>There is a strange phenomenon though that seems to occur at times,
>generally when its very cold and clear. During some of those periods,
>but not all the time it seems like the band just opens up and I get all
>these additional stations, both low and high frequency ones, and some
>with 75 to 85% relative signal strength indicated as well. Sometimes
>these additional stations will be gone the next day, and other times
>they might hang around for a week or so and then, just as quickly as
>they appeared they're gone again until the next time they mysteriously
>reappear.
>
>Sometimes I have thought that snow might be a factor, that is not when
>it's snowing but after it's on the ground and the temperature is cold. I
>used to DX VHF TV with just a Vbeam when I was a kid in New York City
>but It's been my experience that UHF doesn't usually skip. Could this be
>ground wave, but on UHF?
It sounds as if you may be experiencing "tropospheric ducting".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tropospheric_propagation#Tropospheric_ducting
http://www.dxinfocentre.com/tropo.html
I've heard of people being able to go up a thousand feet or
so in the Santa Cruz mountains, aim an antenna southwest, and work a
VHF radio repeater system (2-meter, 145 MHz) located at a similar
altitude on one of the islands in Hawaii, when the ducting conditions
are right.
Tropospheric ducting is similar in some respects to the "skip" which
affects lower-frequency transmissions... both are due to the RF signal
being refracted, and thus "bent" out of its usual line-of-sight path.
HF "skip" is commonly an ionospheric phenomenon, while tropospheric
propagation/ducting occurs much lower in the atmosphere and does not
(I believe) require that the air layers in question be ionized.
You could think of tropospheric ducting as sort of a high-altitude
version of the refractive effect that causes the illusion of water on
the ground, when you look out over a hot patch of desert or asphalt.
Clear, cold air probably helps in another way... by reducing the
amount of moisture in the atmosphere it can decrease signal losses.