Today it will be 3 weeks that I have been back from Korea. Almost one month. Time is passing by so fast... *sigh*
Two weeks ago, it was Friday the Fourth of July : Independence Day. National holiday here in the USA, but for me it meant one day of weekend more to spend with LJ and jippie hey - going on a short road trip to Northern California. For the occasion I even wore my funky USA top :).
Our main destination was Lassen Volcanic National Park. LJ wanted to go there for quite some time, because he has always been fascinated by volcanoes - while I just love hiking and want to eat my 'boterhammen met choco' on the mountain top :)).
So as I was telling, destination Lassen.... As usual, we did not really do a lot of preparations : just rented a car, packed some stuff in a rush and just left like that. Going on holidays is easy, if you have nothing really planned in your head except for the destination. No stress, just one goal :).
Bumpass Hell and Cold Boiling Lake
Bumpass Hell is a geothermal site in the park, where you can find terminal geysers, mud pools, boiling lakes,... as THE evidence that miles and miles underneath our feet the heart of mother earth is still alive and kicking. Imagine yourself walking around in an environment surrounded with the odor of rotten eggs and stinky damps ;p. In our opinion, not as worse as in Rotorua - the city that really smells like rotten eggs - New Zealand, where the people actually are living in that kind of stench day in day out.
After the geothermal site, we headed for some lakes in the surrounding area, most of them formed by melting water from the mountains. Beautiful landscapes with yellow, red and purple wild flowers :).
Mount Lassen Peak and crater - 3187m
During the hike we could see some of the smoke hanging low above the mountains, as we heard it from someone, that those were not clouds but smoke from the fires. (The annual firework for the 4th of July in Red Bluff was even postponed because of fire hazard. ToOO bad, because there was nothing else to do in Red Bluff but sleeping in our motel room :))
Most of the snow already melted but some of the glaciers were still intact. As for climate is changing and because of global warming, we might not see some of these glaciers anymore within a few years. We could hear the melting water streaming 'invisibly' underneath the glacier blanket; for us it was the first time to experience a melting ice mass like that.
From the peak, you could see some dead wasteland - an area with almost no vegetation around the volcano - resulted from the last volcanic eruption back in 1915. Although the last eruption was almost 100 years ago, in 'earth' terms, this is a quite recent one. The most know recent eruption known in the States is the 1980 Mt. Saint Helens, still being active today.
After the peak - and having lunch there of course - we walked to the crater : a large rough moonscape landscape - no words to describe how it feels to be at the edge for what was once a living volcano. I will just leave the impressions to the pictures, but even then the scenery was too big to really capture the essence of it on image.
1 comment:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GSN9TXMMrmI
here's a better version of the yama wa ikite iru.
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