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Thursday, August 13, 2020

Crater Lake

This month is six years since my visit to fabulous Crater Lake National Park in Oregon. America's deepest lake at nearly 2000 feet in depth, it sits inside the collapsed caldera of an ancient volcano. Wizard Island near the west side of the lake is a volcano within a volcano. The lake is fed entirely by rain and snow. The amount falling in each year is nearly equal to what evaporates of leaks out the bottom. Crater Lake is what I can only describe as being impossibly blue. Pictures don't do it justice.

Crater Lake seen from West Rim Drive

In addition to the lake, the park also features forests, wildflower meadows, waterfalls, pumice deserts, cinder cones, and formations called pinnacles. The pumice deserts were formed by volcanic eruptions depositing pumice. Like sand, it drains very well so there is little moisture retained in the ground. Like in a true desert, only the hardiest plants can scratch out a living. 

Pumice desert

The pinnacles were originally volcanic steam vents. As gas and steam were released, moisture mixed with the surrounding ash and formed a thick cement. Mount Mazama, the ancient volcano that formed Crater Lake, had its last major eruption 7700 years ago. Following a massive eruption of ash and pumice, a huge explosion caused the mountain to collapse into itself. 

Wizard Island, a caldera within a caldera
Red Cinder Cone, a shadow of the volcanic past

While visiting Crater Lake, I got to do a bit of exploring. I started a sunset hike up The Watchman, one of the peaks along the crater's rim. I got turned around by an incoming thunderstorm. On another hike across the pumice prairie and through a burned forest, I turned around when I lost sight of the horizon with more storms in the forecast. I went down into a canyon along a mountain stream and back up, saw the pinnacles, a waterfall, and small meadow with varying degrees of wetness. Different wildflowers were growing in different areas due to elevation, soil, and moisture levels- a great example of zonation.

Some of the wildlife in the park includes Clark's nutcracker, golden mantled ground squirrels, mule deer, black bears, foxes, bobcats, and pika. I was lucky enough to see the ground squirrel, deer, gray jays, and a tiny frog.

After leaving Crater Lake, I headed to the coast and stayed at the Oregon Dunes. There was no activity at the Sea Lion Caves nearby. The next stop before going home was a quick visit to Mount Hood. I stank after a week in the woods without showers, but the adventure was worth it. This week's information comes from USGS and NPS. All photos are my own. I'll be taking a break for vacation and will return in September with a look at some hard workers, just in time for Labor Day.

Friday, August 7, 2020

Species of the Month

Introduction: World Elephant Day is next week, so to celebrate we’re profiling one of the world’s three
elephant species. In addition to the Asian elephant, did you know there are two different African
elephants? There’s the forest elephant and the more commonly known bush elephant, the August
Species of the Month.
African bush elephant (Wikipedia)
 
Scientific name: Loxodonta africana
Kingdom: Animalia (animals)
Class: Mammalia (mammals)
Order: Proboscidea (elephants)
Range: Central and southern Africa
Habitat: Savannah, forest, deserts
Lifespan: 60-70 years
Diet: Grasses, herbs, fruit, tree leaves, and tree twigs, roots, and bark
Predators: Lions, African wild dogs, hyenas, crocodiles, humans
Mother and calf (Wikimedia Commons)
Conservation Status: Elephants are listed as vulnerable on the IUCN red list. They are threatened under
the US Endangered Species Act.
Other Information: The African bush elephant is the largest land mammal in the world. An adult male
can weigh over six tons with a shoulder height of ten feet. Adult males live alone or in small groups,
while females and calves will form a larger herd led by a matriarch. Calves are raised communally
and are totally dependent on maternal care for several months. They reach full independence around
eight years old. Elephants don’t grow their tusks until after they’re a year old and the baby teeth fall
out. They also have a conveyor belt of six molars that wear out and fall out, allowing the next in line
to move forward. After losing the last molars, they can no longer eat properly. The large ears are great
for hearing, but also dissipate heat. Elephants are very mobile with a large range because of the
massive amount of food they need to eat. They can drink up to 50 gallons of water a day. Mud and
dust baths help them keep cool. Predators mainly go after small calves that fall behind the rest of the
herd. The greatest challenges facing elephants are caused by humans. Development has caused habitat
loss, and keep in mind these giants need a lot of room to roam. Poaching is also a serious threat. Most
elephants are confined to protected areas, limiting their population sizes. However, even at a protected
reserve elephants aren’t safe from poachers.
Young elephants at the watering hole (Sierra Club)
This week’s information comes from Animal Diversity Web.