Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 22, 1956
A Journey Into Llaos Hallway
By Willis G. Downing, Ranger-Naturalist
Most visitors to Crater Lake National
Park are impressed by the geology of the rim wall and the story of the
collapse of a mighty mountain. The formation of Crater Lake did provide
an area worthy of preservation as a National Park. It is fortunate, too,
that the park boundaries include geologic formations outside the caldera
which, while not of National Park status in themselves, are of interest
to both the employees of the park and the visitors. The spectacular
gorges carved out of pumice and scoria flows by Annie, Castle, and Sand
Creeks are examples.
Llaos Hallway is a lesser chasm created
by Whitehorse Creek, a small tributary of Castle Creek. Erosion through
scoria deposits by the flowing of Whitehorse Creek has carved out a
chasm which is two hundred feet deep in some places, yet narrow enough
to be spanned at the top by outstretched arms.
Late in August of 1955 two of the fire
guards (Fred La Bar and Jim Pritchard) and I decided we would like to
take a journey into Llaos Hallway. After obtaining permission from the
rangers' office, we set out in Fred La Bar's Model A, whose
construction, by good chance, makes it an excellent vehicle to drive
through the pumice-laden, sand-like roads in the park. This time we did
not need to enter a fire road, but parked along the West Entrance road
alongside an emergency telephone.
As evidence of the fact that this was a
real first adventure for all of us, we did not immediately find
Whitehorse Creek, as we should have, but rather picked up an even
smaller stream-bed nearby which ran into Whitehorse Creek at a point
where the walls of Llaos Hallway were about fifty feet high. Whitehorse
was just a trickle.

"Llaos Hallway, N.P.S. photo."
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Now the moments of discovery began.
Stepping and jumping from rock to rock, we usually avoided getting wet.
In some spots there were drops of four to six feet which required adroit
cooperation or, perhaps, well placed jumps. We always kept in mind, of
course, the fact that we would want to ascend again what we had just
descended. In two spots we encountered snow banks protected even from
the hot summer sun by deep shade. These banks can sometimes present moot
problems. Should you go under them with the stream? Or are they strong
enough and situated so that it is best to go over them? We did both;
once we went under, and once over.
As we continued down this slit, the sky
looked farther and farther away. One hundred and fifty feet above us was
a crack and sunlight. Sometimes we could touch both walls at the bottom
with outstretched arms. But as we continued down, the canyon assumed a
teardrop, cavelike shape. It was obvious that stream action had been
undercutting and that the walls above us could fall in large or small
chunks at any time.
Toward the end of the Hallway, we saw
that this deduction was correct. A section of the wall ahead had
collapsed, damming up the stream and forming a pool about twenty feet in
width and forty feet long. We judged the water over six feet deep. This
water was so cold that even the intrepid explorer, Fred La Bar, was
persuaded that this should be the end of our venture. As we stood
contemplating the pool, rocks two to six inches in diameter fell into
the water from the walls above us. We were protected from their fall by
the overhanging nature of the wall above. Any rocks dislodged
immediately above us would have fallen only six to ten feet.
As we turned back, I felt that this was
not the place to let out with an ape cry or a Swiss yodel. This was
certainly an area of rapid erosion in terms of geologic time. We were
beneath a spot where a misplaced footstep of a golden-mantled ground
squirrel could cause a shower of medium sized rocks.
Continuing back up Llaos Hallway, we
saw curves and formations we had not seen before. For a trail traversed
from the opposite direction almost always reveals something overlooked
or unseen from the wall the other way.