JudyJB wrote:I found a neat volcano where you could drive to the top. I checked the website, and it said there was an $18 fee for vehicles over 26 feet to drive up to the top of the volcano because they close the road to other traffic so you can make the turns. Going to do that on Thursday. There was a volcano in Oregon where I could not drive up, so I was very happy to hear I could do this, even with the fee.
Ok, Judy,
DISH!!I know that there are an almost unbelievable number of volcanoes (active, dormant or extinct) in the Cascades (the mountain range that runs up the west coast of the United States, from northern California to British Columbia). Literally hundreds, if one also counts cinder cones (which I do, because a cinder cone, although generally monogenetic, is considered one of the four main types of volcano).
There are also many volcanoes in the Cascades that one can "drive up":
Lassen Peak
https://www.nps.gov/lavo/index.htm,
Mt. Mazama (Crater Lake)
https://www.nps.gov/crla/index.htm, Newberry, Medicine Lake all come to mind. And the list goes on.
However, since I am always up for a new "volcano adventure" (if anyone wonders why, please click on my link below), would LOVE to know the name of the specific volcano you are referring to in your post. I am SO ready to go there!
As an aside, as you probably know, the pending Eagle Lake GTG is in a heavily volcanic area of northern California.
For those who are interested in volcanoes, there are several within a relatively short drive of Eagle Lake. I can not fail to mention here
Lassen Volcanic National Park
https://www.nps.gov/lavo/index.htm (a short distance away from Eagle Lake), which includes the four main types of volcano: the cinder cone (as mentioned above), the plug dome (Lassen is the largest plug dome volcano in the world), the stratovolcano and the shield. Lassen Volcanic National Park is well worth a visit - I have visited there many times.
And, remember, Lassen Peak is considered to be an
active volcano, and has the largest area of hydrothermal features in the United States (boiling lakes, steam vents, mud pots - the works), second only to Yellowstone. Lassen last erupted a only little more than one hundred years ago. A mere blink in geologic time.
If anyone is interested in Lassen or the general area of Eagle Lake, feel free to PM me.
Anne