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Home 30
Creation date / 2009 / Week 21
- 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
- Trail junction sigh for Humbug Mounain on the Saddle Mountain Trail. The trail leads to an excellent view of Saddle Mountain to the north.
- The trail passes above a small waterfall on the Cape Falcon Trail.
- The summit of Neahkahnie Mountain has this great view of the beach at Manzanita.
- The Neahkahnie Mountain Trail switchbacks up from Highway US 101 and climbs up through an open meadow. This is looking north to Cape Falcon in the far distance.
- Suspension bridge over Short Sand Creek at Oswald West State Park. This is the beginning of the lower Neahkahnie Mountain Trail.
- Surfers in the ocean at Oswald West State Park. This view is near the beginning of the lower Neahkahnie Mountain Trail.
- Spring wildflowers of yellow Violets and Bleeding Hearts decorate the first portion of the Saddle Mountain Trail.
- Skunk Cabbage (Latin name: Symplocarpus foetidus) sporting shiny new leaves in late May along the Cape Falcon Trail. This is one of the few plants in the wild that you can smell before you see it.
- Several small streams are along the trail. Some have bridges and some don't. They are all step-across streams in all but winter storms.
- Saddle Mountain emerges from the coastal fog as seen from the Humbug Mountain viewpoint.
- Rough cut stairs go to the top of Humbug Mountain.
- Red alder trees and Elderberry bushes near the trailhead to Saddle Mountain. The photo doesn't do justice to the way the light plays on the trunks and patches of moss on the alder.
- Pink bell-shaped flowers of Salal (Latin name: Gautheria shallon) in bloom along the Cape Falcon Trail.
- Looking southeast from near the summit of Neahkahnie Mountain. This is a veiw into the Nehalem River valley.