Crater Lake

PCT 2018 Day 79, July 10, Tuesday

Start mile 1810.2, campsites

End mile 1837.2, campsites

Miles walked: 27.0

I walk quickly to Mazama Village and arrive at 8:30AM to pick up my food box, but the staff says I need to wait until 9, so I go over to the restaurant for a well-deserved breakfast. But there is a line waiting, and breakfast takes a while, too late to do laundry and hike to my campsite after seeing Crater Lake. See, the park service restricts where hikers can camp within the park, and I looked ahead to the few camping sites available.

Back to the camp store I get my food box and repack to my food bag. Magic Bean, Viking, Phelps, Spacejam, and I hang out at the Mazama picnic tables, snacking and doing prep.

I struggled with Xanterra’s paid wifi, so slow that I could barely download any podcasts. (Xanterra is the concessionaire for most of the large national parks.)

Viking shows off his 40 pound pack. After a few more miles of steep climb up to the rim trail, the view makes the minor hassles of the morning irrelevant. Crater Lake is in a caldera, an old exploded and collapsed volcano. The stunning blue is real, not merely an artifact of photography. The water clarity is 143 feet, said to be a world record. The maximum distance across the lake is 6 miles. You can see reflections of clouds in the water. Wizard’s Island is a cinder cone within the caldera. Down below, a tourist boat moves past. We are really up high on the rim. Magic Bean and I stop at a campsite 8 miles within the park boundary, with mosquitos getting too bad to enjoy walking further. Viking and several section hikers are already there. Magic Bean models her long netting poncho, which she uses for cowboy camping.

Video bonus: pan across Crater Lake

Author: Jim, Sagebrush

Jim (trail-name Sagebrush) codes audio software for Windows, Linux, Android, and embedded systems. When not working at sagebrush.com, he enjoys backpacking, which this blog is about.