Browsing the blog archives for December, 2009.

Mt. Redoubt

Hi-Lo Photos

Here is a great link to one of the coolest and most active volcanoes in the Kenai area, if not North America. Kenai is a great place to do sightseeing of volcanoes and mountains, and this volcano should be high on any aspiring mountaineers’ lists.

Mt. Redoubt Multi-Day Zeitcam

From Wikipedia on Mt. Redoubt:

Mount Redoubt, or Redoubt Volcano, is an active and recently eruptive stratovolcano in the largely volcanic Aleutian Range of the U.S. state of Alaska. Located in the Chigmit Mountains (a subrange of the Aleutians), the mountain is just west of Cook Inlet, in the Kenai Peninsula Borough about 180 km (110 mi) southwest of Anchorage. Mount Redoubt towers 9,000 feet (2,700 m) above the surrounding valleys to the north, south, and southeast in little over 5 miles (8 km); it is also the third highest within the range, with nearby Mount Torbert, at 11,413 feet, being the highest and Mount Spurr at 11,070 feet being the second highest.

Active for millennia, Mount Redoubt has erupted five times since 1900: in 1902, 1922, 1966, 1989 and 2009. The eruption in 1989 spewed volcanic ash to a height of 14,000 m (45,000 ft) and caught KLM Flight 867, a Boeing 747 aircraft, in its plume (the flight landed safely at Anchorage). The ash blanketed an area of about 20,000 km2 (7,700 sq mi). The 1989 eruption is also notable for being the first ever volcanic eruption to be successfully predicted by the method of long-period seismic events developed by Swiss/American volcanologist Bernard Chouet.[4] The Alaska Volcano Observatory currently rates Redoubt as Aviation Alert Level Yellow and Volcano Alert Level Advisory.[5]

Come visit the Hi-Lo lodge and see these mountains in style!

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Hi-Lo Photos

Season’s Greetings and Wishes for a Safe and Happy New Year!

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December at Hi-Lo

Hi-Lo Photos

moonlight  the sun rises, the moon sets, and all is quiet except for the crackling of ice on Beaver Creek as the tides ebb and flow

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Ice Fishing Anyone?

Hi-Lo Photos

Beaver Creek mid November new-051

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