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Home 13045
- Door to the renovated bathroom near Panorama Point at Mt. Rainier National Park. Pretty exciting picture isn't it? I liked the wooden door and stonework. The workers did a very nice job fitting in new stones with the old ones.
- Fall foilage provides a nice complement to the peaks of Smith Rock State Park.
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- Jasmine takes a break on the Bluff Mountain Trail.
- Dugout canoe and Native American canoe replicas at Cottonwood Beach along the Steigerwald Lake Trail in Washougal, WA. Lewis and Clark camped here for 6 days in the winter of 1806.
- The Stevens Creek Trail joins the Box Canyon Trail. This is a view looking south towards the Stevens Canyon Road. The National Park Service had arch bridges faced with stone to blend in with the scenic views of the Park.
- The stone house was built by the Works Progress Administration. It was a restroom and was abandoned after the Columbus Day Storm.
- Part of Garfield Peak as seen from the Sun Notch Trail.
- There is an alternate access to Homestead Falls but you miss walking along the pleasant trail.
- What could be a better way to have some water than with a view like this.
- Ramona Falls on the Timberline Trail.
- The rust orange color of this cement come from iron and other minerals that precipitate out of the water as it cools. This stonework was built around 1920. This color is why the spring is called Iron Mike.
- Mt. Hood as seen from Summit Prairie Meadows along the Trillium Lake Trail.
- An overlook from the Horsetail Creek Trail with Beacon Rock is in the distance on the right and looks kind of like a big tooth. Wind Mountain is the pointy peak just to the right and behind Beacon Rock.
- This is the only wildlife I was able to take a picture of at the park.