There is nothing quite so wonderful as that moment of anticipation as we approach one of our favorite places in the west. The Medicine Lake Highlands loom over the landscape south of the Oregon border near Tulelake. We know the route well, having camped at Medicine Lake together several times since our very first shared camping trip in August of 2003.
We have returned several times in July or August, and sometimes in frosty September. The only thing that keeps us from going there more often are the fires that can darken the skies with thick smoke during the months when the weather is conducive to an off-grid camping trip. This year, for the first time, we planned to share this special place with Daughter Deborah, and I watched the smoke maps daily as our scheduled departure grew closer. Wonder of wonders, the winds kept the smoke from the California fires north of the lake, and the skies were gorgeous and clear as we drove over the High Lakes Pass, past Klamath Lake, along the State Line road adjacent to the Lower Klamath Wildlife Refuge, through Tulelake, and south on Highway 139 toward Alturas.We have two favorite campsites at this lake, 43, which was already occupied, and this one, 45
Medicine Lake Highlands unfold like a vast, uplifted world, a gentle giant of a volcano built up by successive basalt flows that erupted from fissures as recently as 1,000 years ago. As the land swells upward, its crown is hollowed into a shallow caldera where forest, water, and stone mingle. Within that natural amphitheater rests Medicine Lake, a still, dark mirror cradled by slopes of pine and fir. On quiet days, the surface lies so calm it seems almost to deny the restless forces that shaped it. It is that glassy stillness that draws us again and again to camp beside the lake and launch our kayaks on the silky water.
Mo and Deb did most of the hauling of wood and gear down to the firepit and picnic tableThere is much to explore in this magical landscape. Radiating outward from the lake, the highlands are etched with the marks of ancient fire. Vast fields of ropy layers of cooled lava sprawl toward the horizon, some weathered and softened by time, others raw and sharp-edged as if the eruption cooled only yesterday.
To the east of the lake, Glass Mountain rises in a stark, glittering contrast to the dark basalt around it. Born in a furious eruption less than a thousand years ago, it is a hill of pure obsidian, a chaotic tumble of jagged shards and car-sized boulders that catch the sun like splinters of black crystal. Walking there is like treading on broken glass, each step ringing underfoot with the clinking sound of glass shards. This is the high volcanic country we looked forward to sharing with Deborah.
After setting up camp and getting settled, Mo started a campfire, and I cooked supper on the Weber, our trusty little BBQ that has been with us for at least a decade. We had marinated grilled chicken breasts with foil-roasted yukon potatoes and onions with a dollop of beef tallow, my newfound seasoning treat. A simple salad and a bottle of wine rounded out the meal as we looked out over the lake.
I took only my phone with me on this paddle, unwilling to go to the trouble of packing up the Nikon, but when I saw the eagles, I knew that was a mistake. Even the fancy camera in my Samsung 25 Ultra can't zoom in enough to catch the detail that I hoped for.
Still, we enjoyed every minute of our time on the water, searching out the eagles and paddling to the far western shore of the lake where the pink polygonum was blooming as usual.
Map of A.H.Hogue campground with site 45 on the lower center right next to the lake
Oh-oh-oh, I want to go there! Your description and photos are inviting! Even if we didn't kayak, I'm sure we would love this place as much as you guys do.
ReplyDeleteI know you would love it, Nickie. Lots of beautiful hikes, a lovely beach and places to explore. I do hope you two get there someday
DeleteLooks so totally peaceful!!!
ReplyDeleteIt really is, probably the most peaceful place that we camp.
DeleteYou are so color coordinated in the photo amongst the pink flowers--kayak, and visor matching those beautiful flowers! I love reading about your trips!
ReplyDeleteI guess that was just lucky, but I did love it when I noticed it in the photo. Glad you are reading and so glad you are also writing and sharing with some loyal friends.
DeleteI agree that Anticipation is one of life’s great joys. I do love reading about and seeing your lake trips as I hang out in the green blue ridge with no kayaking near by. So thank you.
ReplyDeleteSad to hear you often have smoke at Medicine Lake and that there even is such a thing as a smoke map. I could almost feel your happiness at the gorgeous clear skies. You sure can pick the most wonderful lake side campsites.
Your descriptions of this area are beautifully poetic. I read and reread them just to enjoy imagining.
Great picnic table picture. Love your look and Matty, from her perch atop the picnic table, keeping such a close eye on what Mo is doing. That fire pit is one of the best I have ever seen in a campground.
Gorgeous pictures of you two on the lake. What a wonderful spot. No wonder you love to go there. Launching from your campsite sounds like heaven to me. SO nice to have a 3rd person to put an umbrella out, keep the fire going and keep Matty company. Although at this point I’d settle for just a second person to go kayaking with me.
It was great to see the map and see how lucky you were to get one of those sites closest to the water and without reservations. Unheard of in my world. Not many waterside sites at all in my world.
I think we found waterside sites at COE parks in the south and the midwest, but defiitely not in the northeast. It is such a different world there. Even the beauty of Vermont at Jeanne's place and the gorgeous places along the Atlantic in Maine don't have that extra bit of luxury as launching from a campsite. We did find places like this in British Columbia when we traveled to Alaska, but at the moment I can't think of any others. But of course, you have started my brain on a journey so I will be thinking about this the rest of the day.
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