Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 19, 1953
Climb Mount Thielsen!
By Clifton E. Peterson, Ranger Naturalist, 1952

Mt. Thielsen is on the right. Photo by James Richards, Seasonal
Ranger, 1952.
Mount Thielsen, the magnificent pinnacle seventeen miles NNE of Rim Village,
always excites the interest of the visitor to Crater Lake National Park. This
pointed spire, commonly compared to the Matterhorn in Switzerland by the
European visitor, even though only 9,173 feet in elevation, beckons the
adventurous.
Mount Thielsen rests on a base of rocks uplifted from the ocean about 60
million years ago. Covering this, and rising to an elevation of 3-4 thousand
feet, is the same kind of basalt that makes up the Columbia River plateau. The
next several thousand feet are composed partially of lavas which may be referred
to as either basalts or andesites, the remainder being pumice and scoria.
Forming the mass of the barren pyramidal summit is a compact cinder-like
material which has been invaded by many basalt dikes. Through this tuff cone
projects the dark lava plug which forms the sharp projecting peak of the
mountain.
Mount Thielsen, like all volcanoes, is thus composed of materials thrown up
by its own eruptions. Intermittent eruptions began some 25 million years ago and
ceased sometime during the last of the Great Ice Ages, probably about one
million years ago. At that time the elevation of the summit was in excess of
10,000 feet. The ponderous, moving sheets of ice upon Mount Thielsen's slopes
ground away the top until, with the gradual warming of this continent, the
glaciers passed away.
The Skyline Trail to the summit of Mount Thielsen begins near the trailer
camp just off Hwy. 209, at the SE corner of Diamond Lake. The five mile trail to
the summit of Mount Thielsen fades as the solid rock near the top is reached,
but beyond this point the best route approaching the spire from the south should
be apparent. Except for the last 100 feet, which necessitates climbing upward at
an eighty degree angle utilizing crevices in the rocks as support, this trip
should present no problems to the average hiker using common sense. No ropes are
needed. The hike to the top will take 2-5 hours.
For the safety of hikers, it is desirable for them to state, on forms
available at the Forest Ranger Station 1.4 miles north from the trail entrance
along the Diamond Lake road, their intention to climb Mount Thielsen. At the end
of the hike they should return to the Ranger Station and note the successful
completion of the climb on the same form.
On the morning of August 8, 1952, our party of six started from the foot of
the Skyline Trail, packing canteens and lunches. The meadow at the start of the
trail changed rapidly to the dense forest of lodgepole pine which covers all the
lower slopes of the mountain. The few small open areas beside the trail were
filled with flowers. After a slight downward slope across the now dry Camp
Creek, the trail became steeper. From the deadened tramping of feet on the dry
pumice slopes little clouds of dust arose. We stopped to rest, discussing the
natural history unfolding before us. Juncos and western tanagers perched above
us.
We started upward again. Intermixed with the lodgepoles were a few ponderosa
pines, western white pines and firs. More and more mountain hemlocks were noted;
the elevation was becoming too high for the lodgepoles. Small pieces of pumice
covered the ground, replacing the pumice dust. More basalt was seen.
We passed across relatively open pumice slopes. Trees were fewer, and most of
these were white-bark pines. Then the pumice slope became barren of trees,
except for a few small scraggly white-bark pines struggling in a sterile and as
yet undeveloped soil. But sulphur flower, Newberry's knotweed, lovage, alpine
false dandelion, varied-leaved phacelis and other flowers brightened the area.
Each step forward was partly lost by sliding backwards, due to the softness and
slope of the trail.
Light colored, fragmented lava gradually replaced the pumice and the slope
increased. Here visible plant life was at a minimum. We passed by dark,
horizontally-layered remnants of the old tuff cone projecting high into the air.
To the south and southeast the tuffs dip steeply for the most part. This
material gave a better foothold for climbing than was available upon the
fragmented lava.
A depressed area in the sloping tuff to the west of the spire, cut by water
from melting snows, was heavily populated by the golden long-leaved arnica,
bleeding heart, Davidson's penstemon, long-stemmed penstemon, lovage, and, more
rarely, Lewis' monkey flower, Jacob's ladder and five-finger.
As we neared the top, rests were more frequent. We approached the base of the
summit pinnacle from the south--the only readily accessible route to the top. A
few dwarfed white-bark pines grow near the base of this last obstacle to a
successful climb.
The last 100 feet was almost straight up, and it was necessary to pull
oneself up by handholds in the rock. I was carrying the pack containing the
lunches. Trying to hug the bare rock for that last hundred feet, the feeling of
being pulled off-balance and away from the rock by the pack, the strange feeling
at looking off into a void from this precarious position -- well, nothing can
quite compare to it.
The view from the top was spectacular! To the north we saw a storm-lightning
and thunder and drenching rainfall. Westward, the slopes of Mount Thielsen fall
off toward shallow Diamond Lake, lying 4,000 feet below. Beyond the lake is the
broad-shouldered volcano, Mount Bailey. Eastward, the slopes of Mount Thielsen
lead gradually down to the broad basaltic plateau of central Oregon and across
the marshlands where graze 150,000 cattle. To the north, the Three Sisters are
easily visible, and to the south, across Pumice Desert, is the grandeur of the
rising slopes in which nestles Crater Lake. Fully one-third of Crater Lake is
visible beyond its precipitous rim. Far, far to the south, the snow-capped peak
of Mount Shasta is dimly seen through the slight haze, 140 miles away in
California.
The top of Mount Thielsen is a small area about 9x14 feet. This is where we
ate our lunch. The wind was blowing with that eerie sound to be heard around
barren rocks in high places. To the NE and ESE of this platform are sheer drops
of 1,600 feet into barren valleys containing masses of glacial debris. These
valleys were formed as glacial cirques ages ago. Far down, 1,900 feet below,
mighty springs can be seen gushing from the side of the valleys, the waters of
which wend their way across forested valleys, eventually to reach the Pacific.
We prepared to leave. All around as far as the eye could see were foresee and
lakes and mountains, certainly defying description, almost defying belief.
Except for the very intriguing first portion of the descent, the trip down was
uneventful.
For the visitor to Oregon, the climb up Mount Thielsen will provide a
memorable experience.
Reference
Williams, Howell 1933. Mount Thielsen: A dissected Cascade volcano.
University of California, Berkeley. Bulletin of the Department of Geological
Sciences 23: 195-214.