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View Full Version : Mt. St. Helens 45 years ago today



KayLR
5-18-25, 10:42pm
I know there aren't many here who live in the Pac NW, but some may remember this day clearly as I do. This morning I was kind of shocked to realize it's been 45 years since that Sunday morning my ex and I were having our morning coffee when we heard a loud noise and some time later seeing ash falling from the sky. We lived in Yakima then.

It was coming down so thickly that we could not see our neighbors' lights on in their windows. Most of what I remember now is talking with relatives down in SW Washington about the disruption of I-5 traffic due to flooding of the Toutle River and ash everywhere. And subsequent smaller "burps" that came later.

There was so much ash on the roads in Yakima that the city brought out their snowplows to scrape the streets. It wasn't good for cars' air intakes. Many people wore masks. The Yakima Valley is agricultural; much of the apple industry is there. I recall news stories wondering how the ash would affect the crops and sales.

The most poignant thought I had this morning was realizing that our first daughter was born the following spring---and she's 44 years old! Somehow I just hadn't really realized how old she is now! Shock to my system.

Anyone else have volcano memories?

Tradd
5-18-25, 11:27pm
I was growing up in Michigan at the time. I was about 11. A relative lived in an area that got ash fall. He actually mailed us a small jar of ash. It lived in a kitchen cupboard at least until when I moved to the Chicago area in 1996!

Tybee
5-19-25, 8:10am
That is so interesting, Kay, especially the loud noise part! I have no experience with volcanoes or ash but that is really cool to get your account. I just can't imagine. I remember the event, but did not realize that ash was everywhere like that.

nswef
5-19-25, 9:03am
Thank you Kay for the memory. I remember it happening (I was teaching then) and the snow plows. Being in Maryland we were not affected but definitely interested. Do you remember if it affected the apple crop that year or in subsequent years?

ToomuchStuff
5-19-25, 9:37am
Had a gal that worked for us, who they rented a house in the woods pretty close to it (less then 6 miles from memory). She was a kid, and her dad got up that morning, looked out the window and saw it smoking and yelled, "hey, we are moving".
She had a jar of ash they kept from it.
I just remember seeing all the pictures of it, in science class, and they talked about how the photographer lost his life, getting everything setup to get some of the science stuff about it.

KayLR
5-19-25, 12:14pm
Had a gal that worked for us, who they rented a house in the woods pretty close to it (less then 6 miles from memory). She was a kid, and her dad got up that morning, looked out the window and saw it smoking and yelled, "hey, we are moving".
She had a jar of ash they kept from it.
I just remember seeing all the pictures of it, in science class, and they talked about how the photographer lost his life, getting everything setup to get some of the science stuff about it.

Yes, the photographer was Reid Blackburn. I worked at the same newspaper he did (later) and his widow still worked there. She never remarried.

I'm surprised your friends were that close and not told to evacuate by then. I think that would've been the Red Zone and anyone in it would've been warned to get out. There had been quake activity for some time.

KayLR
5-19-25, 12:23pm
Thank you Kay for the memory. I remember it happening (I was teaching then) and the snow plows. Being in Maryland we were not affected but definitely interested. Do you remember if it affected the apple crop that year or in subsequent years?

All I clearly remember is that they were concerned about the ash fall impeding photosynthesis and it probably did to some extent. The wheat hay, and alfalfa crops were heavily damaged due to the weight of it, and it couldn't be sold for feed contaminated like that anyway.

KayLR
5-19-25, 12:29pm
One other note, there are places along I-5 in SW WA with banks of ash that were built up by DOT in the cleanup. They're covered with grass now and just look like earth contours that have always been there. There's an entire golf course which was built on scraped up & spread out ash.

catherine
5-19-25, 12:43pm
Thank you for your memories of that day! Being on the opposite coast, my only association of it is the coverage by the news media. As Tybee said, it's really interesting to get a first-hander's account of major events like this! I agree that it doesn't seem possible that it was 45 years ago. My kids were very young then as well--I only had 2 of the 4 and they were basically babies.

happystuff
5-19-25, 4:28pm
Ditto catherine. I only know what I saw on the news. Can't imagine being up close.

rosarugosa
5-20-25, 7:03am
Yes, another east-cost person here who just basically remembers that it happened.

outlander
6-2-25, 12:50am
I lived in Colorado Springs during the eruption. Of course we all watched it on the news. But to my surprise, a few days later I got up in the morning to find a dusting of ash on all of the vehicles!

It really brought a sense of reality to the disaster, something that made it much more than just another news report. I will always remember that, and I can't imagine what it must have been like for people that were actually in the area.

littlebittybobby
6-4-25, 12:51am
okay---way i see it, too bad the volcano didn't bury the whole west coast under red-hot lava. Problem solved. End of story. Yup.

HappyHiker
6-4-25, 10:26am
okay---way i see it, too bad the volcano didn't bury the whole west coast under red-hot lava. Problem solved. End of story. Yup.

Wow, that strikes me as a terrible thing to say. Ugly.

littlebittybobby
6-4-25, 12:56pm
Wow, that strikes me as a terrible thing to say. Ugly.
okay---what's so terrible about replenishing the land with rich volcanic soils? Hope that helps you some. Thankk mee.

HappyHiker
6-4-25, 6:26pm
okay---what's so terrible about replenishing the land with rich volcanic soils? Hope that helps you some. Thankk mee.

Because the comment stuck me as wishing millions of fellow humans got buried under hot lava and ash. If that was not your intent, then I apologize.

KayLR
6-4-25, 6:40pm
okay---way i see it, too bad the volcano didn't bury the whole west coast under red-hot lava. Problem solved. End of story. Yup.


Wow. Well bless your heart. I hope the next tornado, flood or blizzard doesn't bring you to harm.

What problem exactly did you imagine that solving? Not accepting that BS answer about land replenishment.

littlebittybobby
6-4-25, 9:39pm
okay----whatever you kids think. But anyway-----here's a old Ponnyack sitting on the lower slopes of the St Hellens eruption. (see photo). It looks as though somebody tryed salvaging the motor out of it, at one time. Thank mee.6380

KayLR
6-13-25, 1:42pm
For the nature & science nerds...I never heard or knew about this. Pretty cool!

How gophers brought Mount St. Helens back to life in one day | University of California https://share.google/tmQRhP9DhG90BjE2o

rosarugosa
6-14-25, 7:21am
For the nature & science nerds...I never heard or knew about this. Pretty cool!

How gophers brought Mount St. Helens back to life in one day | University of California https://share.google/tmQRhP9DhG90BjE2o

That was really interesting, Kay!