camping my life away...
Jul. 15th, 2005 01:47 pmIt's not quite as snowy now, as it's mid-July, but this is Mt. Shasta, which at 14,162ft (4,312m) is the second largest volcano in the Cascade mountain range, only a few hundred feet shorter than Mt. Rainier (14,410/4,392) up by Seattle. At the
Mendocino Triple Junction, the San Andreas runs out to sea to make room for the Juan de Fuca plate to jam in between the Pacific and the North American Plates, and it is that action of the Juan de Fuca plate subducting under the North American that caused these giant mountains to form -- Lassen, Hood, St. Helens, Rainier, Baker, Adams, Glacier, Jefferson, the Three Sisters, Crater Lake, and of course, Shasta.
The town in the picture is called Mt. Shasta City, and it's where I sit right now, in an internet cafe, getting my net.fix. I'll have to go back to camp in a little bit (the trip was ostentatiously for the purpose of getting
jillcaligirl to print her genealogy stuff. But I can log in too.)
It's a little harder, the campout this year, because we have all the relatives that my great-grandparents left behind in Minnesota, people like my Uncle Peanut and Uncle Junior, and their families. And if you ever hear
jrenken do his Minnesota Accent, well, I was listening to my relatives talk, and my first thought is "Ohmigod, Cal nailed it."
My mom is still being annoying at times, and she gets frustrated when we don't leap to attention, but that's normal. And I got sunburned, but that's pretty normal too.
Oh yeah, I meant to mention and didn't. Mom turned one yesterday. That is, it's been a year since her stem-cell bone marrow transplant. We survived the first year, and now if we could just stop the arsenic related problems, we'd be doing really well. :)
Anyway, having fun. It turns out that SMS doesn't reach me as well, either in Mt. Shasta City or out at Lake Siskiyou where I'm staying, so my phone is just a phone. Blah.
Mendocino Triple Junction, the San Andreas runs out to sea to make room for the Juan de Fuca plate to jam in between the Pacific and the North American Plates, and it is that action of the Juan de Fuca plate subducting under the North American that caused these giant mountains to form -- Lassen, Hood, St. Helens, Rainier, Baker, Adams, Glacier, Jefferson, the Three Sisters, Crater Lake, and of course, Shasta.The town in the picture is called Mt. Shasta City, and it's where I sit right now, in an internet cafe, getting my net.fix. I'll have to go back to camp in a little bit (the trip was ostentatiously for the purpose of getting
It's a little harder, the campout this year, because we have all the relatives that my great-grandparents left behind in Minnesota, people like my Uncle Peanut and Uncle Junior, and their families. And if you ever hear
My mom is still being annoying at times, and she gets frustrated when we don't leap to attention, but that's normal. And I got sunburned, but that's pretty normal too.
Oh yeah, I meant to mention and didn't. Mom turned one yesterday. That is, it's been a year since her stem-cell bone marrow transplant. We survived the first year, and now if we could just stop the arsenic related problems, we'd be doing really well. :)
Anyway, having fun. It turns out that SMS doesn't reach me as well, either in Mt. Shasta City or out at Lake Siskiyou where I'm staying, so my phone is just a phone. Blah.
no subject
Date: 2005-07-15 10:10 pm (UTC)107 °F / 42 °C
Clear
Humidity: 15%
Dew Point: 50 °F / 10 °C
Wind: 7 mph / 11 km/h from the SW
(Last time I was there it was 118F. It's the dry heat that makes it even a tiny bit tolerable.)
Mount Shasta, the town at the base of the mountain, right now:
92 °F / 33 °C
Clear
Humidity: 21%
Dew Point: 46 °F / 8 °C
Wind: 4 mph / 6 km/h Variable
Again: The heat's dry, which is a good thing. :)
no subject
Date: 2005-07-15 11:35 pm (UTC)It's the snow in the picture that makes things feel a bit cooler.
no subject
Date: 2005-07-15 11:40 pm (UTC)http://www.shastacam.com/ <-- currently
There are year-round glaciers on the mountain, but in hot dry years, there's a lot of visible grey cinder under the snow. This was a wet year with lots of snow, so it'll probably look like this most of the year.
(I grew up not far from