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Inicio 52
Data de creación / 2009 / Marzo
- Pixie Cup Lichen (Latin name: Cladonia chlorophaea) near Triple Falls, Oregon.
- Trailhead sign for Munson Creek Falls. This is a typical view of the trail to Munson Creek Falls.
- Looking downstream on Newton Creek showing that there is a wide floodplain for snowshoeing or skiing along this part of the creek.
- Water cascades down cliffs in several places along the trail during the wet season. This is just past a switchback on the west side of Oneonta Creek.
- Skunk Cabbage (Latin Name: Symplocarpus foetidus) is a slightly poisionous plant, but don't worry because there are no animals that willingly eat it.
- Bryophyte mosses grow lush along Munson Creek.
- The log bridge over Clark Creek is so full of snow that it isn't useable until some of the snow melts. There are usually snow bridges just upstream from the bridge that are used.
- 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.
- This is the trailhead sign at the southern end of the Cape Lookout North Trail.
- Munson Creek Falls cascades 319 feet down a cliff at the head of the valley. This is the tallest waterfall in the Coast Range.
- The Nordic Center at Mt. Hood Meadows is the trailhead for this hike. The trail is found by starting from the left side of the center and walking off to the left a bit, looking for blue trail markers.
- The Bridge over Oneonta Creek is about 30 feet above the stream and has an open-slat deck. You can look down right through the bridge and see the creek rushing beneath you.
- A root-arbor has developed when this tree grew a root along another tree that had fallen against it. Now it is like a doorway on the trail.
- In a rainforest, even the signposts have plants growing on them. This is the Cape Lookout Trai, part of the Oregon Cost Trail system.
- Munson Creek Falls is the tallest waterfall in the Coast Range. It cascades 319 feet down a cliff at the head of the valley. This picture was taken early spring when the water flows freely.