Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 21, 1955
Views From Sinnott Memorial
By Willis G. Downing, Ranger Naturalist

Looking toward Mt. Scott from Sinnott Memorial
From
Kodachrome by Welles & Welles
If the name Sinnott Memorial is
mentioned, most park visitors and employees think at once of the
excellent views of Crater Lake to be had from that point and of the art
and photograph exhibits in the room behind the lookout platform. This,
of course, is the reason for the existence of this observation post. It
is there to enable all who visit Crater Lake to better appreciate its
meaning -- scientific, scenic, and aesthetic.
To the ranger naturalists who stand
duty there, the lake and the wall around it are of continual interest.
The lake is never the same. Even if it were, no single viewing of Crater
Lake would impart complete understanding to the viewer.
Some of the questions that visitors ask
at Sinnott Memorial are about the area just below and around this
observation point. Many interesting and sometimes unusual observations
of mammal and bird life have been made from Sinnott Memorial; for
example, the viewing of swimming eagles on different occasions by Dr.
George C. Ruhle (Farner, 1952) and Ranger Naturalist John Mees (1954). I
have enjoyed watching some of the more usual antics and habits of the
smaller mammals around Sinnott Memorial. Any one of the smaller animals
in that vicinity can be an absorbing study in itself.
The golden-mantled ground squirrels are
very much in evidence all during the day. I have often marveled at their
lack of appreciation of the approximately 900-foot drop to the lake
surface from Sinnott Memorial. I have seen them scamper along the stone
wall at the edge of Sinnott Memorial and take a flying leap into midair.
They invariably land on some small crag of rock along the steep outer
wall. Then they will jump from one small outjutting to another until
they reach the more level ground west of Sinnott Memorial.
They leap, too, from rock to rock along
the slide area east of this observation post. Now and then one
golden-mantled ground squirrel will chase another away from some source
of food. In the process of rapid movement, he will dislodge a rock, and
a rock slide begins. At the beginning of the summer season, streams from
melting snow caused larger rocks to roll down this slope. When the snow
disappears, minor erosion continues as ground squirrels and an
occasional marmot dislodge smaller rocks from the slopes.
Like the ground squirrels, the marmots
have no fear of the drop to the lake surface. They do not jump from rock
to rock as do the squirrels, but scamper up the steep slide area east of
Sinnott Memorial. They seem startled when their movements start the
rolling of a rock downhill. Marmots are also agile in their movements on
rocks. They often climb and lie upon rocks a hundred feet or so below
Sinnott Memorial.
One of my rarer views of a marmot in
action was obtained on the grassy slope just west of the walk leading
down to Sinnott Memorial. Ranger Naturalist Edward Burnham first noticed
a young marmot nibbling at the head of a sedge. The marmots along the
rim usually avoid approaching humans. This one seemed an exception. He
continued working his way up the slope, standing, grabbing stalks of
sedge in his two front paws, and eating the seeds. Many visitors
photographed this unusual sight as the marmot approached within two or
three feet of the wall beside the walk.
To the interested observer, the slopes,
slides, and rocks around Sinnott Memorial can provide surprising
discoveries about the habits and ventures of golden-mantled ground
squirrels, marmots, and other small mammals that live thereabouts.
Literature Cited
Farner, Donald S. 1952. The Birds of
Crater Lake National Park.
Lawrence, University of Kansas Press. xi, 187 pp.
Mees, John. 1954. Unusual eagle
experiences. Nature Notes from Crater Lake 20:5-6.