Ice Conditions: Observations of Environmental Change in Alaska Coastal Parks

Ice Conditions: Observations of Environmental Change in Alaska Coastal Parks

The following press release was published by the U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service on Jan. 26. It is reproduced in full below.

Quick Facts

Significance:

After passage by the Senate on May 9 the bill was signed into law (47 Stat. 155) by President Herbert C. Hoover on May 14, 1932. Thus, 973 acres were added to the park, the addition becoming popularly referred to as the park's "southern panhandle."

Amenities

6 listed

Information Kiosk/Bulletin Board, Picnic Table, Recycling, Restroom - Accessible, Toilet - Vault/Composting, Trash/Litter Receptacles

Ponderosa Picnic Area is at the southern tip of the park, a region referred to as the panhandle. At 4400 feet in elevation, you get the advantage of warmer temperatures, less snowpack, the highest diversity of plant species, the densest collection of Ponderosa pines and the best views of fall’s colorful deciduous trees found anywhere in the park.

Most people stop at Ponderosa Picnic Area for the restroom and orientation to the park, where a map and general information are secured in a bulletin board. It is one of the first places where wildflowers bloom after the snow melts. A colorful wildflower display begins in early summer, with Skyrocket, Paintbrush, lupine, wild strawberry and sweet-smelling snow bush.

Sugar pines, Douglas-firs, white firs, cottonwoods and of course, Ponderosa pines can all be seen from and within a mile of the picnic area. If you have never sniffed the bark of a Ponderosa Pine, rest your nose on a tree with yellow-reddish, puzzle-like bark and breathe in-vanilla, butterscotch, or?

Crater Lake National Park

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Tags

* crater lake national park

* picnic area

* picnic tables

* ponderosa pine

* forest

* wildflowers

* douglas fir

* songbirds

Source: U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service

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