Eyehike Gallery

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This tree trunk has been sandblasted by storms that rake Mt. Hood. The wood is worn away faster than it can turn gray. The grit almost polishes the wood smooth.

aav.jpg Trees fight to survive and eventually lose the fight with the elements that pound Lamberson Butte. Here a skeletal tree provides a foreground balance to Mt. Jefferson in the distance.ThumbnailsMt. Hood from the Timberline Trail above Lamberson Butte. Trees at this elevation grow incredibly slow and never get much over ten foot tall.Trees fight to survive and eventually lose the fight with the elements that pound Lamberson Butte. Here a skeletal tree provides a foreground balance to Mt. Jefferson in the distance.ThumbnailsMt. Hood from the Timberline Trail above Lamberson Butte. Trees at this elevation grow incredibly slow and never get much over ten foot tall.Trees fight to survive and eventually lose the fight with the elements that pound Lamberson Butte. Here a skeletal tree provides a foreground balance to Mt. Jefferson in the distance.ThumbnailsMt. Hood from the Timberline Trail above Lamberson Butte. Trees at this elevation grow incredibly slow and never get much over ten foot tall.Trees fight to survive and eventually lose the fight with the elements that pound Lamberson Butte. Here a skeletal tree provides a foreground balance to Mt. Jefferson in the distance.ThumbnailsMt. Hood from the Timberline Trail above Lamberson Butte. Trees at this elevation grow incredibly slow and never get much over ten foot tall.Trees fight to survive and eventually lose the fight with the elements that pound Lamberson Butte. Here a skeletal tree provides a foreground balance to Mt. Jefferson in the distance.ThumbnailsMt. Hood from the Timberline Trail above Lamberson Butte. Trees at this elevation grow incredibly slow and never get much over ten foot tall.

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