Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 19, 1953
Lost Creek Ski Patrol
By Richard M. Ward, Park Ranger
Each year a crew of rangers makes a
patrol to the Lost Creek Cabin (East Entrance). This patrol is made
primarily to remove the snow from the roof of the cabin, which would
otherwise be crushed. The total depth of snow to be removed has varied
from a record of eleven feet, in the spring of 1952, to a low of four or
five feet. This year the depth was approximately seven feet.
The morning of February 11, 1953, was
clear and cold - - ideal weather for a ski patrol. I say ski patrol;
actually we used a Tucker Sno-Cat as much as possible. On the trip to
Lost Creek it is possible to use the Sno- Cat for four miles, thus
leaving three miles to be skied.
The rangers on the patrol this year
were Paul Turner, Verne Bertsch, and Richard Ward. We left Park
Headquarters at 8:00 A.M., in the Sno-Cat and proceeded out the East
Entrance road to the Vidae Falls truck trail. We then traveled this road
to the point where it starts around the flank of Dutton Ridge. Here we
parked, took time for a cup of coffee, put on our skis and started
around the ridge.
The day was beautifully clear, so the
three of us were busy taking color shots of Union Peak, Klamath Lake and
other interesting features. About one and a half hours after leaving the
Sno-Cat we reached the point where the rest of the trip was downhill.
Here we stopped for lunch, as it was almost noon. We also took several
pictures of Mt. Scott with its covering of snow. We always look forward
to that stretch of the trip from Dutton Ridge to the Lost Creek Cabin as
it is downhill all the way. (I make the above statement only from the
standpoint of "going over" because "coming back" the slope seems ten
times steeper up than it does down.) We put on our skis after lunch and
started down. Luck was with us as we had almost ideal snow conditions.
At first we encountered a few patches of ice, but we soon worked our way
out of it onto a stretch of powder snow about three inches seep,
arriving at the cabin early in the afternoon.
The first job was to dig out the stove
pipes and to shovel the snow from the cabin door. Finding the stove
pipes was a big job in itself. We knew approximately where they were, so
we started digging. After removing about seven feet of snow we found the
ridge; then we started down the slope of the roof and, as the snow had
pushed the pipe over, we had to search for it. This took some more
digging. By the time the pipe was dug out and straightened we had worked
up an appetite. While the stove pipes were being dug out, one man gained
access to the door of the cabin and laid the fire. At the signal that
the pipes were clear, the fire was started.

Ranger Bertsch standing in the initial cut in
the snow.
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The cabin was like a deep freeze when
we first went inside, but after a few minutes it started to warm up and
all thoughts turned to food. Each man picked his specialty and started
to cook. The food had been stored late in the fall in mouse-proof
containers and, although many of the items were frozen, it was in good
condition. After a good meal, the dishes were washed, more snow
shoveled, beds were made, fires were built up, and then to bed.
Next day the routine was as follows: Up
in the morning, after some discussion as to who would get up and build
the fires and start breakfast (hot cakes and bacon). After breakfast
snow removal. We divided the roof into sections and shoveled trenches
all the way to the roof, eave to eave and over the top; then using a
saw, sections were cut off and rolled clear of the roof. This soon
becomes back breaking work. The snow removal continued all day, with
short breaks for coffee and lunch.
As soon as it started to get dark we
had dinner of wieners, potatoes, peas, biscuits with butter and jam, and
peaches - - all washed down with lots of coffee. We all "hit the sack"
early - - to rest our sore and tired muscles.
The morning of the third day we were up
bright and early, ate breakfast and finished the roof. We had an early
lunch, put out the fires, locked the building, put on our skis and
started back up the steep mountainside to the Sno-Cat. For this climb we
used "seal skins", a mohair material fastened to the ski bottoms that
allows a skier to climb a slope without sliding back. After several
hours we reached the top of Dutton Ridge and had a candy bar and a cup
of coffee. We only had a little way to go now, with some excellent
downhill skiing. Soon we saw the Sno-Cat - - and it was a welcome sight.
Ranger Turner started the motor, we had another chocolate bar, and then
settled back for a comfortable ride back to Headquarters.