Mobile Menu

  • Destinations
    • Canada
      • British Columbia
        • Vancouver Island, B.C.
        • Okanagan
        • Lower Mainland, B.C.
        • Northern B.C.
        • Interior B.C.
        • Kootenays/Rockies
      • Alberta
      • Yukon
      • Northwest Territories
    • U.S.A.
      • Alaska
      • Washington
      • Oregon
      • California
    • West Coast Galleries
  • Experiences
    • West Coast Galleries
      • Nature Photography
      • Wildlife Photography
      • Cityscapes
    • Things To Do
    • Staycation Secrets
      • Canada
      • U.S.A.
    • Adventure
      • Adrenaline
      • Beaches
      • Biking
      • Camping
      • Fishing
      • Hiking
      • Hunting and Fishing
      • Rafting
      • Skiing
    • Sip & Savour
    • Family Activities
    • Indigenous Tourism
    • Accessible Travel
    • Travel Tips & Advisories
  • Newsletter Sign-up
  • Contests
  • About
    • The Armchair Traveller Newsletter
    • Explore our travel guides
    • Impressive West Coast
    • West Coast Partners
    • West Coast Traveller Directory
    • Join Our Team
    • Contact Us
    • Terms of Service
    • Explore West Coast Traveller on TikTok
  • Search
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok Icon
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Flickr Icon
  • Menu
  • Skip to left header navigation
  • Skip to right header navigation
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to secondary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Before Header

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok Icon
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Flickr Icon

West Coast Traveller

  • Destinations
    • Canada
      • British Columbia
        • Vancouver Island, B.C.
        • Okanagan
        • Lower Mainland, B.C.
        • Northern B.C.
        • Interior B.C.
        • Kootenays/Rockies
      • Alberta
      • Yukon
      • Northwest Territories
    • U.S.A.
      • Alaska
      • Washington
      • Oregon
      • California
    • West Coast Galleries
  • Experiences
    • West Coast Galleries
      • Nature Photography
      • Wildlife Photography
      • Cityscapes
    • Things To Do
    • Staycation Secrets
      • Canada
      • U.S.A.
    • Adventure
      • Adrenaline
      • Beaches
      • Biking
      • Camping
      • Fishing
      • Hiking
      • Hunting and Fishing
      • Rafting
      • Skiing
    • Sip & Savour
    • Family Activities
    • Indigenous Tourism
    • Accessible Travel
    • Travel Tips & Advisories
  • Newsletter Sign-up
  • Contests
  • About
    • The Armchair Traveller Newsletter
    • Explore our travel guides
    • Impressive West Coast
    • West Coast Partners
    • West Coast Traveller Directory
    • Join Our Team
    • Contact Us
    • Terms of Service
    • Explore West Coast Traveller on TikTok
  • Search
You are here: Home / Travel / Venture into the dark at Washington’s Ape Cave

Hikers walk near the entrance of Ape Cave in Gifford Pinchot National Forest. The cave is a series of lava tubes from an eruption of Mount St. Helens 2,000 years ago. (Taylor Balkom / The Columbian)

Venture into the dark at Washington’s Ape Cave

August 29, 2022 //  by Wire Service

Share this:

By Scott Hewitt / The Columbian

A bit sizzly up there on the surface, is it? Why not hang out down here, underground, with us supremely cool apes?

The year-round temperature inside Ape Cave, a lava tube on the southern approach to Mount St. Helens in southwest Washington, is a stable 42 degrees no matter the weather outside. That’s cold enough to see your breath, if you can see anything at all. Which you can’t down here, not without your own light.

Darkness and chill are the central features of any visit to Ape Cave. This isn’t the kind of outing that offers big vistas and information stations, other than on the surface before you descend. Once you’re underground, exploring Ape Cave really means exploring your own tolerance for shadows, cold and overall creepiness.

Sounds like fun, doesn’t it? It sure is, in a spooky sort of way. Just ask the army of intrepid summer-camp kids from Friendly House in Portland who were marching through the cave, armed with flashlights and headlamps, when we visited one morning in late July.

Lamps and lanterns

Ease yourself down the long metal staircases that descend into an enormous but well-hidden pit in the forest. Step carefully over the rubble strewn around this bubble of light, which turns out to be soberingly small.

This is where you realize that the U.S. Forest Service’s recommendation of two light sources per person is no joke. Standard cellphone lights that seem obnoxiously bright above ground are swallowed whole in this darkness.

Your spelunking Columbian correspondents wore strap-on headlamps and carried bright camping lanterns. The latter did most of the work. During summer you can rent lanterns at the visitor booth here ($5 in cash or $5.39 by card).

Take a breath. Face the unknown. Feel the cold start to settle in. That’s mostly the ambient temperature down here — unless it’s also the tiniest thrill of fear.

This way, a sign says, is the lower cave: a ¾-mile tunnel that’s not especially challenging nor tight enough to trigger claustrophobic willies. It takes about an hour to go out and back for a 1½-mile journey in all.

The other way is the upper cave: a rugged 1½ miles up a tighter, twistier corridor that demands careful stepping, scrambling over rocks and caution about banging your head. Budget yourself at least two hours to explore the upper cave, after which you clamber up a metal ladder and make your way back along a surface trail that’s part forest oasis and part pahoehoe museum.

Headlamps illuminate the walls of Ape Cave. Temperatures in the cave are 42 degrees year-round. (Taylor Balkom / The Columbian)

Crust and flow

Pahoehoe is that blobby, undulating lava that looks exactly like what it is: hardened liquid. It’s a Hawaiian term for the shapely lava you’ll find on the islands, a type less often found in the Cascade Range.

Almost 2,000 years ago, oozy, slow-moving basalt lava trickled out of a vent on the south side of Mount St. Helens. Pahoehoe forms a hard crust that preserves its inner heat, allowing it to travel long distances. At Ape Cave, a tight pahoehoe seal formed on the forest floor while lava kept flowing below, carving a unique 2-mile-long tube that was eventually left empty as the lava trickled away again.

The terraced walls of Ape Cave reveal how that happened unevenly, in waves, with different layers and well-formed lava shelves distinctly visible. As the lava sank away, super-hot gases baked the tunnel walls into a shiny, intricately textured glaze.

As you travel, the crust of lava overhead can vary in height from as low as a basement ceiling to as tall as a cathedral. The carpet of sand and ash underfoot in the lower cave was deposited during relatively recent volcanic ash flows.

Any fragile, removable geologic formations, including stalagmites, were carted away by tourists long ago. The oddball formation near the bottom of the lower cave that’s still here is the glob of cooled lava that apparently fell from the ceiling, floated down the lava stream and became wedged in a narrow spot just over your head. It’s called The Meatball.

Apes, bats, slime

According to the U.S. Forest Service, the yawning mouth of Ape Cave was discovered in 1947 by Lawrence Johnson, a logger from nearby Amboy. But it was local Scout leader Harry Reese who had the clever idea of letting his troop of eager young Boy Scouts do the initial exploring.

They didn’t find apes. According to the Forest Service, Ape Cave’s name comes from the Scouts’ sponsorship organization, the St. Helens Apes, a group of local outdoorsmen. It’s unknown whether the St. Helens Apes were playing with the term “brush ape,” slang for hillbilly, or adopting local legend Sasquatch as their mascot.

What Ape Cave does have by way of inhabitants is insects, salamanders, mice and bats. A boot-brush station is provided near the mouth of Ape Cave so visitors can clean off any hitchhiking fungal spores that cause white-nose syndrome, which is deadly to bats and spreading in Washington.

There isn’t much by way of plant life down in the darkness of Ape Cave except for lichen, moss and a nutrient-rich goo that insects feast upon called cave slime. When you visit Ape Cave, please don’t touch the slime.

Hikers walk down into Ape Cave, which was discovered in 1942. (Taylor Balkom / The Columbian)

If you go:

  • Located near Cougar, WA. Ape Cave is a 4½-hour drive from Everett, WA., about 3½ hours from Seattle, WA, and about 1 ½ hours from Portland, OR.

  • A popular tourist destination, Ape Cave manages crowds through timed ticketing and parking permits May through October. Make your timed reservation (two-hour window) at tinyurl.com/EDH-ape-cave. Price: $2.
  • To park at Ape Cave, purchase a Northwest Forest Pass onsite or online at tinyurl.com/EDH-GP-passes. Price: $5 per day, $30 for one year. (A Northwest Forest Pass gets you admission to all Forest Service recreation sites in Washington and Oregon.)
Share this:

Category: TravelTag: Adrenaline, caving, Hiking, Staycation secrets, Things to do, USA, Washington, WCT Intro

Related Posts

You may be interested in these posts from the same category.

Mount Revelstoke parkway opens to the summit for vehicles

Revelstoke’s scenic 26-kilometre parkway has opened all the way to the top for motor vehicles,…

Mount Revelstoke parkway opens to the summit for vehiclesRead More

Comox Trolley Tour debuts hop-on, hop-off tour of town’s sights

The Great Canadian Trolley Company has officially arrived in Comox, launching its highly anticipated Hop…

Comox Trolley Tour debuts hop-on, hop-off tour of town’s sightsRead More

A Circus by the Sea takes shape in sand as Parksville Beach Fest returns!

Vancouver Island’s favourite beach festival returns in just a few short weeks, with more than…

A Circus by the Sea takes shape in sand as Parksville Beach Fest returns!Read More

Need an escape? New tech can help you unplug without going totally off-grid

Need an escape? New tech can help you unplug without going totally off the grid.…

Need an escape? New tech can help you unplug without going totally off-gridRead More

North Vancouver Island’s Ha’me’ Restaurant shares bounty of Indigenous cuisine

Ha’me’, the fine dining restaurant at the Kwa’lilas Hotel in Port Hardy, wholly owned by…

North Vancouver Island’s Ha’me’ Restaurant shares bounty of Indigenous cuisineRead More

Okanagan to host Canada’s longest-running Elvis festival

An annual tribute to the King of Rock ‘N Roll returns to B.C.’s Okanagan June…

Okanagan to host Canada’s longest-running Elvis festivalRead More

13 of the most surreal places to visit in the western US

You know those places that feel so dreamlike that you ask yourself, “Did I just…

13 of the most surreal places to visit in the western USRead More

Ancient species spotted along Trail shoreline offers hope for Upper Columbia sturgeon

What could be greater than a lunchtime stroll along the Trail Esplanade, with the sunshine…

Ancient species spotted along Trail shoreline offers hope for Upper Columbia sturgeonRead More

Sidney, B.C. museum launches exhibit on ‘most fascinating frontier’: space

A southern Vancouver Island museum invites you to explore the reaches of space with a…

Sidney, B.C. museum launches exhibit on ‘most fascinating frontier’: spaceRead More

Previous Post: « Banff National Park plan focuses on climate change, traffic, Indigenous relations
Next Post: Vote now for favourite travel photos! »

Primary Sidebar

Things To Do

Mount Revelstoke parkway opens to the summit for vehicles

June 29, 2025

Comox Trolley Tour debuts hop-on, hop-off tour of town’s sights

June 29, 2025

A Circus by the Sea takes shape in sand as Parksville Beach Fest returns!

June 27, 2025

Need an escape? New tech can help you unplug without going totally off-grid

June 25, 2025

Recent Posts

Mount Revelstoke parkway opens to the summit for vehicles

June 29, 2025

Comox Trolley Tour debuts hop-on, hop-off tour of town’s sights

June 29, 2025

A Circus by the Sea takes shape in sand as Parksville Beach Fest returns!

June 27, 2025

Need an escape? New tech can help you unplug without going totally off-grid

June 25, 2025

Footer

The West Coast Traveller has an immense social media footprint, with eight social media sites and and 125,000+ social followers.

Join us on social media and Join Our Community by sharing your stuff!

Get Inspired

News Media Groups

Black Press Media
Sound Publishing
Oahu Media Group
Alaska
Boulevard Magazines
Used.ca

Let’s Get Social

West Coast Traveller
I Love British Columbia
I Love Alberta
I Love Yukon
I Love Northwest Territories
I Love Washington
I Love California
I Love Oregon
I Love Alaska

Visit Our Companion Sites

I Love Saskatchewan
I Love Manitoba
I Love Nunavut
I Love Ontario
I Love Quebec
I Love Newfoundland and Labrador
I Love Nova Scotia
I Love New Brunswick
I Love Prince Edward Island

Site Footer

  • Facebook
  • Flickr
  • Instagram
  • TikTok Icon
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Copyright © 2025 West Coast Traveller and · All Rights Reserved