by Cudedog » Sun Jul 23, 2017 10:39 am
You said that you wanted to loop around from the coast and then travel the Sierras on your way back south. Lassen is where the Sierras and the Cascades meet.
. . . And, if you like volcanoes. . . Lassen National Park contains all of the four main types of volcanoes: the Plug Dome, the Stratovocano (or composite cone), the Cinder Cone, and the Shield. The Lassen Park area is still considered to be volcanically "active" not dormant, or extinct. Lassen itself was the first United States volcano in the continental United States to erupt in the 20th century, Mt. St. Helen's was the second. Lassen Park is contains one of the the greatest number and variety of volcanically-driven thermal features in the United States, second only to Yellowstone.
If you are already at Lassen. . . just a couple of hours north of the Lassen area sits the mighty Medicine Lake Volcano, one of the oldest (an eruptive history of some five hundred thousand years) and largest volcanoes (it's "footprint" covers eight-hundred square miles) and most historically active volcanoes in the Cascade chain (although it is currently dormant, it will erupt again). The north-east area of the volcano comprises Lava Beds National Monument - with more than three hundred (!) lava tube caves awaiting your visit. With more caves still being discovered.
And what about Glass Mountain? Imagine, if you will, an entire slope of the Medicine Lake volcano, comprising some five square miles, made up of sparkling and beautiful black volcanic glass [obsidian]. Be careful, though - broken pieces of obsidian can be sharper than surgical steel - and have been used for surgery!
Amazing and not to be missed!
Great camping there - either at Medicine Lake itself (a beautiful caldera-depression lake, sheltered by massive conifers, located at the summit of the volcano), Lava Beds National Monument (at the foot of the volcano), or Hawk's Nest RV Park (I have stayed at Hawk's Nest many times) which is about five miles from the monument.
Amazing hiking opportunities at the volcano as well. The entire volcano is criss-crossed with U. S. Forest Service maintained gravel roads (including miles of trails on Glass Mountain). Buy the Forest Service map for this area before you go.
And the very best part? You can drive for miles on the paved and unpaved roads at the Medicine Lake volcano, and never see another soul. Perhaps a few people at the Monument, but there have never been more than a couple of dozen people at the Visitor's Center in the many times I have visited there.
And. . . if you are already at Medicine Lake volcano. . . why not go on for two or three more hours north to the exquisite and amazing Mt. Mazama volcano - home of Crater Lake National Park. As you drive north, you can see, far to the west, the glacier-covered slopes of beautiful Mt. Shasta volcano. The one time I visited Crater Lake, it was pretty much mobbed with people - but, still, a feast for the eyes not to be missed. And if you are keeping a tab of your volcano visits. . . as you leave the park out of the north exit. . . there is the lonely and majestic eroded spire of Mt. Theilsen volcano, looming in the distance.
Ah, volcanoes! Be still my heart!
Anne
Last edited by
Cudedog on Sun Jul 23, 2017 11:34 am, edited 1 time in total.