This has taken me forever to finally post because there are so many things I want to share, and our internet connection has not been cooperating! Last Tuesday was an incredible day. The weather was gorgeous and the views were amazing. I am so lucky to have had the opportunity to work on Mt. St. Helens... and it sounds like there might be another chance to go back up! We'll see how the rest of the summer pans out. For the rest of this post, though, I'm just going to upload pictures, and I'll include the stories in the captions. You can click on any of the pictures for a larger view.
We had a little bit of time to kill when we reached our landing site, so the other interns and I went to the Johnston Ridge Observatory, where there's an overlook. It was really foggy early in the morning, but our first view of the mountain was amazing!
The summit of St. Helens emerging from the fog. From Johnston Ridge Observatory (JRO).
The only way to travel!
The view of Mt. St. Helens from our landing site at the gravel yard.
Scientists waiting for their turn to fly. Ben is sitting on the tailgate with the handheld GPS unit. Mike is standing with his back to the camera- he's the one I worked with up on the mountain. Mt. St. Helens is in the background.
My first view of the volcanic landscape from the air. It's amazing how gray so much of the land still is, 30 years later.
Getting closer! The mountain sure is beautiful.
The North Fork of the Toutle River was dammed by the debris and pyroclastic flows of the 1980 eruption, which caused the water level of Spirit Lake to rise about 200 feet! The volcanic gases and debris nearly destroyed the lake, but today there are signs of life again, including fish (introduced by fishermen), birds, and plants. There are still trees floating in the water that were thrown there by the blast.
The glacier and snow melt and run down the mountain in streams and waterfalls.
The optical illusion as you fly into the crater is so strange! Everything is SO HUGE, it looks so close! But then you keep flying up, and up, and up... and nothing gets any closer! It just gets bigger.
My other favorite picture. I never got tired of the view from the crater! Mt. Rainier over Spirit Lake.
Here you can see the two domes a bit better. The lower mound (left) is '80-'86, the higher one is '04-'08. We're back in the helicopter and getting ready to fly back down.
This ridge was the first part of the dome built in 2004. It came up just like that (as a "whaleback"), and cut the glacier growing in the crater right in half!
What an incredible experience. I am really, really lucky to get to do such cool things. If you're still reading this, thanks for making it through a long one!