Eyehike Gallery

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Piggyback Plant or Thousand Mothers, (Latin name: Tolmiea menziesii) along the Wildwood Trail at Forest Park in Portland, Oregon.

aaf.jpg Piggyback Plant or Thousand Mothers, (Latin name: Tolmiea menziesii) carpets the ground along the Munson Creek Falls Trail.PiktogramosPicture of the end of Fire Lane 13 showing the power poles that mark the start of the user trail. You can see the user trail going off into the brush just to the right of the poles.Piggyback Plant or Thousand Mothers, (Latin name: Tolmiea menziesii) carpets the ground along the Munson Creek Falls Trail.PiktogramosPicture of the end of Fire Lane 13 showing the power poles that mark the start of the user trail. You can see the user trail going off into the brush just to the right of the poles.Piggyback Plant or Thousand Mothers, (Latin name: Tolmiea menziesii) carpets the ground along the Munson Creek Falls Trail.PiktogramosPicture of the end of Fire Lane 13 showing the power poles that mark the start of the user trail. You can see the user trail going off into the brush just to the right of the poles.Piggyback Plant or Thousand Mothers, (Latin name: Tolmiea menziesii) carpets the ground along the Munson Creek Falls Trail.PiktogramosPicture of the end of Fire Lane 13 showing the power poles that mark the start of the user trail. You can see the user trail going off into the brush just to the right of the poles.Piggyback Plant or Thousand Mothers, (Latin name: Tolmiea menziesii) carpets the ground along the Munson Creek Falls Trail.PiktogramosPicture of the end of Fire Lane 13 showing the power poles that mark the start of the user trail. You can see the user trail going off into the brush just to the right of the poles.Piggyback Plant or Thousand Mothers, (Latin name: Tolmiea menziesii) carpets the ground along the Munson Creek Falls Trail.PiktogramosPicture of the end of Fire Lane 13 showing the power poles that mark the start of the user trail. You can see the user trail going off into the brush just to the right of the poles.

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