You start out with winter tires, for one thing. You can go to your local tire shop, Les Scwhab, if you have one. and get someone that actually knows, to show you what chains or cables you 'could' get and if you do, have them show you how to put them on. Carry a couple bags of sand or kitty litter and a couple of those military surplus collapsing shovels.
The hardest thing about snow or ice conditions is controlling your nerves and your speed. You get traffic behind you and next thing is, you are trying to appease those drives and putting yourself at risk. Be well versed in using the transmission selector to get yourself set up for the downhills...and when approaching an obviously slippery uphill section..look ahead...all the way up to ensure the way is clear, find a nice comfy speed and keep that speed. Just loaf on up and keep your situational awareness. Is there another vehicle coming up from behind or coming down at you? Use your 4 ways if you like. And unless you are out of options, don't stop. If you do stop..out comes the kitty litter.
You have a kitchen in there..pull way off and make a coffee or tea. Something..anything, to relax a bit. We make fewer mistakes when we get that few minutes of rest. When or if, it gets really hairy, I turn the music down and tell anyone else with me to be quiet and let me concentrate. If it's going to be a long haul, then a soft conversation is good. The hardest thing is to know when you have reached your limit. Men have to keep going, eh. The driver has the responsibility. Go or stop, but the driver is the one to make the call.
Gary Haupt