209 Mark, op. cit., 27. Some of the article is derived from Tony Hiss, “Reflections (Experiencing Places, Part I),” The New Yorker (June 22, 1987), 63-64.
210 A brief description of the project and depiction of it in relation to the motorway is in Kelly N. Kritzer, Report on the Archeological Survey of the Proposed Stewart (sic) Falls Trail Realignments, Crater Lake National Park, Oregon, December 19, 2003, Cultural Resources files. The Sky Lakes Wilderness was designated by Congress in 1984.
211 Beechel, Modifying Visitor Facilities and Programs for Disabled Persons, CPSU/UW 79-2, May 1979, 44-45; Kelly Donahue, The Godfrey Glen Trail: a design guideline for an accessible outdoor recreation trail [1993]; transmittal to park January 1994, Cultural Resources files.
212 [Terri Urbanowski], The Godfrey Glen Trail: An Implementation Guide for an Accessible Outdoor Recreation Trail, December 1998, Cultural Resources files.
213 Tom McDonough, Godfrey Glenn (sic) Nature Trail Guide, August 2001 draft, Cultural Resources files.
214 Section 106 form and accompanying PMIS #19086, Restore Garfield Peak Trail, June 6, 2007, plus attachments, Compliance files 2007, Historian’s office.
215 Section 106 form accompanying PMIS #26558, Rehabilitate Castle Crest Wildflower Trail and Parking Area, June 25, 2009, in Compliance files, Historian’s office. The latter phase also included replacement of log benches built in the early 1980s and some vista clearing, as well as hazard tree removal.
216 Trail Guide to the Castle Crest Wildflower Garden (Crater Lake: Crater Lake Natural History Association, 2010).
217 K. Rodney Cranson and F. Owen Hoffman, Garfield Peak Trail Guide (Crater Lake: Crater Lake Institute, 2004). Larry Eifert carried out much of the revision, but it disappeared based on a decision by the Crater Lake Natural History Association not to carry the guide.
218 Sullivan, Trails of Crater Lake National Park and Oregon Caves National Monument (Eugene: Navillus Press, 2010). Not only was age a factor in the declining sales of the volume by Toops, but a topographic map highlighting trail locations had been sold by the CLNHA since 1994. Based on the special map produced by the U.S. Geological Survey, the “Trails Illustrated” series by National Geographic had not been updated since 1998; Crater Lake National Park, Oregon, USA, Trails Illustrated Map #244 (Evergreen, CO: National Geographic Society, 1994, rev. 1998). The book by Jeffrey Schaffer, Crater Lake National Park and Vicinity (Berkeley: Wilderness Press, 1983), which included a number of park trails as well as those on surrounding federal lands, went to a second printing in 1992 and then ceased publication.
219 Sullivan, 66-67.
220 See Stephen R. Mark, Addendum to Crater Lake National Park Roads, Historic American Engineering Record project documentation, HAER No. OR-107, (2003), copy in park library.
221 These are the Discovery Point Trail, Watchman Trail, Mount Scott Trail, and the loop through the Castle Crest Wildflower Garden. The district was listed on January 30, 2008.
222 There may be ways to use cultural resources, such as the Fort Klamath – Rogue River wagon road, as trails, or part of a larger loop. Trails can provide a way to do cultural resources interpretation, something generally lacking at Crater Lake.