Walking on Crater
Herald and News
Klamath Falls, Oregon
February 21, 2006
By LEE JUILLERAT
Not many people walk on water, especially on Crater Lake.
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Duane Fitzgerald. |
But Duane “Do-We” Fitzgerald did.
It was March 14, 1949, when Fitzgerald, Crater Lake National
Park's acting chief ranger, and George Ruhle, the park's chief
naturalist, climbed down the caldera walls and walked across the
frozen lake to Wizard Island.
“I knew that come summer we were going to get questions about
how deep the ice was,” recalls the 91-year-old Fitzgerald.
Fitzgerald, who has lived in Corvallis since the early 1950s,
remembers the day and reason for the never-duplicated walk:
“People had heard the lake was frozen, and it was the first time
that it ever had as far as we knew.”
Historically, Crater Lake does not
freeze because of its depth - it is nearly 2,000 feet at its
deepest point.
But during the winter of 1948-49, a combination of occurrences,
including temperatures that stayed below zero for several days,
allowed the upper levels of the lake to freeze. It's the only
known time the lake has been completely frozen.
Ruhle wrote about the walk in the
September 1949 issue of the park newsletter, “Nature Notes.”
“... the lake not only was
completely covered by a sheet of ice, but this ice was strong
enough to support a significant blanket of snow. For over three
months, from mid-February to mid-May, park visitors beheld a
white expanse in place of the sapphire sea so justly famous.”
Ruhle's story, which was reproduced in the 2002 issue of the
Shaw Historical Library Journal, “The Mountain With a Hole in
the Top: Reflections on Crater Lake,” has been told before.
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Photo courtesy
Crater Lake National Park Museum & Archives Collections
Duane “Do-We” Fitzgerald, third from left, gathered with
other Crater Lake rangers in 1941. George Ruhle, who
accompanied Fitzgerald on the 1949 frozen lake walk, is
shown at far right. |
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Photo courtesy
Duane Fitzgerald family
Duane Fitzgerald was photographed walking on cross
country skis on the frozen, fog-shrouded lake by hiking
partner George Ruhle March 14, 1949. |
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Photo courtesy
Crater Lake National Park Museum & Archives Collections
Crater Lake as it looked during the winter of 1949 when
it was completely frozen —the only known time in park
history. |
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