Crater Lake National Park News
Crater Lake Institute - www.craterlakeinstitute.com
Using cross country skis or snowshoes, one can experience Crater Lake's winter wilderness
Herald and News
Klamath Falls, Oregon
February 02, 2004
by LEE JUILLERAT
Ooooow, the moods.
On a snowy, blustery day when the sound of the wind brushing
through trees echoes like a chorus of groans, and when wispy fog
offers only taunting, teasing views of the lake and Wizard
Island, Crater Lake National Park is truly a mystical and
mystical place.
Happily, it doesn't require a long trek from the Rim Village
parking area to experience a sense of Crater Lake's winter
wilderness.
In a prolonged winter season when most park roads, including Rim
Drive, are clogged and closed by snow, the best ways to travel
into the park's quickly remote winter wilderness is on cross
country skis or snowshoes.
Winter
at Crater Lake is a season of unpredictable discoveries. While
the road to the rim may be sunny, it's not uncommon to find the
rim a whirling maelstrom of chilling winds and snow, and
lake-shrouding fog along the lake's edge.
The wind, fog and snow often combine to create tantalizing
sights. Prevailing winds layer snow at unusual angles. On some
slopes, the lee facing side can be mushy soft and waist deep,
causing skiers and snowshoers to wallow in powdery quicksand.
But, on the opposite edge, the surface is often glazed, iced and
compacted.
Textures of snow are often radically different. Some is pure
powder, some has the consistency popcorn. Other times, or other
places, the snow may be fractured like slivers of shave ice or
bloated like pieces of styrofoam.
Even the trees - towering ponderosa pines, tipsy-topped hemlocks
and gnarly whitebark pines - evoke different moods in winter.
Wind-blasted snow plastered on tree bark creates dramatic and
irregular patterns, highlighting the quilt-like surface.
Along the rim, especially at "The Corrals," the overlook beneath
The Watchman, wind-blasted trees transform into "snow ghosts" as
layer upon layer of fallen and blown snow is frozen into place,
like giant heapings of vanilla ice cream.
A different sort of beauty is created in areas with less dense
accumulations, where traces of snow fast-freeze on limbs,
branches, cones and needles.
Dramatic and subtle shifts in the weather continually create a
kaleidoscope of patterns, sounds and sights. And because heavy
snows immediately transforms the park into a wilderness just
steps away from its few snow-cleared roads, wintry Crater Lake
is a landscape of many moods.