Crater Lake National Park News
Crater Lake Institute - www.craterlakeinstitute.com
Crater Lake back to normal, spectacular self
Herald and News
Klamath Falls, Oregon
May 12, 2003
By LEE JUILLERAT
It's back to normal at Crater Lake National Park.
After celebrating its 100th year as a national park in 2002, the
nation's sixth oldest park is back to normal operations this
year.
Normal at Crater Lake, however, is extraordinary.
The lake is a world-renowned wonder. It was created about 7,700
years ago by the explosion of Mount Mazama. The remaining
caldera gradually filled with water. With a maximum depth of
1,932 feet, Crater Lake is the deepest lake in the United States
and seventh deepest in the world. Research indicates the lake
may also be the world's clearest.
Located high atop the Oregon Cascades, the park receives 533
inches of snow in a typical winter. While that total wasn't
reached this season, more than 400 inches was measured,
including a healthy dose of snow in March and April.
All
that snow means the opening of park roads, concession services,
campgrounds and trails will happen gradually. The Rim Village
cafeteria/gift shop is open year-round, but other facilities,
including Crater Lake Lodge, the Mazama Village store/gas
station/showers/motel, along with boat tours, two campgrounds
and Rim Village displays and buildings, will open as the snow
clears.
Park crews try to open the section of Rim Drive between Rim
Village and the North Entrance by late May or early June.
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Later in the summer, as the park emerges from its thick snow blanket, a full range of park services will be offered. Popular activities include concession lake boat tours at Cleetwood Cove, ranger-led nature hikes and evening talks, and drives around the 33-mile long Rim Drive.
Three renovated Rim Village buildings that reopened last summer
will offer some pleasant diversions for visitors, including the
Rim Village Visitor Center, Sinnott Memorial and Community
Building.
The visitor center is normally open from 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
daily once the snow clears. Crater Lake interpretive talks will
be given daily at the Sinnott Memorial, which is just a short
walk from the visitor center. Featured at the Sinnott is a new
informative $500,000 exhibit that offers interactive programs.
The community building will be used for various displays and
activities.
Beginning in June, and continuing until Labor Day, ranger-led
hikes will be offered at 2 p.m. daily. Hikes vary daily but
include Garfield Peak, Discovery Point and Annie Creek. Youth
ages 6 to 12 can participate in the Junior Ranger Program. Park
rangers will give 45 minute programs at 5 p.m. daily at the
Mazama Campground Amphitheater through late-August. Evening
campfire programs will be offered at Mazama Campground at 9 p.m.
through July 31, when they will begin at 8:30 p.m.
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A full
range of concession services will be offered from the Rim
Village cafe and gift shop, which is open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
The Crater Lake Lodge, with its 71 rooms, is scheduled to open
May 20. The Mazama Village store and gas station and the 40-room
Mazama Motor Inn, located near the park's South Entrance, will
open as soon as the snow clears.
Reservations for Crater Lake Lodge and the Mazama Motor Inn can
be made by calling (541) 830-8700 or 594-2211.
Crater Lake boat tours, with a park naturalist, will be offered
seven times a day, weather permitting, beginning in late June.
The drive from Rim Village to Cleetwood Cove and the 1.1-mile
hike to the boat dock takes about an hour. Tours last about two
hours.
Once the snow clears, camping will be available at Mazama
Campground, which has 198 tent and RV sites, and the less
developed Lost Creek Campground.
For more information about park conditions, including roads and
available programs and services, call the park at 594-3100 or
visit the park's Web site at www.nps.gov/crla/home.htm.