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Home 20
Creation date / 2009 / Week 12
- Munson Creek is a small, shallow stream. It seems amazing that a good-sized waterfall can fit into such a small stream.
- Piggyback Plant or Thousand Mothers, (Latin name: Tolmiea menziesii) carpets the ground along the Munson Creek Falls Trail.
- Licorice fern (Latin name: Polypodium glycyrrhizais) growing on a small tree. Licorice fern is named because of the sweet, licorice-flavored rhizomes.
- A lichen or other epiphyte growing in the shrubs along the Munson Creek Falls trail.
- Bryophyte mosses grow lush near Munson Creek Falls.
- Bryophyte mosses grow lush near Munson Creek Falls.
- Trailhead sign for Munson Creek Falls. This is a typical view of the trail to Munson Creek Falls.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- The trail dips down and crosses this small creek, then switchbacks up to the southern end of the Cape Lookout North Trail.