- OrdenPor defecto
✔ Título de la foto, A → Z
Título de la foto, Z → A
Fecha de creación, nuevo → antiguo
Fecha de creación, antiguo → nuevo
Fecha de publicación, nuevo → antiguo
Fecha de publicación, antiguo → nuevo
Puntuación, más alta → más baja
Puntuación, más baja → más alta
Visitas, más → menos
Visitas, menos → más - Medidas de la fotoCuadrado
Miniatura
✔ XXS - diminuto
XS - extrapequeño
S - pequeño
M - mediano
L - grande - IdiomaAfrikaans 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
Inicio / University Falls Photos OR 12
Visualizar:
Lista semanal
Fecha de creación / 2011 / Semana 5
- A closer view of University Falls shows what a lovely cascade the falls are with the water spilling across the whole face of the falls in the winter.
- A few small streams cross over the University Falls Trail.
- An old stump rots and provides a haven for moss and Salal along the University Falls Trail.
- Jasmine checks out the trail junction for the Storey Burn Trail. Stay to the left at this junction on the University Falls Trail. This junction is about .3 mile from the trailhead.
- Jasmine gets a drink from the Devils Lake fork of the Wilson River.
- Log crossing ove the Devils Lake fork of the Wilson River.
- Nearing University Falls, the trail looks down on Elliott Creek.
- Seasonal ponds hold runoff water along the University Falls Trail. The ponds make nice reflections of the forest.
- The trunks of Red Alders create a fantastic pattern of black and white along the University Falls Trail.
- These old stumps are testament to how trees used to be logged. You can see the divots in the side of the tree which were cut by the lumberjacks for springboards. Springboards were what the lumberjacks stood on as they sawed through the trees by hand. It l
- Two streams come together just above the log crossing over the Devils Lake fork of the Wilson River. Looks like a great place to go wading in the summer.
- University Falls cascades about 55 feet down a basalt slope. The trail ends with a closeup view of the falls.