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Prima pagină 52
Data creaţiei / 2009 / Martie
- Looking north on the trail to the promontory which is west of the Pacific Crest Trail between Barlow Pass to Twin Lakes, OR.
- Photo of a blue trail marker to show what they look like on the trails around Mt. Hood. This is just west of the Pacific Crest Trail between Barlow Pass to Twin Lakes, OR.
- Looking east on the trail to the promontory which is west of the Pacific Crest Trail between Barlow Pass to Twin Lakes, OR.
- Mt. Hood from the trail to the promontory which is west of the Pacific Crest Trail between Barlow Pass to Twin Lakes, OR.
- Along the trail to the promontory which is west of the Pacific Crest Trail between Barlow Pass to Twin Lakes, OR.
- Snow covered alpine meadows on the trail to the promontory which is west of the Pacific Crest Trail between Barlow Pass to Twin Lakes, OR.
- When the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) built these trails in the gorge, concrete signs were added. Sometimes they are hard to see because moss and ferns are growing over the signs. This sign is about 50 feet from the trailhead near Horsetail Falls.
- Devil's Matchsticks lichen (Latin Name: Pilophorus acicularislichen) on the Oneonta Trail near Triple Falls. This plant is about 2 inches tall and you can see the fruiting bodies on the tips of the stalks.
- In a rainforest, even the signposts have plants growing on them. This is the Cape Lookout Trai, part of the Oregon Cost Trail system.
- This is a 60 foot waterfall on Oneonta Creek on Horsetail Creek Trail, just above the steel and wood bridge over Oneonta Creek. Oneonta Falls is just downstream from this waterfall.
- A lichen or other epiphyte growing in the shrubs along the Munson Creek Falls trail.
- Bryophyte mosses grow lush along Munson Creek.
- Licorice fern (Latin name: Polypodium glycyrrhizais) growing along Horsetail Creek Trail. Licorice fern is named because of the sweet, licorice-flavored rhizomes. Maybe early spring isn't the season to eat this because It didn't taste good.
- aal
- Ponytail Falls waterfall is about 110 feet high and is on Horsetail Creek in the Columbia River Gorge. This is classified as a horsetail waterfall.