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Crater Lake
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Where
to Stay...
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Klamath
Falls
Red
Lion Inn - Our 108 guest rooms feature many amenities
including free high-speed wireless Internet access, coffee
maker and iron/ironing board. Enjoy our outdoor pool or whirlpool.
Pets are welcome.
Medford
Red
Lion Hotel -
Located in downtown Medford, 10 minutes from Rogue Valley
Intl Airport. 185 spacious guest rooms and suites feature
free high-speed wireless Internet access, in-room coffee,
hairdryers, voicemail and dataports.
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Southern
Oregon:
Volcanic Legacy Scenic Byway
Length:
140 miles / 224.0 km
Time to Allow: Plan for 5 to 7 hours to tour this byway.
Fees: There is a fee to enter Crater Lake National Park.
Driving
Directions
The
Volcanic Legacy Scenic Byway is located in south-central Oregon
about 5 1/2 hours south and east of Portland. It can be reached
via paved highways and freeways. Located about 80 miles east of
the I-5 corridor, a one-hour drive will access the byway from Medford,
a two-hour drive will access the byway from Roseburg, and a 2 1/2-hour
drive will access the byway from Eugene. All of these drives are
on two-lane, paved highways.
The
northern end of the byway is the Diamond Lake Junction on US 97
about halfway between Bend and Klamath Falls. The southern end of
the byway is the Oregon/California border on US 97.
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Description
This diverse byway follows the brims of lakes, diverse wetlands, scenic
ranches, thriving croplands, and forests full of bald eagles. It passes
brilliant Crater Lake National Park and historic Crater Lake Lodge.
It also threads
its way through volcanic landscapes, craggy mountain reaches, and high-desert
wetlands. As the byway passes the 90,000 surface-acre Upper Klamath Lake,
you can see more than 1 million birds during peak migrations in the fall.
The Klamath Basin is the largest freshwater ecosystem west of the Great
Lakes. Six National Wildlife Refuges in these wetlands were favorite fishing
spots of President Roosevelt.
You also
can visit the same Pelican Bay where John Muir (naturalist, writer, conservationist,
and founder of the Sierra Club) wrote The Story of My Boyhood and Youth
in 1908.
Points
of Interest
Applegate
Trail - The Applegate route, blazed by Jesse and Lindsay Applegate's
party in 1846, connected the California and Oregon trails and figured
centrally in the settling of Klamath County (the county that accommodates
famous and historic Crater Lake.) The trail has been traveled countless
times as part of the Volcanic Scenic Byway since 1846, but a party of
five from Klamath County re-enacted the harsh, original trip on horseback
in 1992.
Your trip
(by vehicle) will begin by entering Klamath County via highway 66, continue
by crossing the fabled Klamath River, pass through the pine-studded town
of Keno, and enter the rich Klamath Basin, which is noted for its abundance
of wildlife, productive agricultural land, and dense forests.
The trail
ends after you come out of the basin and enter the Czechoslovakian-settled
town of Malin, Calif.
Baldwin
Hotel Museum - This hotel, built in 1906 from locally-manufactured
brick, is listed on state and national historic registers. Tours show
off period furnishings and clothing, both set up as if someone left the
room just for a minute.

Crater
Lake |
At a soaring
four stories, it was the tallest building in town. Sen. George Baldwin
operated this Victorian hotel while maintaining his hardware store and
livery stable, and while leading civic activity. His family, (particularly
his daughter, Maud) was equally involved in the running of the hotel and
they entertained such dignitaries as President Theodore Roosevelt during
his several hunting and fishing trips to Klamath Falls.
President
Roosevelt stayed in The Baldwin during the trip in which he dedicated
the Tule Lake National Wildlife Refuge, the nation's first wildlife refuge,
and the President also signed the papers creating Crater Lake National
Park in The Baldwin's hotel lobby.
Crater
Lake National Park - Crater Lake, one of the deepest lakes in America,
once a towering mountain, is now America's deepest lake, at 1,932 feet.
You can drive around its thirty-three mile circumference, hike the nearby
mountain trails to spectacular waterfalls, or picnic near wide fields
of wildflowers.
To many people,
winter is the best time to enjoy the solitude, mystery, and the (then)
icy beauty of the lake. Camping and other recreational activities, such
as skiing along the snow-covered west rim drive, are especially great
in the park's gorgeous winter, which typically lasts from October to June.
More aboutr Crater
Lake National Park.

Source:
© National Scenic Byways / U.S. Department of Transportation
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