Friday, September 25, 2015

Oregon's South Sister

View from Highway 27 looking northwest to the South Sister on July 28, 2015, the day of my climb.

I made quick work of Oregon's South Sister, the state's third highest peak at 10,358 feet (Mt. Hood is king followed by Mt. Jefferson). There is an excellent well-used trail that climbs 5,000 feet over 6 miles from the Devils Lake trail head to the volcano's cratered summit. Since this was a family vacation and we had much planned to see and do in Bend, I got going early and was back to our hotel by 11:30 am. This was my first climb in the Cascades, and I'm afraid I might be hooked. 


For the first couple of miles, the trail winds up through dense forest.



A rare flat section in a meadow near Devils Lake.



Trail junction. Right leads to Moraine Lake. The tree canopy thins dramatically as you attain the ridge above the lake.



Steep, sandy trail above Moraine Lake.



Moraine Lake. 9,065-foot Mt. Bachelor, home to a popular ski resort, in the distance.



Still a lot of vertical ahead.






The South Sister is a young volcano that could potentially erupt in the future. The light gray rhyolite flows seen here are only about 2,000 years old and represent some of the youngest volcanic activity near the South Sister.  Satellite data showed an episode of uplift of as much as 2 inches per year near the South Sister in the late 1990s.  Things have calmed down since, but a seismic swarm of 2,000 earthquakes over a two day period in 2004 is another indicator that magma may be on the move beneath the South Sister.





Terminal Moraine Pool below the Lewis Glacier.



The South Sister conga line makes its way up the mountain. This is a very popular hike, although many don't make it past the Terminal Moraine, do to the altitude and steep scree slopes ahead.



Final 1,000-foot push to the top. I'm about to start the South Sister's infamous 2-step-forward-big-slide-back scree section. (With nearly bald tread on my running shoes! This is not recommended)


Looking down to the Terminal Moraine Pool.


Once on the crater rim, you have the choice to either run around the rim or cross a snow field to get to the true summit on the opposite side. I opted to rim run on the approach and then traverse the snow field on the return trip.


Nice morning view of nearby  Broken Top (9,175 feet) from South Sister's eastern rim.


Running along the crater's edge.








I got lucky, as there were yet no fires burning in the Northwest to muck up my views from the top.


The Chambers Lakes on the northern flanks of South Sister.



Volcano country. The closest is the 10,085-foot North Sister. Next is Mt. Washington at 7794 ft, followed by Three Fingered Jack at 7841 ft, and finally in the far distance, Mt. Jefferson.


Snow field route across the summit crater. The depression ahead of me and to the right is normally where Teardrop Pool, Oregon's highest lake, rests, but it had not yet made an appearance this early in the season.



Round trip time was just under 5 hours at a steady pace. With the huge vertical and tripod setups for photos, it was 3.5 hours on the ascent. I ran the entire descent, with fewer photos and it only took 1.5 hours. I can't recommend this climb enough if you happen the be in the Bend area.

Several times, as we toured through Northern California, and southern Oregon, I could see Mt. Shasta dominating the skyline. I think this will be the next volcano climb on the to-do list.











4 comments:

  1. Hi I'm an art director and I'm interested in one of your images. Can you please contact me. Thanks

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  2. The South Sister shows why hikes and rides up mountains can be the most satisfying undertaking. The trails, the lakes and craters, the view from the top - just marvelous!

    Looking forward to the pictures of your next climb on Mt. Shasta!

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  3. Wrong about all volcanoes looking north. North sister was correct. Next was jefferson then hood. To the right of hood is Adams. Adams is round topped and 12000+ ft. Between hood and jefferson zoom in and look a little low, that faint white is Rainer.

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  4. And south was Mt McLaughlin not shasta

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