You may have heard of Mt. St. Helens. You know, that mountain that exploded back in 1980?
I took a class last fall called “Environmental Hazards of the Pacific Northwest” and as you might imagine, we ended up talking quite a bit about Mt. St. Helens. A couple of my friends took the class with me, so we’ve been planning to make a trip up to the actual mountain for a while now. We wanted to go over Spring Break, but the roads were still closed thanks to a pesky bit of weather called snow (we had to settle for “Danielle’s Excellent Gorge Adventure” instead, but more on that another time).
We finally got ourselves out there last weekend. I was there last two summers ago on fourth of July with my sister, and while I’m sure I probably had to pay for parking, I don’t remember paying to go into the observatory… and even if that was a thing back then I definitely don’t remember paying just to be on the trails, so that was a bit of a shock. We’d driven two hours to get there though, so there wasn’t much point in just turning around, plus I was finally out of the city (something that happens depressingly rarely now that I don’t own a car), so I was going to take full advantage.
I had seen the observatory several times before, so I encouraged my friends to go check that out while I got in the maximum amount of trail miles I could. I went to Harry’s ridge and back in just over two hours – because I ran most of it. It’s roughly an 8 mile out-and-back from the Johnston Ridge Observatory to a view of Spirit Lake and Harry Truman’s grave – the pieces of mountainside that completely buried him and his Spirit Lake Lodge when he refused to leave back in 1980. All-in-all it was a good time despite the extra unexpected fee and the scraped knee I got out of the deal.
Have you been to the summit?
Ah man, I wish! I have yet to summit any mountain actually, let alone Mt. St. Helens with all those special permits you need. I’m actually planning my first summit experience for the end of August or beginning of September this year – it’ll be Mt. Shasta.
Wow, Shasta’s a big volcano! Have fun! 🙂
It seems like every trip you go on you get a new battle wound 😛
Haha not quite every trip! You just hear about all of them because I’m often unreasonably proud of my battle wounds :p