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Izveidošanas datums / 2009
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- Wildflowers carpet the hillside on parts of Kamiak Butte. This is looking south from Kamiak Butte over the Palouse.
- White flowers in bloom on Apple Clover, Wood Sorrel, or Sour Apple, (Latin name: Oxalis oregana) on the Neahkahnie Mountain Trail, Oregon. The leaves of this plant are edible, but contain Oxalic acid which can upset some people's stomachs. This plant is t
- Whispy clouds and frosty rocks provide a wintery scene on the shady side of the ridge. This is on a promontory west of the Pacific Crest Trail on the way to Twin Lakes Trail.
- 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.
- When James Longmire opened the resort at Longmire in the late 1800's, it was considered good health to drink from the soda springs and to bathe in the water.
- Western Hemlock (Latin name: Tsuga heterophylla) predominate the lower portions of this trail. Here is a picture the gray bark of an older tree.
- Western Hemlock (Latin name: Tsuga heterophylla) predominate the lower portions of this trail. Here is a picture of their soft, flat needles.
- West Lake is a jewel of a lake nestled in the trees below Glacier View. The lake bottom has a moderate slope and it makes a great place for a summer swim in a cold lake.
- 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.
- Water cascades down cliffs in several places along the trail during the wet season. This is just at the edge of the trail on Horsetail Creek Trail.
- Walking up the Burroughs Mountain Trail from Frozen Lake you can see the Mt. Fremont Lookout as a tiny dark cube at the left edge of the ridge in the center of the picture.
- Walking under the overhanging cliff at Ponytail Falls on Horsetail Creek in the Columbia River Gorge.
- Walking 100 feet away from the Green Point Ridge Trail provides a nice view of North Lake and Mt. Defiance. Take care to remember how far you have wandered off the trail so you don't overshoot the trail while bushwhacking.
- Vine Maples frome trees as they struggle for sunlight on the Twin Firs Trail.
- Vine Maple leaves are backlit by sunlight at the base of one of the huge cedar trees in the Grove of the Patriarchs at Mt. Rainier National Park.