![]() ![]() While you’re at Vidae Falls, we recommend driving a bit further to the nearest big curve barely a mile east of the falls pullout. Vidae Falls was not far east of Crater Lake’s Rim Village, which seemed to be the center of the tourism action in the reserve Overall, this drive took us around 2 hours, which included a road work delay (there always seemed to be these things no matter when you make your visit). Then, we turned right to go counterclockwise on Rim Drive and we continued for the next 2.8 miles to the roadside pullout for the falls on the left (it’s 6 miles east of Rim Village). We then kept left at this junction to go into the park, where we then drove an additional 4.5 miles or so to another road junction. Turning right at this junction to continue on Hwy 62, we then drove an additional 15.5 miles towards a junction shortly before reaching the turnoff for Mazama Village and the Crater Lake National Park Entrance. I swore that on our late June 2021 visit, the available pullout space in front of Vidae Falls had increased since the first two times we saw it in both August 2009 and July 2016 We managed to get there by basing ourselves in the sprawling city of Medford, then driving along the Crater Lake Hwy (Hwy 62) for about 54 miles to a signed junction. ![]() ![]() Vidae Falls sat within the boundaries of Crater Lake National Park towards the southern rim. For information or inquiries about the park as well as current conditions, visit their website. It is administered by the National Park Service. Vidae Falls resides in Crater Lake National Park near Medford in Klamath County, Oregon. Thus, we suspect this falls would probably flow year-round though it would certainly be dependent on the water level of the lake. In that video, they simulated one of the mechanisms (the other being evaporation) by which the lake level balanced itself out against the accumulation from snow and rain. Vidae Falls was likely fed by the waters seeping out of Crater Lake through unseen channels in the caldera of Mt Mazama itself Moreover, a video simulating the formation of Crater Lake near the visitor center at Rim Village supported our seepage theory. Therefore, in order to explain this observation, the seepage theory was the only plausible explanation that I could think of. However, since our first visit here was in late August 2009 when you’d think the falls would either go dry or not flow well, it still had pretty good flow while all the snow had been long gone. Context of Vidae Falls and the rim of Mt Mazama with lots of scree slopes towards its bottomĬertainly in our experience, waterfalls without much of a drainage or watershed don’t tend to last long. I suspect that Vidae Creek resulted from the seepage of the lake’s waters through possible channels within the caldera itself before the waters re-emerge back on the surface further downslope. While that’s not so unusual in and of itself, the waterfall’s presence so close to the top of the mountain was definitely rare as typically creeks and streams need enough of a drainage to accumulate enough water to make the stream more permanent. One thing that was unusual about Vidae Falls (but maybe not so unusual amongst waterfalls in the boundaries of Crater Lake National like Duwee Falls and Plaikni Falls) was that its flow seemed to have come from Crater Lake itself. Its flow would continue to the south and southeast of the slopes of Mt Mazama, which was the mountain that blew its top and gave rise to the famed Crater Lake itself. Focused on the main drop of Vidae Falls in the late afternoon of our first visit in late August 2009 Vidae Falls featured a main cascading drop before reaching a rocky slope with less of an incline that eventually made its way down beneath the Rim Drive. When we came back in late June 2021, I noticed that there were more signs erected to steer people away from scrambling on the slopes perhaps to minimize the chances of someone getting hurt or causing additional erosion. With such minimal physical effort to experience the Vidae Falls, we were tempted to scramble around the steep scree slope trying to look for different angles and ways to photograph and view the reportedly 115ft falls.Īs we did this on our first two visits, we tried not to mind the mosquitos which were in abundance during our July 2016 visit (but not so much during our August 2009 visit). ![]() Vidae Falls as seen in the early morning of our mid-July 2016 visit Indeed, it was one of the few waterfalls in all our waterfalling experiences that we didn’t need to work for (other than the drive to get here see directions below). Vidae Falls was definitely one of the easiest waterfalls to visit in Crater Lake National Park, mostly because it was right by the road. ![]()
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