|
2007.07.07 - A visit to Mt St Helens |
|
< Back to Mt St Helens |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
On the Luckiest day of the century, the 7th year, the 7th
month, the 7th day, we went to show off Washington's most
famous Mountain, Mt St Helens, to my cousin, who was
visiting from Florida.It had been almost a year
since I've been there... the longest stretch since I moved
back up this way in 1999... the changes were quite striking,
actually.
We decided to not start out at "O-dark-30", which is when
I usually go, most of the time to catch the sunrise, and set
a plan to only stop at a few of the welcome centers along
the way... stopping at them all is a bit tedious...:-)
|
 |
 |
At the first Welcome Center, an Osprey family has set up
shop above the building in an old snag.
The top of the tree broke off in a wind storm, providing
the perfect anchor for their nest.
Inside the welcome center, you're greeted by a grand
hall, and a picture of the exploding mountain. A movie
tells you about the process behind the explosion that
changed the Toutle Valley forever.
|
 |
 |
 |
3-D maps show where everything is, and there's a wall of
pictures showing images and news events leading up to the
fateful day in May.Mt St Helens, and Spirit Lake, was
quite beautiful... All that changed one Sunday morning, when
an earthquake broke whatever was holding the North Face in
place, letting it fall in the largest landslide ever
witnessed by man.
The magma underneath, suddenly released from all the
weight holding it back, exploded outwards, devastating
everything in its path for miles.
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
In only a few minutes, the landscape that was so picturesque
was forever altered.Its amazing. I've been there
many times, and have looked over those pictures almost as
many times, and it still gets me.
We left the Welcome Center, and proceeded up the state
highway - stopping, of course, at the Weyerhaeuser truck,
and the KOMO news car, and the logging camp restaurant.
|
 |
 |
 |
We stopped at the "A" frame house, too.This family was 3
days away from moving in. They were away visiting
friends for a couple of days before moving into their new
house near the Toutle River.
When The Mountain blew, a wall of mud and debris rolled
down the valley, and their home became encased in a concrete
mud mixture. A large tree bashed in the front of the
house.
Rather than fix it, the family decided to live somewhere
else, and do not share my fondness for The Mountain at all.
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
Above the door of a gift shop at the "A" frame house, a
little swallow family peeps at you as you enter or leave...
|
At the Hoffstadt Bluff overlook, you're treated to an
awesome view!
|
 |
 |
The Hoffstadt Creek Bridge, about a half mile long, is an
impressive sight. The west end of the bridge sits on
the edge of the "Blast Zone"... the line around the mountain
where the trees were knocked over or killed by the searing
heat.All of the trees closer to the Mountain than this
point were either planted by Weyerhaeuser (it is their farm,
after all), or grew there naturally.
Pockets of trees, behind ridges and outcrops of rock,
were spared, but everything - even the bacteria in the
ground - around those oasis's was laid waste.
The bridge is pretty impressive on its own, I think
anyway.
|
 |
 |
 |
Coming up the valley from the bridge, another incredible
view awaits you.
|
 |
 |
As you get closer to The Mountain, the views get more
grandiose.I'm always amazed at how much closer the
"green" seems to be to the Mountain's flanks... the recovery
has been quite remarkable.
|
 |
 |
 |
Before too long, we were at the Johnston Ridge Observatory,
set up across the valley from the Mountain, on a ridge where
David Johnston made his famous radio call, "Vancouver!
Vancouver! This is it!"The area around the Observatory
has changed a lot over the years... more flowers, more
variety of plants, MUCH more green! You can still see
the damage, but the changes are quite amazing to see!
Displays inside the Observatory show the extent of the
area damaged by the blast... its quite incredible.
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
A film clues you in on what you're looking at, and the
process behind the geologic features you're able to pick out
on the slopes and in the Crater.It ends with a dramatic
raising of the curtain... on a clear day like today, its
pretty striking!
We went outside, and checked out the valley and the
Mountain, and of course took the "I was there" photos... :-)
they have a couple of new cameras set up to observe the
happenings during the current dome building eruption that's
going on...
|
 |
 |
 |
Steam rises out of the new dome. The newly exposed hot
rock reacts with the cold mountain air.I really like my
video camera's zoom... and the pictures it takes aren't too
bad, either. It has a bit of trouble with the white
balance, and really bright scenes come out looking sort of
dark, but I can't complain - the zoom MORE than makes up for
it!
|
 |
 |
The new spine, called "Spine #7" by the CVO, is extruded
from the lava shaft at a rate of about a dump truck's worth
of rock every 20 seconds.
|
The glaciers, squished out of the way by the growing dome,
have accelerated their slide down the floor of the crater
|
 |
 |
The tortured valley is picturesque in its own right.Green
can be seen clear up to the mouth of the crater... its
pretty incredible!
A US Forest Service Ranger explains the explosion, and
how what we're seeing now came into being.
|
 |
 |
 |
During the discussion, I noticed a landslide on the new
dome... not a very big one, but it was still cool.After
listening to the Speil, we headed out in search of food,
which is at the Cold Water Ridge Observatory.
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
On the way to Cold Water Ridge, scenery that was behind you
on the way up now comes into view... huge fields of trees
still lay, baked white by the sun, where they were knocked
over by the force of the blast, which happened about 10
miles from where these trees are...White mounds of Dacite
rock bump some of the lower areas on the back side of
Johnston Ridge, part of the debris from the explosion caused
by the release of pressure.
A waterfall on Cold Water creek, once buried deep in an
old growth forest, now falls in plain view.
|
 |
 |
 |
Big Foot lived here in this valley, the legend went, making
his home among the old trees. There hasn't been a
sighting near these parts since the blast.The creek,
after cascading down the ridge, flows through its valley,
cutting its way through several dozens of meters of debris
left behind by the considerable portion of the landslide
blown over the ridge by the huge blast.
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
Cold Water Ridge observatory, for a long time the closest
you could get to The Mountain, sports a FANTASTIC view!We
grabbed pizza and a couple of "St Helens LAVA" burgers from
the little eatery there, and enjoyed the view while we
ate..e
|
 |
 |
 |
Cold Water Lake, formed by the 300-foot natural dam created
by the landslide, came into being much the same way that
Spirit Lake was formed. The Mountain shapes the land
around it.Without the blast, this picturesque lake would
not exist.
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
Flowers have established themselves here, too.They made
to a great end to a great day on the Mountain.
I'll be back... probably sooner rather than later.
:-)
|
 |
 |
 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
< Back to Mt St Helens |