The deepest, clearest, most astonishingly blue water anywhere
Quote:
Originally Posted by
glc
Crater Lake.
Indeed it is, George--one of my favorite places, all the way around.
This picture is taken from essentially the same vantage point as those first two. I was on the east side of the crater, looking to the southwest. The rugged shoreline here looks a little different than the image of Crater Lake that most folks who have been there carry in their memory.
https://www.roadtripamerica.com/blog...4-DSC01217.jpg
A little further down the road, I'm sure the view is getting more familiar. I won't pretend that I never brighten the colors in my photos, but in this case, that impossible shade of blue is as real as it gets.
https://www.roadtripamerica.com/blog...5-DSC_5614.jpg
Around the other side of the lake, closer to the Visitor's center, is the view that's instantly recognizable: Wizard Island, a little volcano growing out of the collapsed, water-filled caldera of what was once the biggest volcano in the region
https://www.roadtripamerica.com/blog...6-DSC_5650.jpg
Depending on cloud cover and the angle of the sun, there are certain times of day when the crater looks as if it's filled with sky and clouds, rather than water...
https://www.roadtripamerica.com/blog...7-DSC01157.jpg
https://www.roadtripamerica.com/blog...8-DSC_5657.jpg
It would be pretty tough to take a bad picture of Crater Lake. Especially if you're out there at sunset.
https://www.roadtripamerica.com/blog...9-DSC01201.jpg
I camped in my Jeep in the National Park, and I got an early start the next day. What that meant, in practical terms: I also got some great pictures of the sunrise, from the exact same spot!
https://www.roadtripamerica.com/blog...0-DSC_5861.jpg
Crater Lake is one of those places that you really have to see for yourself. My photos do a reasonably good job of capturing the scenery. What they don't capture is the feeling you get when you're standing out there, with the sun coming up over all that grandeur. That's the kind of thing that makes it worth getting up in the morning!
Rick
Whatever you do, don't spook the cows!
Okay, now put on your blindfolds, (or pull your face masks up over your eyes) and spin 'round in circles until I yell stop.
Ready?
Or not! stop peeking!...keep spinning...
Boom! And just like that, here we are...where? Somewhere else altogether!
This is a canyon:
https://www.roadtripamerica.com/blog...0-DSC_8631.jpg
No, really--it IS a canyon, and it even has a bottom to it:
https://www.roadtripamerica.com/blog...0-DSC_8610.jpg
From rim to rim, it's filled with gorgeous hoo doos, fins, and spires that look almost (but not quite) like a rather more famous canyon that's a couple hundred miles away (as the crow flies):
https://www.roadtripamerica.com/blog...1-DSC_8634.jpg
Still not sure? Here's your clue:
https://www.roadtripamerica.com/blog...3-DSC_8646.jpg
What, no instant flash of recognition? No sage nods of certainty?
(Psst: they think you're kidding!)
(Who, me? Never! Or at least, not this time.)
Seriously, the windmill is a real clue, so after you've identified the Mystery Canyon, tell us why the windmill matters.
Rick