
Cascades
Mount Shasta, California
The Cascades are a 700 mile long mountain range extending from Southern British Columbia, Canada through Washington and Oregon into Northern California. They are volcanic in origin, created by the Juan De Fuca Tectonic Plate subducting beneath the North American Plate over the past 10 to 50 million years.
I live almost in the shadow of the tallest of the Cascades mountains - Mount Rainier (Also known as Tahoma by the Lushootseed or Nisqually/Salish peoples) - and have not yet been able to get a good photo of it.
Colonial Peak from Hwy 20, North Cascades National Park - 19 June 2024
Cloudy Day at Diablo Reservoir, North Cascades - 17 June 2023
Pinnacle Peak (aka the Chopping Block) in the Pickets Range from the Visitor Center, North Cascades National Park - 18 June 2024
Colonial Peak and Pyramid Peak, North Cascades - 19 June 2024
Colonial Peak and Diablo Reservoir, North Cascades National Park - 19 June 2024
Davis Peak and Diablo Reservoir, North Cascades National Park, Washington - 19 June 2024
The view of the Picket Range from the Visitor Center on a cloudy day - 17 June 2023
Colonial Peak - 19 June 2024
Pyramid Peak from the Diablo Lake Overlook, North Cascades National Park - 19 June 2024
Davis Peak and Diablo Reservoir - 19 June 2024
Mount Shasta and its satellite cone, Shastina - 9 May 2023
Mount Shasta and Shastina - 9 May 2023
Mount Shasta and Shastina, California. Shastina would rank as the third highest peak in the Cascade Range behind Mount Rainier and Mount Shasta if it were not associated with Mount Shasta - 9 May 2023
Mount Thielsen, Oregon - 9 May 2023
Mount Shasta from Mount Shasta City - 12 February 2023
Mount Shasta - 25 February 2023
Mount Shasta - 25 February 2023