Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 26, 1995
A Naturalist's View of Crater Lake
Lodge
By Erik Hendrickson and Steve Mark
The Crater Lake Lodge will reopen in
the spring of 1995 after four years of rehabilitation work. There are
just 71 guest rooms in the lodge, but all park visitors are welcome to
spend some time in the building. They can relax in the Great Hall, have
a meal in the dining room, examine a small exhibit room that centers on
the lodge's history, or wander around the grounds to contemplate Crater
Lake and its surroundings. As you might expect, there are many
opportunities for observation and study.
Landscaping adjacent to the lodge is a
lesser-known component of a more than $15 million rehabilitation
project. A separate landscape contract has been let in order to restore
lodge grounds impacted during four summers of construction. In addition
to historic and aesthetic criteria, the landscape plan addresses erosion
and species integrity as two other areas of emphasis.
The effects of erosion can be seen just
below the caldera rim. Roots of mature trees are exposed where the soil
in which they grew has been worn away. Small-scale erosion in areas
disturbed during construction and in newly planted beds is being checked
by an erosion control blanket. This consists of wood shavings and a
nylon net that will degrade in a few years with exposure to ultraviolet
light. Concerns that the net might entangle deer have been alleviated
upon observations that the animals traverse the blanket without
difficulty.
The genetic integrity of plants placed
around the lodge became a prime concern of consulting botanists. They
insisted that vegetation planted in the restored landscape be limited to
the floral gene pool of Crater Lake National Park. This would insure
better adaptation for survival in the harsh environment (deep snows,
long winters, dry summers, high elevation) of Rim Village, but also
might prevent introduction of non-native species or variants which
eventually could compete with native plants. All of the plants used in
this project have been propagated from seed collected in the park, or
from local cuttings.

Young hemlocks curl over as snow accumulates.
Illustration by Amy Mark, National Park Service files.
All three tree species evident around
the lodge are well adapted to the deep snows that fall at Crater Lake.
Mountain hemlock, Tsuga mertensiana, with its distinctive droopy
leader, is very flexible. Visitors in late fall or early spring might
see young hemlocks curling over as snow accumulates, or slowly springing
upright as the snow melts. Subalpine fir, Abies lasiocarpa, has
also evolved to bend with heavy snow and strong wind. Mature trees
display a distinctive spire-like silhouette, in part to shed snow and
cut wind resistance. Whitebark pines, Pinus albicaulis, can be
identified by clusters of five needles and very limber branches. They
are often perched right at the caldera's edge because their ecological
niche permits survival in exposed areas where there is less competition
from other species.
Contractors also transplanted a number
of shrubs into beds around the lodge. Perhaps more than the trees,
shrubs help blend the hotel with its surroundings because they can
soften vertical lines imposed by building facades and provide transition
between ground and structure. In utilizing a number of well adapted
shrubs around the Crater Lake Lodge, this also provides a way to learn
something about native plants.
Discovered only in 1896, the Crater
Lake currant, Ribes erythrocarpum, is found in only a few areas
outside park boundaries. This is a creeping shrub, and may form a large
mat with copper-colored flowers in July and red berries in late summer.
Waxy currant, Ribes cereum, by contrast, is more bushy and has
smoother leaf edges. It can also be distinguished by white or pinkish
flowers and yellowish red berries. Botanists found the waxy currant much
easier to propagate from in-park sources than Crater Lake currant,
perhaps because of its wide distribution at high elevation in dry, open
places.
Pinemat manzanita, Arctostaphylos
nevadensis, is a low, sprawling shrub that seldom grows more than a
foot high. It has red bark on its slender stems, and evergreen, leathery
leaves. This type of manzanita is also common along the Cleetwood Cove
Trail leading down to the lake. It is one of several shrubs frequently
browsed by deer.
Rubber rabbitbrush, Chrysothamnus
nauseosus, is a relatively small shrub, being six inches to two feet
in height. Its yellow flowers appear late in the summer and can be seen
along the Garfield Peak Trail and at places like the Wineglass near the
caldera's edge.

black twinberry
L. Howard Crawford, Nature Notes from Crater Lake, Vol.
8, No. 3 (September 1935), p. 7.
|
Sierra willow, Salix sitchensis,
and Bush honeysuckle,
Lonicera involucrata, both have long, large leaves, but they are
easy to tell apart in the late summer. The willow, which ordinarily
prefers wet habitats such as stream sides, develops seeds that give the
appearance of small bits of cotton. Bush honeysuckle (which is sometimes
called black twinberry) produces pairs of dark purple berries which are
a favorite food of the Clark's nutcracker, Nucrifraga columbiana.
These berries can stain the bird's beak bright purple, something which
is often seen around Rim Village where this species of honeysuckle is
common.
Botanists experienced difficulty in
locating Mountain maple, Acer glabrum, from which cuttings could
be obtained in the park. They eventually found several of these shrubs
in a moist area near the east rim drive. As a result, several mountain
maples can be seen near the southwest corner of the kitchen.
Mountain ash, Sorbus sitchensis,
is fairly common around the lodge. Shrubs planted in the 1930s are about
five feet tall, and in need of pruning. The leaves of mountain ash are
composed of seven to eleven leaflets end have a shiny green color. This
shrub produces red berries in the fall that are eaten by migrating cedar
waxwings, Bombycilla cedrorum.
Although they are the smallest
component of the landscape project, perennial wildflowers are, at times,
its most colorful. Like the shrubs, these herbs provide an understory
for trees and complement the grass-like native sedges. From midsummer
until late fall, a number of perennial wildflowers transplanted into
beds around the lodge may be seen.

columbine
Walter Rivers, Crater Lake Nature Notes, Vol. 14, No. 1
(1948), p. 11. |
As its name implies, the
pearl-everlasting, Anaphalis margaritacea,
has a long-lived flower. Its papery-white petals appear in July and last
until snowfall. Growing from one to two feet tall, it is commonly seen
along park roads where runoff creates moist conditions.
Visitors from the Rocky Mountains who
are familiar with the pastel to deep blue of columbines in that region
may be surprised to find the red and yellow Sitka columbine,
Aquilegia formosa, around the lodge. This species of columbine is
the only one in the park, but is common to forests along the Pacific
slope. It is frequently seen during July and August in the Cascade Crest
Wildflower Garden near Park Headquarters.

cascade aster
Rivers, op. cit.
|
Cascade aster, Aster ledophyllus
var. covillei, has purple flowers with approximately eight radiating
petals. This is the most common of the four asters in the park and was
easily propagated from seed for transplanting at the lodge. It is often
seen from July to September around the rim, usually in dry places.
Sulfur eriogonum, Erigonum
umbellatum, is found in dry areas throughout the park and is
sometimes known as wild buckwheat. This plant has small yellow flowers
atop a leafless four to twelve inch stem. Its paddle-shaped, silver
green leaves appear at the base. Another member of this genus,
Eriogonum pyrolaefolium var. coryphaeum, is somewhat similar in
appearance but has white flowers. E. pyrolaefolium is usually
known as Dirty socks because of its objectionable odor.
Cliff penstamon, Penstamon rupicola,
is an attractive woody plant with purplish pink flowers that grows in
rock crevices. Often found on ledges along the Garfield Peak Trail,
cliff penstamon has been planted in the rocks which help stabilize the
rootball of a mountain hemlock transplanted at the east end of the
lodge.
As intended, the trees, shrubs, and
flowers around Crater Lake Lodge combine to help blend the building with
its surroundings. Although they represent only a small part of the
park's flora, these species are also useful starting points in
demonstrating how organisms adapt to exposed places at higher
elevations. If nothing else, the plants adjacent to Crater Lake Lodge
demonstrate that life can persist in an environment where natural
succession is slow or even absent for long periods after disturbances
occur.

Amy Mark, NPS files
Erik Hendrickson is a structural
engineer with the National Park Service in Denver, Colorado. He helped
direct the rehabilitation of Crater Lake Lodge.
Steve Mark is the park historian at Crater Lake. He has been
editor of Nature Notes since its revival in 1992.