Eyehike Gallery

Welcome to the Eyehike photo gallery

Accueil / Wyeth Rainy Photos OR /

Looking northeast at the Columbia river far below in the distance. This picture is an illustration of the elvation gain on this trail. The trail begins at about the same elevation as the Columbia River.

aar.jpg Taking the trail Gorton Creek Trail up to Green Point Ridge Trail provides one of the few views of Mt. Hood on this hike on the Wyeth Trail.MiniaturesThe pink spires of Western Coralroot (Latin name: Corallorhiza maculata) belong to the Orchid family. These plants are saprophytic, which means they don't need light to grow, they need decaying plant matter.Taking the trail Gorton Creek Trail up to Green Point Ridge Trail provides one of the few views of Mt. Hood on this hike on the Wyeth Trail.MiniaturesThe pink spires of Western Coralroot (Latin name: Corallorhiza maculata) belong to the Orchid family. These plants are saprophytic, which means they don't need light to grow, they need decaying plant matter.Taking the trail Gorton Creek Trail up to Green Point Ridge Trail provides one of the few views of Mt. Hood on this hike on the Wyeth Trail.MiniaturesThe pink spires of Western Coralroot (Latin name: Corallorhiza maculata) belong to the Orchid family. These plants are saprophytic, which means they don't need light to grow, they need decaying plant matter.Taking the trail Gorton Creek Trail up to Green Point Ridge Trail provides one of the few views of Mt. Hood on this hike on the Wyeth Trail.MiniaturesThe pink spires of Western Coralroot (Latin name: Corallorhiza maculata) belong to the Orchid family. These plants are saprophytic, which means they don't need light to grow, they need decaying plant matter.Taking the trail Gorton Creek Trail up to Green Point Ridge Trail provides one of the few views of Mt. Hood on this hike on the Wyeth Trail.MiniaturesThe pink spires of Western Coralroot (Latin name: Corallorhiza maculata) belong to the Orchid family. These plants are saprophytic, which means they don't need light to grow, they need decaying plant matter.Taking the trail Gorton Creek Trail up to Green Point Ridge Trail provides one of the few views of Mt. Hood on this hike on the Wyeth Trail.MiniaturesThe pink spires of Western Coralroot (Latin name: Corallorhiza maculata) belong to the Orchid family. These plants are saprophytic, which means they don't need light to grow, they need decaying plant matter.

aar

Auteur
Steve Jones
Visites
1039
Bilan
pas de note
Votez pour cette image

Données EXIF

Make
Canon
Model
Canon PowerShot S3 IS
DateTimeOriginal
2009:07:11 14:42:42
ApertureFNumber
f/4.0