- LanguageAfrikaans Argentina Azərbaycanca
Bahasa Indonesia Brasil Brezhoneg
Català Česky Dansk
Deutsch Dhivehi English
English English Español
Esperanto Estonian Euskara
Finnish Français Français
Gaeilge Galego Hrvatski
Íslenska Italiano Latviešu
Lëtzebuergesch Lietuviu Magyar
Malay México Nederlands
Norsk bokmål Norwegian nynorsk Polski
Português Română Slovenšcina
Slovensky Srpski Svenska
Tiếng Việt Türkçe Wolof
Ελληνικά Български Македонски
Монгол Русский Српски
Українська עברית العربية (مصر)
العربية العربية پارسی
कोंकणी বাংলা ગુજરાતી
தமிழ் ಕನ್ನಡ ภาษาไทย
ქართული ខ្មែរ 中文 (繁體)
中文 (香港) 日本語 简体中文
한국어
Home 13068
- A few Tiger Lillies (Latin name: Lilium columbianum) grow along the trail providing a bright splash of orange along the Wyeth trail in the late spring.
- Yellow Western Groundsel (Latin Name: Yellow Senico integerrimus) and pink daisies on the overlook along the Wygant Trail.
- CIMG2428
- Delphinium (Latin Name: Delphinium trollifolium) and Thimbleberry (Latin Name: Rubus parviflorus) on Angels Rest trail.
- The Columbia River can barely be seen from this clearing in the trail.
- Another view of Mt. Hood from the forest road. Be sure to look back towards Mt. Hood as you're walking up the snow-covered road.
- From the top of Beacon Rock you can see Hamilton Mountain and the basalt cliffs along the south side of the mountain. Looking at Hamilton Mountain you can see how steep slopes end in sheer cliffs in the Gorge.
- View of Mt. Hood from Silver Star Mountain.
- Mt. Defiance can be seen to the south of Bunker Hill. Mt. Defiance is on the south side of the Columbia River.
- Burnt Bridge Creek Trail construction sign - 2008
- The blue flowers of Spreading Phlox (Latin name: Phlox diffusa) are in full bloom in mid-July along the Burroughs Mountain Trail in Mt. Rainier National Park.
- Several small streams are along the trail. Some have bridges and some don't. They are all step-across streams in all but winter storms.
- Old trailhead photo for the Cape Horn Trail
- Just another pose of me working on the Cape Horn Trail.
- A root-arbor has developed when this tree grew a root along another tree that had fallen against it. Now it is like a doorway on the trail.