one that's a Category 3, 4 or 5 on the Saffir-Simpson Scale of Hurricane Intensity.

The NSW alpine resorts of Perisher (pictured) and Thredbo turned white overnight as 30cm of snow blanketed the mountains with lows of minus nine degrees
Temperatures plunged as low as minus nine degrees Celsius as the alpine resorts of Perisher and Thredbo in New South Wales disappeared underneath a blanket of snow on Monday evening.
Average winter temperatures across New South Wales are typically between 14 and 16 degrees Celsius.
It got as cold as 6.1 degrees Celsius in the City of Sydney, making it the chilliest morning the region has seen since 1987. Falls Creek in Victoria also received 20cm of snow overnight and Mount Buller recorded8cm, while Melbourne got off to its coldest morning in almost 40 years.

Rain clouds move in over downtown Los Angeles, California in this March 2, 2015 file photo.
A reverse meteorological spring is rare and indicative of the abnormally warm and dry weather plaguing California, which has suffered severe drought conditions for the last four years, National Weather Service weather specialist Stuart Seto said.
"What this means is that springtime started out warmer in March and then April was cooler and May was cooler," Seto said. "It's an unusual occurrence that's only happened three times in the history since we've been keeping records."
The last reverse meteorological springs in the area were in 1914 and 1921, according to National Weather Service records dating to 1877.
An unnamed 62-year-old tourist had a harrowing encounter with a bison while visiting the park. Authorities said that the man was rushed to the hospital after being tossed three times in the air by the bison. He sustained serious injuries but survived.
Yellowstone officials reported that several people had crowded the bison as it quietly lay near a path from the famous site of Old Faithful geyser. Park officials said that the bison was already becoming agitated due to the people crowding near it and it attacked the man as he took photos from a few feet away.









