It never ceases to amaze me how many native Oregonians,
mostly from Portlandia, have never been to Crater Lake. An even smaller
percentage has actually been on the lake itself.
Although I had been to Crater Lake as a child with my
family, the caldera was foggy, with no view whatsoever. So with great expectations, I headed east on U.S. 26 over Mt. Hood enroute to Bend and beyond
to the fabled east entrance of Crater Lake National Park.
The next morning, I saw the lake clearly for the first time
live. Somewhat startled, it indeed took my breath away. Of course, I
realized I was at about 7,000 feet above sea level, so the breaths were bound
to be more frequent because of the altitude.
Reporting for work that morning, little did I know that I
had stepped on the treadmill of a seven-day-a-week job conducting tours of Crater
Lake. Because the season is so short, we ran the boats virtually every day from
Independence Day until Labor Day.
As stated in the manual, “our operation is short-term,
business is hectic, and every employee hired is needed full-time in his or her
job.” We did have one day off: the Fourth of July, not because it was a holiday,
but because it snowed 14 inches the night before.
And
so it was: we’d hop into our six-pack every morning at Rim Village after
breakfast in the cafeteria for the 16-mile drive to the trailhead at Cleetwood
Cove on the other side of the rim, the jump-off point for tours around the
lake.
The first two weeks were spent pulling the boats out of dry
dock on Wizard Island and prepping the four, 45-foot launches for tours. Each
boat had the capacity to hold 60 people.
As beautiful as Crater Lake is from the rim, it’s even more
stunning on the water, which allows for an up-close-and-personal perspective of
the caldera wall, not to mention Wizard Island and Phantom Ship.
Leaving Cleetwood Cove, the tour begins in a counterclockwise
direction with passage through Steel Bay (below), named for William Gladstone
Steel -- the “father” of Crater Lake National Park.
Llao Rock, the next significant landmark, resembles a giant
raptor in flight. The formation developed when a massive lava flow from the
summit of Mt. Mazama filled a U-shaped valley carved by a glacier.
The next feature is the Devil’s Backbone, the most prominent
of numerous “dikes” inside of the caldera wall. These dikes formed when the
pressure of the molten rock pushed upward from the feeding chamber, cracking
the entire volcano. The molten material forced into the cracks eventually cooled to
produce unusually dense rocks.
“Long afterward, when the top of Mt. Mazama disappeared,
dense filling of the cracks, being more resistant than the bordering material,
were sculpted into relief and so stand out like buttresses,” noted Howel Williams
in “Crater Lake: The Story Of Its Origin.”
Passing below Hillman Peak, the highest point on the rim,
the tour enters Skell Channel -- the narrow body of water between Wizard Island
and the caldera wall. Emerald Pool, the green pond on the peninsula (above),
was a favorite swimming hole for employees and others who preferred a warm
water option to Crater Lake.
Circling Wizard Island, we pass by Fumerole Bay on our way
to Governor’s Bay, the site of the dock on the island and boathouses for wintertime
storage. Wizard Island -- the volcano within a volcano -- is the largest of three
islands in the lake and most well known “because of its weird appearance,”
wrote Steel.
Departing Wizard Island (above), we then continue to Chaski
Slide, which was formed when a large section of the mountain broke off from the
rim and slid down the caldera wall. On occasion, we’d back the boat up to one
of several waterfalls for a refreshing shower.
Next up: my personal favorite, The Phantom Ship. With its
form resembling a sailing ship, the ancient lava plug may appear and then
disappear depending on perspective, weather and lighting conditions. The best
places to view The Phantom Ship are from Kerr Notch and Sun Notch, two U-shaped
valleys on the south side of the caldera.
Moving from the south end of the lake to the east wall, we
would point out the Pumice Castle, a colorful volcanic formation that was popular
with many visitors. The Pumice Castle (below) is part of an extensive lenticular
bed, creating an orange outcropping resembling a fortress on the caldera wall
about 1,300 feet above the lake.
Beneath Redcloud Cliff is Grotto Cove, featuring the third
and smallest island in Crater Lake called the Madonna and Child. This tiny
atoll, which resembles Mary and the Baby Jesus, was a popular fishing spot for
the boat crew after hours. From here, it was back across another direct line to
Cleetwood Cove, our starting point.
Instead, we’d marvel at the Wineglass, a common place to slide boats down to the lake in the
early days, and The Palisades, a striking feature composed of a lava flow of
silica.
If we were lucky, we would see The Old Man In The Lake, a tall, barkless tree stump that floats in an upright position around
the lake, mostly between Cleetwood Cove and Wizard Island.
After three tours a day, we’d pack up our stuff for the
end-of-the-day trudge up the Cleetwood Cove Trail, a rigorous set of
switchbacks that climbs about 700 feet in elevation in slightly more than a mile,
followed by a 17-mile drive back to Rim Village.
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