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Hem / Coldwater Lake Photos WA 56
Publiceringsdatum / 2016 / Vecka 23
- Wildflowers bloom along the trail because the old undergrowth was blasted away and covered with a layer of ash providing pioneer plants such as Lupine an ideal place to grow.
- Trees that were not blown down in the blast were killed as their branches and bark were scoured off in the 1980 blast.
- This old bulldozer was once part of a logging operation. Another example of what the 1980 blast destroyed.
- This moss was smiling at me as I walked by. It reminded me of a Smurf. I found this along the shore of Coldwater Lake.
- This interesting root ball is along Coldwater Lake.
- The trail breaks out of the forest where the hillside bore the full brunt of the 1980 volcanic blast. Still no trees growing after more than 30 years have passed.
- The South Coldwater Trail begins in a new forest and has a moderate climb up to a ridge. Foxglove stretch for the sky in this small clearing.
- Tent caterpillars create a horror scene for plants growing along the trail this year (2012). The webs remind me of Shelob's lair in Lord of the Rings.
- Tent caterpillars cover a leaf along the South Coldwater trail.
- Some jagged peaks loom above the Coldwater Trail.
- Skeletons are all that remain of the forest in this part of the 1980 volcanic blast. The terrain allows abundant wildflowers.
- Penstamon is one of the wildflowers that bloom in July along the South Coldwater Trail.
- One of the many small steams the Lakes Trail crosses. Most of them have yellow Monkeyflowers blooming along the creeksides.
- More equipment destroyed in the volcanic blast of 1980. Not a flake of paint remains on this equipment. The paint was completely scoured off by the blast debris.
- Mimulus grows along the sunny wet margins of the small streams that feed into Coldwater Lake.