Spring is coming and the trail is starting to wake from its long winter break. Our National Park Service Interpretive Rangers are already out and about with our Mobile Visitor Center. Our team has made lots of contacts at various trade show events around Spokane, WA, and Washington State Parks joined NPS at the Othello Sandhill Crane Festival. Our thanks to Ranger’s Abby, Emilee and David for sharing the Missoula Floods story with over 500 visitors to the Scablands. From April 27th through May 25th the Mobile VC will be traveling to sites around Lake Roosevelt NRA on Thursdays. You can find the Ice Age Floods NGT and Lake Roosevelt NRA Mobile Visitor Center’s schedule and locations on our Ice Age Floods NGT calendar.
Our Junior Ranger Program test is showing success and has already run out of booklets! Tualatin Library, one of the National Trail’s official partners, has been promoting and sharing our Junior Ranger activity booklet “Megaflood Adventure”. Young explorers can turn in completed booklets for Ice Age Floods NGT Junior Park Ranger badges. National Pak Service is exploring this program and hopes to bring more Junior Rangers into the Missoula Floods community.
Out on the Trail: Now is a great time to explore the Willamette Valley searching for signs of great Missoula Floods and watching the valley spring to life. You might explore Erratic Rock State Natural Site near McMinnville, Oregon. There you will find ~90-ton chunk of Precambrian argillite sitting ~150 feet off the valley floor and some 500 miles from where this sort of rock originates. How did that happen?
You can use the Trail’s NPS App to find out how and to explore more amazing landscapes changed by the Missoula Floods. Some of them are perhaps in your part of the world! I am looking forward to joining Institute members at the IAFI Rock-Out Jubilee in just a couple of months. I’ll see you there or out on Ice Age Floods National Geologic Trail this summer. Have fun and safe travels.