View of Mt. Lassen from inside the crater of Cinder Cone, Aug 2016. |
Except perhaps for Redwood National Park ,
I've been to Lassen more times than any park in the National Park System.
Thursday the 25th of August was the official one hundredth birthday
of the NPS. Lassen too is celebrating its 100th birthday this year. But can a
few trips alone do justice to any of the west’s marvelous parks? The weekend
following the centennial birthday party, I visited a new corner of Lassen: the
northeasterly Butte
Lake .
Persicaria (left) and Sagittaria (right) in Butte Lake. |
I kayaked around some of the northern end of the lake.
Visibility wasn't great, and the water had a greenish hue probably due to
plankton or other suspended particulates in the water. But it was refreshingly
cool, which was very welcome given the dry and dusty surrounding landscape.
Some of the shores supported tiny wetlands comprised of typical marsh plants
such as Juncus (a rush) and Carex (a sedge). In the shallows at the
edge of the lake there were also submerged aquatic plants, such as the floating
Persicaria. A few of them displayed
short spikes of pink flowers above the water surface. Intermixed, but in less
abundance, were the floating arrowhead-shaped leaves of Sagittaria. At the tiny wetland near the boat launch, dragonflies
and wasps were abundant. Water striders balanced on the surface tension of the
water, distorting the surface and thereby leaving unusual shadows on the muddy
bottom.
To the south of Butte
Lake , lies the conical Cinder
Cone, one of the types of volcanoes contained in the park. It is a dark grey heap
of barren gravel and rubble, set cleanly on the Lassen landscape like a pile of
sugar dispensed from a heavenly hand. A hiking trail leads from Butte Lake
to the east side of the mountain, rising quite steeply from the base up to the
rim of the crater. Incredibly, a few trees have taken root on the outside of
the cinder cone, where no real soil seems imaginable. A larger number of
conifers can be found just inside the lip of the rim where water possibly
collects and the wind may be less harsh. The base of the crater is perhaps a hundred
meters below the rim, the interior shaped like a funnel inside the mountain.
The Milky Way, with a silhouette of Cinder Cone at bottom center. |
Saturday night after the darkening sky began to reveal an
abundance of stars I ventured out to the rubble volcanic barrens next to the
lake to photograph the sky. During about an hour and a half of photography, I
noted some half dozen to a dozen shooting stars. The Milky Way spread in a luminous
arc above, a wide ribbon stretching from south to north across the sky busy
with so many stars.
References
US Geological Survey. 1995. Prospect Peak ,
CA. 1:24000 topographic map.
Lake Helen and Lassen Peak. |
Shadow from a water strider on the bottom of Butte Lake. |
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