Mount St. Helens Day
beautiful, pictures, Washington, Yakima May 18th, 2007On this day, twenty seven years ago, Mount St. Helens erupted.
At the time, my family lived in Yakima, Washington, which was the first decent-sized town in the path of the ashfall. The eruption happened at about 8:30 a.m. We were just pulling up to St. Johns Episcopal Church, where my dad was the vicar, when someone called and said, “I just heard on the radio. . .Mount St. Helens erupted!” The handful of us who were there sat and thought for a few minutes, but when we saw the whole horizon turning black (on a cloudless morning), we decided we should try to get home if we could.
The ash cloud hit us halfway home. Instantly, visibility went to about two feet. It was like a warm, grey snowstorm, and it smelled horrible. We were driving about ten miles per hour, but we still almost hit a turn divider and ran off the road because we couldn’t see.
We did make it home safely, and good thing, too, because the ash fell for the next day or two. We ended up with about an inch and a half of ash everywhere. It killed plants and pets. It choked the fuel systems of cars. (Interestingly, I remember that people were able to drive their cars by stretching pantyhose over their carburetors. Isn’t that ingenious?)
I was nine years old, and I wasn’t scared at all. That’s the perfect age to be during something like that. Old enough to remember it, but young enough to be mesmerized by it.
The town completely shut down for about a week, while people shoveled their driveways and sidewalks, and street cleaners ran day and night. My brother and I would stand under the awning on the back patio and watch the ash falling for a long time. People were saying things like, “Don’t let the ash touch you, it’ll melt your skin!” and “If you breathe it in, it will kill you!” So when we did venture out, we wore those little breathing masks and sweltered in our winter coats, at least until we realized that it wasn’t THAT hot, and we could catch it in our hands.
I’ll never forget the video of the gigantic logging trucks being washed down the Toutle River, or the huge logs destroying bridges, or the picture of the newspaper photographer’s car buried by boiling mud.
One of our friends in the neighborhood drew a volcano in ball-point pen on a bunch of white T-shirts with a caption that said, “Mount St. Helens–a pain in the ASH!” O, the hilarity.
The local news had a field day with the eruption, as you can imagine. “WILL VEGETATION EVER GROW BACK?? WILL THE VOLCANO KILL YOUR PETS?? TUNE IN AT FIVE TO FIND OUT.” Well, most of the pets lived, and before too long, trees and plants were growing back stronger than before. I still remember the pictures in National Geographic of the first little sprouts growing up out of the ash.
It was an amazing experience, and one that I’ll remember as long as I live.
May 19th, 2007 at 8:14 am
I, too, was near the volcano on that day. I was a junior at McMinnville High School and a member of the vocal jazz ensemble. We were traveling to Powell River, B.C. and had left school at about 5 a.m. We crossed the Tuttle River Bridge just as the volcano erupted! our charter bus driver drove off the freeway and up a huge hill. We sat on the hillside watching the eruption for more than 1 hour. I took photos that would knock your socks off…but, I haven’t been able to find them for the past 3 years! (pre-digital camera era).
Now, I celebrate Mt. St. Helens Day because my son, who is now 15, was born on May 18. It’s my favorite day of the year!
May 19th, 2007 at 9:53 pm
I remember that T-shirt!!! I still have a baby jar filled with ash. I can’t remember if I thought that would be worth something someday or what, but I sure find a crap-load of it when I’m gardening to this day. Your memory continues to amaze me.
May 20th, 2007 at 2:38 pm
Wow. What an amazing first-hand experience. It is something I watched on the news and later read about in books ..l..