I sent this earlier, but I wondered if someone could confirm that my pictures are really of Smokejumper Hot Springs (or did I just find some obscure hot pool off in the woods). Does anyone know any history behind the name? Thanks Stephen ________________________________ From: geysers-bounces at lists.wallawalla.edu on behalf of Ott, Stephen Sent: Sun 8/9/2009 12:06 PM To: Geyser Observation Reports Subject: [Geysers] Smokejumper Hot Springs Gazers: On July 24, I hiked to Summit Lake and beyond. I had the impression the Smokejumper Hot Springs and Summit Lake Hot Springs were near the trail past Summit Lake. Summit Lake Hot Springs was easy to see from the trail, and I originally thought that I found Smokejumper Hot Springs just over a ridge on the north side of the trail. I fortunately encountered a hiker from Washington who had an excellent map showing Smokejumper Hot Springs and a coordinate grid marked on the map. I put the coordinates into my GPS and headed off into the forest. I'm not sure how Smokejumper Hot Springs were ever first located, because even when I was less than 100 yards away, I still couldn't see any sign of hot springs. The springs are in a large depression lower than the rest of the forest floor. I marked the coordinates at the edge of the basin at N 44° 25.240' and W 110° 57.216' at an elevation of 8630 ft. I have placed photos at http://emp.byui.edu/otts/recreation/ynp/summit_lake/summit_lake.html if others would like to look and verify that they are of Smokejumper Hot Springs. Stephen Ott BYU-Idaho Chemistry Department -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: winmail.dat Type: application/ms-tnef Size: 5802 bytes Desc: not available URL: </geyser-list/attachments/20090812/24a78bf8/attachment.bin>