Live Mt St Helens webcam
Below are two views of Mt St Helens.The top image is from a camera mounted on my balcony pointed 52 miles North to the
volcano.The second image is from the incomparable VolcanoCam, a mere 7 miles from the crater at the Johnston Ridge
Observatory.
*update 11/5/06* After 2 years in a damp, leaky, plastic box my camera died. I highly recommend the Sony TRV460 if
you ever need a camera to stay on continuously for 2 years in the rain. In the meantime, I will work on getting a new one.
Links:
kevision webcam:
-Sample clear day image
-Mt St Helens time lapse videos
-Zeitcam time lapse
-Mt St Helens
Photos
- Rockfall images
-kevision home
-email Kevin

USFS VolcanoCam:
-VolcanoCam Home (USFS)
-VoclanoCam FAQ (USFS)
-VolcanoCam Image Archive(USFS)
-The Johnston Ridge Observatory (USGS)

Mt. St. Helens Science:
-CVO current volcano status (USGS)
-PNSN webicorders (Pacific Norhtwest
Seismograph Network)
-Mt. St. Helens Night Imagery (Darryl Luscombe)
-Mt St Helens Monitoring Page (Jody Wilson,
Boston University)
-Mt. St. Helens blog (The Spokesman-Review,
Spokane, WA)
-David Johnston bio (USGS)

Regional Meteorology:
-VAAC ash alerts (NOAA)
-Mt. St. Helens wind data (NOAA)
-
Mount St. Helens Weather (NOAA)
-Portland Weather (NOAA)
My camera, 52 miles south of the volcano in Portland, Oregon. The roof of the One Main Place building is to the left. If the
weather is cloudy, or the sun has set, this image may not refresh, or may be of the general downtown area
The VolcanoCam facing south from the Johnston Ridge Observatory. This camera is on 24 hours, and updates every 5 minutes. Click
here for more information on the camera. Please also visit  the Mount St. Helens National Volcanic Monument site.