Remember Day 16 when I promised Velma, my GPS, that I wouldn’t mess with her mind anymore?
I lied.
Sacramento to Eugene, OR, should be about 7.5 hours.
Except then you get past volcanic Mount Shasta and end up needing to top off the tank in this town:
Where things move so slowly that the snow still hasn’t melted all the way because man, they’re laid back in Weed, CA.
And you giggle like a 12-year-old and buy postcards and chuckle some more as you ease on out of town.
Then, pulling yourself out of second person, you decide, eh, you’ve got plenty of time to hit a National Park on the way to Eugene because your kid is in love with becoming a Junior Ranger every chance she gets and you hear Crater Lake is amazing.
I had heard it was amazing. I had not heard that it wasn’t a quick side trip.
I’m kinda glad I hadn’t heard that, because if I had, we wouldn’t have gone. And if we hadn’t gone, we wouldn’t have gotten to ride through creepy X-Files-ish forests on the way.
Even Velma underestimated how much time it would take to get to Crater Lake. She said we’d arrive at 4:30. Instead, Earl and I were staring in the windows of the Ranger Station at 5:01pm giving the rangers The Eye. They lock the doors at 5:00, but did you know if a mother an child stare doggedly at them through the windows long enough, one will come to the door and tell you to go away, they’re closed? They will! But when you desperately plead, “Please! All we need is a Junior Ranger booklet! We came all the way from Tennessee!” they’ll be kind enough to slip it to you through a crack in the door.
Well, I didn’t lie.
The Junior Ranger book came in handy. It kept Earl occupied while I gawked. Because Crater Lake is breathtaking.
Stunning isn’t a strong enough word.
Even Earl was wide-eyed with wonder when she pulled herself from her dutiful studies.
At dinnertime (ahem), we found the park’s only sit-down restaurant. We’d have gone into town, but we were close to cannibalism, and town was a good hour away. So we waited an hour for a table at the restaurant.
Because, in hindsight that makes total sense.
Our dinner delay, though, put us back around the western rim of the lake and heading out through the forest at sunset. And, if you haven’t been able to tell from the pictures on this here blog, I’m a sucker for a purdy sunset.
We left the National Park at 8:30pm. Eugene, OR? A three-hour drive from Crater Lake.
I could potentially call that spontaneous little side trip a grave mistake, but it wasn’t. It was jaw-droppingly gorgeous. More than that, there’s something about spending hours on a windy little 2-lane road with no other cars and only the end of twilight, the moon, and your headlights for illumination. Driving in new places is about the unknown, but darkness kicks it up a notch. I held Earl’s hand when she got scared. We looked, sharp-eyed, for wildlife that might be on the fringes of the surrounding wood. We analyzed wisps to determine fog or smoke from a nearby wildfire. We marveled at the surprises lingering just around the bend, just beyond the lamplight, just out of reach.
It was a long drive. We were both exhausted by the time we hit Eugene not far from midnight. But at the same time, we were somehow more full after our trip to the crater.