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Fecha de creación / 2009 / Marzo
- Munson Creek is a small, shallow stream. It seems amazing that a good-sized waterfall can fit into such a small stream.
- Winter storms can pile snow to surprising depths around Mt. Hood. One more good snowstorm will cover this sign, making routefinding more difficult.
- Stair-step Moss (Latin name: Hylocomium splendens) is a green feathery moss seen growing along the Oneonta Trail in the Columbia River Gorge.
- Piggyback Plant or Thousand Mothers, (Latin name: Tolmiea menziesii) carpets the ground along the Munson Creek Falls Trail.
- Snow blankets the firs and hemlock trees and any winds provide surprises to inattentive people who stand too close when snow sloughs off the treetops.
- Winter rains gather making their way downhill and gathering to cascade off cliffs along the trail during the wet season. This is just at the edge of the trail on Horsetail Creek Trail.
- Licorice fern (Latin name: Polypodium glycyrrhizais) growing on a small tree. Licorice fern is named because of the sweet, licorice-flavored rhizomes.
- Newton Creek in the depths of winter. This creek is about 5 feet wide and at the bottom of about a 12 foot deep snow canyon.
- A lichen or other epiphyte growing in the shrubs along the Munson Creek Falls trail.
- Mt. Hood from Newton Creek. There are some large boulders along the creek left from the last big flood.
- Bryophyte mosses grow lush near Munson Creek Falls.
- Newton Creek showing where I crossed. The log crossing looked to dangerous so I shovelled a ramp down to a step-across creek crossing.
- Frog Pelt lichen (Latin name: Peltigera neopolydactyla) near Triple Falls in the Columbia River Gorge.
- Bryophyte mosses grow lush near Munson Creek Falls.
- Mt. Hood from Newton Creek. This view shows the canyon that begins just upstream from where the summer trail crosses Newton Creek.