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Accueil 53
Date de création / 2012 / Octobre
- What's not to love when you look at the textures and colors of these rocks?
- Vegetation does not get much moisture in the canyon. This dead sage bush attests to the harsh conditions near the river.
- Various rock spires at Smith Rock State Park provide for great scenery as you hike through the park.
- Three Mule Deer watch for hikers at Smith Rock State Park.
- This rock looks like a giant tomato splattered on the face of the rock.
- This is the highest point of any trail in Smith Rock State Park. Even here, you can find rock bolts permanently installed just out of sight.
- This great example of a widow-maker on the Horseshoe Ridge Trail won't be standing for many more seasons. I guess it will fall over this winter.
- This banana slug didn't mind the rainy weather at all.
- These rocks seem about to roll off the tops of these peaks at Smith Rock State Park.
- There is a lot of columnar basalt along this hike. The columns are hundreds of feet tall.
- The trail passes through a second growth forest mainly of Hemlock trees with a few Vine Maples.
- The Three Sisters can be seen from Smith Rock State Park when the weather is clear.
- The Three Sisters are North Sister, also known as Faith, Middle Sister, Hope, and South Sister, Charity, provide a nice backdrop to the town of Terrebone, Oregon.
- The striations in the rocks suggest the land was tilted in some past geologic time.
- The roughness of this rock makes a fantastic interplay of light and shadows in the early morning sun at Smith Rock State Park.