Sunday, September 30, 2012

Mt. Shasta - Magnificent Views (Plus Castle Crags)

A continuation of my trip north:


What's that in the distance?
 A few more miles up and it is much closer
 Oh, there it is!
 Mt. Shasta, the second southern-most cascade volcano (Lassen is the furthest south). Still covered in glaciers in late August
 The freeway goes by Castle Crags State Park, where a granitic extrusion created these immense, complicated cliffs popular with climbers
 This is a spatter cone volcano, likely very dormant. They have ski runs on another one of these closer to the mountain
 I went up a little further to hang out in Weed, Ca. It is just too funny of a name, and if you see below, they have a 'Cougar Cafe', I'm not sure if this is a retiree community...
 The forest ends at the tree line, about half way up the slopes
 And it creates its own weather. The clouds form and are shaped by the mountain, in this case, they arch above/around the summit
 From my camping spot
 At sunset it went crazy pretty
 These colors don't do it justice, it turned pink and then purple
 Almost gone
 Bye bye sun
 The morning brought very cool cloud formations


 One of the volcanic remnants, I liked the red dirt on top
The summit, also with a touch of red
 Wispy clouds go by
 So etherial on the slopes
 More mountain cloud formations, see them dome over the promontories
 A mini volcano in the sky
 This is the crags from about the tree line
 It just went forever with the mist of forest fires all around

Friday, September 14, 2012

Lassen - Volcanic Wonder, or Waste-Land?

Lassen National Park was on fire this August, and I went right through it to get there, for you. 
The main highway to the south of the park was shut down a few cars behind me on the way back, and the flames were 10 feet from the road!
Fortunately, I basically had the entire park to myself, which is unheard of this time of year. I doubt many people can get these shots since it is usually packed with people. 

This, and Shasta, are part of the Cascade volcano range, as opposed to the coastal and sierra ranges
The visitor center is brand new and has lots of good information. There is a long road to the views of the mountain and hydrothermal areas.
 And the views are fantastic the entire way


 This is a hydrothermal area, where gasses and other chemicals seep out of the volcano and leach into the soil and water. The soil and stone turn into clay over time
 But some things still thrive
 First glimpse of the summit
 Once I stopped, you could see this volcano erupting. Wait, what! No, that's that fire I drove by on the way up (was at the bottom of the canyon then) and the smoke was raising behind one of the mountains that made up a super-giant volcano that blew up millennia ago  
 It was surreal and spectacular
 The views south into the sacramento valley were hazy, but expansive
Some hillsides were barren from past eruptions
Bi-colored, some homes went up in this blaze
 Still 'erupting', this boulder is 6 feet tall and on a 400 foot ledge, moved here by the glaciers
 The other rocks carried by the glaciers etched these marks into the bedrock

 Isn't it impressive?
 Can you see Vulcan's eye?
 Lake helen, pristine, dark blue, very alpine
 A stream through a valley makes things verdant
 The lupine. I can't describe how overwhelming their scent was in the air (until the sulfur took over later). It was like honey, lavender and sage, with a hint of citrus blossom that wafted through the air like  nothing I've ever experienced. It literally covered some of the slopes
 All. The. Way. Down.

Clay around Bumpass Hell, the main hydrothermal area in the park (with water over 200 degrees)
 A wooden walkway keeps you from falling in
 Many fumaroles release gasses that smell like rotten eggs
 The stream cuts through it, accreting chemicals
 Staining the earth
 But what a contrast in the pools
Aquamarine
 Some algae survive in the hot creek
 But it is very muddy
 Sulfur deposits
 No idea how this spider survives in the water and this environment, but it was just chillin out
 Boiling mud pots were around as well, with rings showing past activity
 A black and grey creek meet
 The pink stuff is real pink slime, micro-organisms that thrive in the hostile waters and feed off the chemicals

 Fresher mud pots
 Those are sulfur crystals forming at the mouth of this vent
 A large, boiling pond
 With iron pyrite floating on the surface (fool's gold) in liquid form!
 Do you see the swan in this freshwater pond next to the hell?
 I'm not sure the last time I've seen waters this clear

Hope you enjoyed :)