Godfrey Glen Trail
A gentle loop through old-growth forest and a canyon carved into ancient volcanic ash. No permit.
Oregon · Stamp 15 / 63
The deepest lake in America, filling a volcano that blew its own top off 7,700 years ago, water so clear it barely looks real.
About 7,700 years ago, a 12,000-foot volcano called Mount Mazama erupted so violently it collapsed in on itself, leaving a caldera nearly six miles across where a peak used to stand. Rain and snowmelt filled the hole over the following centuries, and the result is the deepest lake in the United States: 1,949 feet at its deepest point, so pure that sunlight penetrates nearly 100 feet down, which is exactly why the water reads as an almost unnatural shade of blue.
Wizard Island, the cinder cone rising from the lake's western side, is a volcano inside the volcano, evidence that Mazama is not entirely finished. For most of the 2026 through 2028 seasons, the only trail down to the water, Cleetwood Cove, is closed for a major rehabilitation project, which means no swimming and no boat tours to the island during that window. The rim views remain, and they remain extraordinary.
Come for the color of the water. Stay for the fact that you are looking at the inside of a volcano that erupted forty times more powerfully than Mount St. Helens. Read the story, check the live data above before you go, and when you leave, collect the stamp.
For the first time in my life I looked down into the blue waters of Crater Lake ... a spectacle of rare beauty.William Gladstone Steel, whose decades of advocacy led to the park's creation in 1902
Six ways to see it, from a rim overlook a hundred steps from the car to a full loop around the caldera.
The classic first look, with the lake laid out below and Wizard Island rising from the blue. Cold even in July; bring a layer.
Everyone · 30 minA 33-mile loop around the entire caldera with over thirty pullouts. Often not fully open until mid-July due to snow.
The signature driveA short climb to the best head-on view of Wizard Island anywhere in the park, especially good at sunset.
Photographers · 1 hrA short walk to a view of the jagged rock formation that looks, from the right angle, exactly like a ghostly sailing ship.
Everyone · 20 minThe park's main campground, a short drive from Rim Village. Reserve ahead for summer weekends.
Campers · book aheadA 1915 rim-edge lodge with a wraparound porch built for exactly one purpose: sitting and looking at the lake.
Everyone · anytimeAnswer a few questions right here — we'll map your day, stop by stop, with a route, timings, weather, and a packing checklist grounded in real park data. No account, no leaving this page.
Every trail rated honestly, with distance, climb, and a clear note on the one trail that's closed through 2028.
A gentle loop through old-growth forest and a canyon carved into ancient volcanic ash. No permit.
Follows the rim from Rim Village to the spot where the lake was first reported by a non-Indigenous prospector in 1853. No permit.
A steady switchback climb to a 1930s fire lookout with the best angle on Wizard Island in the park. No permit.
The only trail to the shoreline and the only way to reach the boat dock, closed for a major rehabilitation project through the 2028 season. Reopens summer 2029.
A steep climb from Crater Lake Lodge to a summit above 8,000 feet with a full panorama of the caldera. No permit.
The park's highest point at 8,929 feet, with a fire lookout and a view stretching to the Cascade volcanoes on a clear day. Wilderness permit required only for overnight camping.
Cleetwood Cove Trail and boat tours closed through 2028 for rehabilitation · wilderness permits via Recreation.gov for overnight camping · no permit for other day hikes
Tap any animal to learn its story. Soon, the app will let you log what you spot and keep a life list for every park.
A gray, jay-sized bird with a special pouch under its tongue for carrying whitebark pine seeds, planting most of the forest it depends on.
Common in the forested slopes below the rim, most active at dawn and dusk along the park's quieter roads.
Present throughout the park's forests. Food storage rules apply at every campground and trailhead.
A tiny alpine relative of the rabbit living in the rocky rim talus, sensitive to warming temperatures and worth listening for its sharp warning chirp.
Nests on the sheer caldera walls, diving at extraordinary speeds over the lake itself, one of the more dramatic sights for patient rim-walkers.
The lake had no native fish at all until early stocking efforts; kokanee and rainbow trout are now the only species present, in a lake that never had fish before people arrived.
Several beetle species found on the caldera rim exist almost nowhere else, adapted to the volcanic soil and short growing season unique to this elevation.
A gnarled, wind-sculpted pine clinging to the exposed rim, now under serious threat from blister rust across its range.
Thrives under the caldera's heavy winter snowpack, its flexible branches shedding snow load that would break less adapted trees.
A rare shrub known from only a handful of locations worldwide, most of them within or near this park's volcanic soils.
A low, sprawling plant that thrives directly in the loose volcanic pumice around the rim, its fuzzy pink flower clusters resembling tiny paws.
A mat-forming shrub with vivid purple blooms wedged into rocky crevices along the rim trails, tough enough to survive in almost no soil at all.
Dominates the forest belt below the rim, its thick, corky bark helping it survive the fires that periodically sweep through these slopes.
At 1,949 feet, Crater Lake is the deepest lake in the United States and one of the deepest on Earth.
The lake formed after Mount Mazama erupted roughly 7,700 years ago with a force estimated at 40 times that of the 1980 Mount St. Helens eruption.
The water's famous blue color comes from its extraordinary clarity, which allows sunlight to penetrate nearly 100 feet before scattering.
The Cleetwood Cove Trail, the only route to the shoreline, is closed for the 2026, 2027, and 2028 seasons for a major safety rehabilitation, reopening in 2029.
Stories, guides, and hard-won tips from the trail. The full Crater Lake deep dive lives on the journal.
Log the visit, keep your story, and watch the map of all sixty-three fill in behind you. Every stamp has a keepsake worth holding.
North through the Cascades: from a collapsed volcano to a very much intact one.
Open Stamp 16 → The collectionSee the full map and track every stamp you have earned.
View the map → PlanTurn Crater Lake into a road trip with a custom, day-by-day itinerary.
Start planning → Go deeperThe long-form guide: every trail, season, and secret, on the journal.
Read it →Offline maps, your passport, and every park in your pocket on the trail.
The printed edition, part atlas, part journal, one story per park.
Field-guide posters, enamel stamps, and the passport book to fill in.