Several years ago we set a goal for ourselves to hike all 500 featured hikes in William L. Sullivan’s “100 Hikes…” series of guidebooks (post). Last year we completed the first of these books covering the Central Oregon Cascades (post). We followed that up by completing a pair of books in 2021 starting with Sullivan’s “100 Hikes/Travel Guide Oregon Coast and Coast Range” 3rd edition. Up until the start of 2021 we had been intending to finish his 4th edition but the continued closure of the Salmonberry Railroad prompted us to revert to the earlier edition. That meant going from only needing to finish 5 hikes to 9 hikes but at least the 9 hikes were open and thus we were able to visit them. The last final featured hike happened to be featured hike #1 – Leadbetter Point (post) which we visited on 7/31/2021. Many of the featured hikes in this book are shorter hikes with some barely more than a half mile so we often did multiple hikes in a single day.
Generally speaking in order to check a hike off our list we need to have hiked a substantial portion of Sullivan’s described hike or visited the main attraction(s) he identifies for the hike. For 59 of the hikes we stuck to a nearly identical route to the one described in the book. For another 22 hikes we added to the hike, either following Sullivan’s “other options” or making it up on our own. Eighteen of the hikes were limited to the main attraction which typically involved hikes where there was an option for a shuttle from a second trailhead or as in the case of the Rogue River Trail there were options for multi-day backpacking trips. (We will get to more of the Rogue River Trail as we work through his Southern Oregon book.) Finally one hike, #86 Lower Rogue River, was cut very short due to trail damage. We may revisit that trail at a later date but we counted it as we went as far as we felt we could safely at the time.
The area covered by Sullivan in this book is unique in that it is the only area in which there are featured hikes in three states – Washington, Oregon, and California. It also contains the northern most featured hike the aforementioned Leadbetter Point. The area covered is a somewhat narrow strip running down the coastline from Leadbetter Point south to Redwoods National Park in California. A few hikes are located as far inland as the foothills of the Coast Range along the edge of the Willamette Valley.

Despite being a fairly narrow (approximately 60 miles east to west) area the hikes were quite varied from beach walks to mountain summits, sand dunes to temperate rain forests, and urban walks to the solitude of remote wilderness.
The area is home to several designated wilderness areas including the two areas that are off-limits to visitors, Oregon Islands and Three Arch Rocks. The areas open to visitors are the Drift Creek, Cummins Creek, Rock Creek, Devils Staircase, Grassy Knob, Copper-Salmon, Wild Rogue, and Kalmiopsis.
Two mountain ranges are home to several hikes. The Coast Range extends over 200 miles from the Oregon/Washington border south to the Middle Fork Coquille River. At the southern end of the Coast Range the Klamath Mountains begin extending south into California. The elevations for these hikes ranged from sea level to 4655′ atop Vulcan Peak in the Klamath Mountains (Mary’s Peak at 4097′ marked the high point in the Coast Range).
Lastly many of the hikes along the Oregon Coast follow the route of the Oregon Coast Trail.
Without further ado here is a list of the 100 featured hikes along with a photo (or two where two distinctly different hikes were included in the entry) from the 2009 3rd edition of “100 Hikes/Travel Guide Oregon Coast & Coast Range”.
#1 Leadbetter Point – Hiked 7/31/2021

#2 Long Beach – Hiked 9/11/2017

#3 North Head – Hiked 9/11/2017

#4 Cape Disappointment – Hiked 9/11/2017

#5 Fort Columbia – Hiked 9/11/2017

#6 Clatsop Spit – Hiked 9/9/2017

#7 Fort Stevens – Hiked 9/9/2017

#8 Fort Clatsop – Hiked 1/10/2016

#9 Astoria – Hiked 9/9/2017

#10 Seaside Promenade – Hiked 9/12/2017

#11 Tillamook Head – Hiked 12/8/2013

#12 Cannon Beach – Hiked 9/10/2017

#13 Saddle Mountain – Hiked 5/31/2013 & 6/23/2018

#14 Highway 26 Waysides – Hiked 6/23/2018
Four County Point
Sunset Rest Area
#15 Banks-Vernonia Railroad – Hiked – 4/10/2016 & 1/16/2021 (Also ran as a marathon in 2014.)

#16 Cape Falcon – Hiked 6/22/2012 & 4/29/2017

#17 Neahkahnie Mountain – Hiked 1/5/2014

#18 Nehalem Bay – Hiked 1/1/2018

#19 Munson Falls – Hiked 5/30/2015

#20 Bayocean Spit – Hiked 4/14/2013

#21 Cape Meares – Hiked 1/1/2018

#22 Wilson River – Hiked 3/8/2014

#23 Kings Mountain – Hiked 8/16/2010

#24 Gales Creek – Hiked 2/15/2015

#25 Hagg Lake – Hiked 9/13/2019

#26 Cape Lookout – Hiked 11/11/2011

#27 Pacific City – Hiked 10/8/2013

#28 Mount Hebo – Hiked 5/30/2011 & 5/30/2015

#29 Niagara Falls – Hiked 2/12/2017

#30 Neskowin – Hiked 2/12/2017

#31 Harts Cove – Hiked 12/6/2014

#32 Cascade Head – Hiked 8/8/2010, 6/25/2019, & 9/28/19 (Inland Trail)

Inland (Rainforest) Trail
#33 Baskett Slough Refuge – Hiked 7/11/2010, 5/3/2020 & 4/15/2021

#34 Valley of the Giants – Hiked 5/18/2020

#35 Roads End – Hiked 3/6/2021

#36 Drift Creek Falls – Hiked 12/6/2014

#37 Salishan Spit – Hiked 8/1/2015

#38 Devil’s Punchbowl – Hiked 7/12/2012

#39 Newport Lighthouses – Hiked 8/26/2017
Yaquina Head
Yaquina Bay
#40 South Beach – Hiked 8/4/2018
Estuary Trail
South Jetty
Mike Miller Trail
#41 Ona Beach and Seal Rock – Hiked 12/11/2017

#42 Drift Creek North – Hiked 9/15/2010

#43 Drift Creek South – Hiked 8/3/2019

#44 Mary’s Peak – Hiked 2009 (day unknown), 6/1/2014, & 6/5/2021

#45 Kings Valley – Hiked 6/1/2014
Fort Hoskins
Beazell Forest
#46 Peavy Arboretum – Hiked 2/19/2018

#47 Chip Ross Park & Dimple Hill – Hiked 12/18/2016 & 10/2/2021

#48 Finley Wildlife Refuge – Hiked 10/21/2017, 5/31/20, & 4/14/2021

#49 Alsea Falls – Hiked 12/19/2012

#50 Yachats – Hiked 12/5/2020

#51 Cape Perpetua – HIked 9/15/2010, 2/17/2013, & 10/27/2018

#52 Gwynn Creek – Hiked 2/17/2013

#53 Heceta Head – Hiked 12/11/2017

#54 Baker Beach – Hiked 1/15/2017

#55 Sutton Creek – Hiked 2/20/2016

#56 Cape Mountain – Hiked 9/5/2011

#57 Pawn and Pioneer Trails – Hiked 5/13/2021
Pioneer Hill Trail
Pawn Old Growth Trail
#58 Siuslaw Ridge Trails – Hiked 2/20/2016 & 11/20/2021
Old Growth Ridge Trail
Clay Creek Trail
#59 Sweet Creek Falls – Hiked 2/20/2016

#60 Kentucky Falls – Hiked 5/9/2015

#61 Honeyman Park – Hiked 12/8/2018

#62 Siltcoos Lake – Hiked 12/8/2018

#63 Siltcoos River – Hiked 12/8/2018

#64 Taylor Dunes – Hiked 9/13/2018

#65 Oregon Dunes – Hiked 1/1/2015

#66 Tahkenitch Creek – Hiked 1/1/2015 & 9/16/2018

#67 Tahkenitch Dunes – Hiked 1/1/2015

#68 Lake Marie – Hiked 9/13/2018

#69 Umpqua Dunes – Hiked 9/13/2018

#70 Golden and Silver Falls – Hiked 5/16/2021

#71 Shore Acres – Hiked 5/15/2021

#72 South Slough Estuary – Hiked 5/15/2021

#73 Fivemile Point – Hiked 5/13/2021

#74 Bullards Beach – Hiked 9/15/2018

#75 Bandon Islands – Hiked 9/14/2018

#76 New River – Hiked 9/14/2018

#77 Floras Lake – Hiked 5/8/2017

#78 Cape Blanco – Hiked 5/8/2017

#79 Port Orford Heads – Hiked 5/8/2017

#80 Humbug Mountain – Hiked 5/16/2016

#81 Sisters Rock – Hiked 5/16/2016

#82 Otter Point – Hiked 5/16/2016

#83 Coquille River Falls – Hiked 5/6/2017
Coquille River Falls
Elk Creek Falls
#84 Hanging Rock – Hiked 5/7/2017
Hanging Rock
#85 Rogue River Trail – Hiked 5/14/2021

#86 Lower Rogue River – Hiked 5/9/2017

#87 Illinois River – Hiked 5/20/2016

#88 Shrader Old Growth Trail – Hiked 5/9/2017
Shrader Old Growth Trail
Myrtle Tree Trail
#89 Cape Sebastian – Hiked 5/18/2016

#90 Boardman Park North – Hiked 5/21/2016

#91 Boardman Park South – Hiked 5/19/2016

#92 Vulcan Lake – Hiked 5/17/2016
Vulcan Lake
Vulcan Peak
#93 Redwood Nature Trail – Hiked 5/17/2016

#94 Wheeler Ridge Bomb Site – Hiked 5/19/2016

#95 Oregon Redwoods – Hiked 5/13/2021

#96 Stout Grove – Hiked 10/25/2015

#97 Boy Scout Tree – Hiked 10/25/2015

#98 Damnation Creek – Hiked 10/24/2014

#99 Hidden Beach – Hiked 5/11/2017

#100 Fern Canyon – Hiked 5/10/2017

With any luck the Salmonberry Railroad will be reopened in the not too distant future so we can say we’ve completed the 4th edition as well. In the meantime there are still other non-featured hikes to explore and trails to revisit. Happy Trails!
River Otters on a boom at Dorena Lake
American bittern flying over Fern Ridge Wildlife Area
Raccoons at South Slough Estuary



Several species

One of the sulphurs
Another sulphur
Becker’s white
A hairstreak
Also a hairstreak











Cabbage white
California tortoiseshell
A checkerspot
Chlosyne acastus – sagebrush checkerspot, female
Chlosyne acastus – sagebrush checkerspot, male?
Cloudis parnassian
Cedar hairstreak
Green comma?
Hoary comma
Juba skipper – Hesperia juba
Langton’s Forester Moth
Lorquin’s admiral
Milbert’s tortoiseshell
Moth
A moth, possibly Gnophaela latipennis
Moth
Mylitta crescents
Ochre ringlet
Orange tip
Possibly a Boisduval’s blue – Icaricia icarioides
Propertius duskywing – Erynnis propertius
Purplish copper
Possibly another purplish copper, Steens Mountain Wilderness 8/17.
Sheep moth
Silvery blue?
A skipper
Anise swallowtail
Indra swallowtail
Possibly a pale swallowtail -Ninemile Ridge
Possibly a western swallowtail -Devil’s Staircase Wilderness
Viceroy
July 19th, Ochoco Mountains
August 17th Steens Mountain Wilderness
August 19th Steens Mountain Wilderness
One of the fritillary butterflies I think.











Flying ants at the summit of Mt. Bachelor

Cicada
Ladybug



Find the beetle
Dictyoptera aurora?
Crab spider

Spot the spider

Praying mantis
June bug
Damsel fly
Dragon fly
Dragon fly
Dragon fly
Dragon fly









Alligator lizard

Ring necked snake


Turtle
Western fence lizards
Dunn’s salamander?
Rough skinned newt
Crawdad surrounded by rough skinned newts
Fish in Black Canyon Creek
Seals
Sea lions
Nutria
Hindquarters of what we believe to have been a mole.
Indian Heaven Wilderness
Badger Creek Wilderness
Golden mantled-ground squirrel







Pika
Mountain cottontail
Eastern cottontail
Snowshoe hare
Jack rabbit
Ring-necked duck and a lesser scaup
American coot, spotted sandpiper and mallards on a log
American wigeons
Green-winged teals
Cinnamon teal
Mallards, a cinnamon teal and a pied billed grebe
Common merganser
A female hooded merganser? and buffleheads
Northern pintails
Northern shovelers
Ducklings
Canada geese
Western grebe
Bird at the Formal Gardens at Shore Acres State Park
At least two types of egrets and a bunch of ducks at Malhuer Wildlife Refuge
Egret
Great blue heron
Black-necked stilt
Dunlins
Yellowlegs?
White faced ibis
Whimbrels
Spotted sandpiper
Another sandpiper
A couple of types of shorebirds
White pelican
Seagull
Cormorants
Kingfisher
American dipper aka ouzel
A couple of American bushtits
Bewick’s wren?
Canyon wren?
Wren? at Horsethief Butte near The Dalles.
No idea, seen along the Alder Springs Trail in Central Oregon.
Possibly a flycatcher?
A flycatcher
Flycatcher?
Another no clue, seen near a creek in the Ochoco Mountains.
Crossbills? (based on the crossed beaks)
Black headed grosebeak
Black phoebe
California scrub jays
Gray jay
Stellar’s jay
Pinyon jay
Clark’s nutcracker
Brewer’s blackbird
Yellow headed blackbird
Red winged blackbird
Starling
Cedar waxwings
Common yellowthroat
Dark eyed junco
Chestnut-backed chickadee
Mountain chickadee
Possibly an orange crowned warbler
Ruby crowned kinglet
A finch
A finch
A finch
Green-tailed towhee
Spotted towhee
Pipit
Townsend’s solitaire
Robin, western bluebird and swallows
Mountain bluebird
Lazuli bunting
Red breasted nuthatch
Yellow-rumped warbler
Western meadowlark
Western tanager – male
Western tanager – female
Western wood-pewee
Rufous sided hummingbird
Chipping sparrow?
White crowned sparrows
Savannah sparrow
Sparrow
Sparrow?
Lark sparrow
Downy woodpecker?
Lewis’s woodpecker
Northern flicker
Red breasted sapsucker
A woodpecker
A woodpecker
Killdeer
Mourning dove
Grouse, leaning toward sooty
Not sure which type of grouse this is.
Ruffed grouse?
Sage grouse
California quail
Turkeys
Rooster at Cape Arago State Park
Crow
Turkey vulture
A magpie and some sort of hawk
A hawk
Hawk in flight
Cooper’s hawk?
Hawk in the Pueblo Mountains
Red-tailed hawk
Hawk or?
Northern harrier
Osprey (with meal)
Bald eagle
Great horned owl
American kestral
Common nightwawk
Northern shrike
Coyote
Wild horses at Steens Mountain
Not wild cows along the Little Malhuer Trail
Columbian black-tailed deer
Columbian white-tailed deer
Mule deer fawn
Elk in the Aldrich Mountains
Mountain goat

A delphinium
Red stem storksbill surrounding a lomatium.
A “nettle” of some sort at South Slough Estuary.
A treefoil.
A vetch
An allium on Ninemile Ridge.




This may be Eaton’s aster along the Deschutes River.
Purple cushion fleabane
Possibly showy fleabane, August-Steens Mountain Wilderness.
Showy townsendia
Anemonastrum deltoideum -Columbian windflower
Anemonoides oregana – Oregon anemone
Arnica
The small white flowers are miterworts while I believe the yellow is an arnica.
Avens
We believe this is ball head sandwort
Ballhead waterleaf
Pacific waterleaf
Balloon pod milk vetch
A milk-vetch, possibly Yakima
A balsamroot at Lyle Cherry Orchard
A balsamroot at Columbia Hills State Park
Hoary balsamroot on Ninemile Ridge
We think these are mules ears along the Malhuer River Trail
Baneberry
Beargrass, admittedly not the nicest specimen but this one stood out as the only still blooming stalk we saw on our hike in the Indian Heaven Wilderness on 9/5/2021.





Big-head clover
Big-seed lomatium surrounded by parsley.
A bindweed
Bistort
Bitter cherry
Bitterbrush
Blackberry
The only blanket flower with any petals left.
Bleeding heart
Blue dicks?
Might be ookow or blue dicks?
Large-flower triteliea
White triteliea
Henderson’s stars
Blue mountain prairie clover
Blue-bells of Scotland
Blue-eyed Mary, slender phlox, and elegant mariposa lilies.
A phlox
A phlox
Phlox
A phlox
Sub-alpine mariposa lily
Tolmie’s mariposa lily
Sagebrush mariposa lily
Sand lily
Glacier lilies
Fawn lilies
Washington lily
Yellow bell lilies
Blurry photo but the only tiger lily we came across in 2021.
Chocolate lily
Water lily
Bog orchid
Phantom orchid
Lousewort
Brass buttons (non-native) along the coast near Fivemile Point.
Alpine buckwheat
A buckwheat
A buckwheat
Another buckwheat
Sulfur? buckwheat
More buckwheat
Buttercups
Pearly everlasting
A mustard? along the John Day River
California corn lilies
False hellebore
Death camas
Mountain death camas
Candy sticks
Candy flower
Catchfly
Chamomile (non-native)




Chicory (non-native)
Chokecherry
A cinquefoil?
Slender cinquefoil
Sticky cinquefoil
Lassen clarkia?
Elkhorn clarkia aka Ragged robin
Clarkias with an out of focus madia
Common madia
Clover
A clover (non-native)
Red clover
Coastal manroot
Coltsfoot
Columbine
Coneflower
A currant
Also a currant
Daggerpod
Dandelions in the midst of mahala mat
Sagebrush false dandelion
Deadly nightshade
Diffuse evening primrose
Hooker’s evening primrose
A primrose
Dusty maiden
Dwarf aplinegold
Elegant brodiaea
Elephants head
Fairy bells
Fairy slippers
False lily of the valley and youth-on-age
False solomonseal
Plummed solomonseal
Star flower solomonseal
Starflower
False sunflowers
Fiddleneck
Fireweed
Flower near Illahe Lodge on the Rogue River Trail
Fringecup
Fuller’s teasel
A gentian
Gentians in the Steens Mountain Wilderness
Purple sticky geranium
Ghost pipe
Giant white wakerobbin
Trillium
Gold stars
Goldenrod
Gooseberry
Grand collomia
Grass of parnassus
Grass widows






Groundsel?
Gumweed? July, Willapa Bay
Hardhack aka Douglas spirea
Hawksbeard
Heart leaved bittercress
Heuchera cylindrica -roundleaf allumroot
Orange honeysuckle
Houndstongue
Also a houndstongue I think.
Evergreen huckleberry
Hyssop




Jacobs ladder
Western Jacobs ladder
Jessica sticktight
Largeleaf sandwort
Larkspur
Lewis flax
Pale flax
Sabin’s lupine



Manzanita
Marshall’s saxifrage
A saxifrage?
Saxifrage?
Mock orange
A monkeyflower
A monkeyflower
Pink monkeyflower
Monkshood
Moth mullien
Mountain bluebills
Tall bluebills
Mountain coyote mint
Mountain heather
Very sad looking mountain lady slippers
Naked broomrape
Northern bedstraw
Nuttal’s linanthus
Old man’s whiskers
Orange agoseris
Orange jewelweed
Oregon grape
Oregon sunshine
Daisies
Pacific coralroot
Spotted coralroot
Striped coralroot
Pinedrops
Two kinds of parsley
Partridgefoot
A pea?
A pea?
Pea (non-native)
Pennycress
Plectritis
Popcorn flower
Poppies
Poppy
Prince’s pine
Purple deadnettle
Purple oyster
Salsify
Pussy toes
Pussy paws?
Queen’s cup
Rangers buttons
Rhododendron
Rockfringe willowherb
Rough eyelashweed
Bunchberry
Salal
Salmonberry
Service berry
Scarlet gilia
Sea thrift
Self heal
Shooting stars
Showy milkweed
Sicklepod rockcress
Silky phacelia
Silverleaf phacelia
Threadleaf phacelia
Snow queen
Spreading dogbane
Sticky starwort?
Stonecrop
Strawberry
Swamp onion
Tapertip onion?
An onion
Tailed kittentails
Tassel-flowered bricklelbush – Favoite name of the year.
Thimbleberry





Three-leaf lewisia
Threeleaf goldthreads
Twinberry honeysuckle
Twinflower
Twisted stalk
Toothwort
Valerian
Vaetch’s blazingstar
A violet
A violet
Wapato
Western clematis
Western meadowrue
Western stoneseed
Western pasque flower (seed head)
White stemmed frasera shortly before blooming.
Wild ginger
Rose
Roses
Wintergreen
Woodland stars
May 29th, Alder Springs Trail
May 29th, Alder Springs Trail
May 30th, Cottonwood Canyon State Park
May 30th, Cottonwood Canyon State Park
June 14th, North Fork Umatilla Wilderness
August 29th, Mt. St. Helens National Volcanic Monument near the Norway Pass Trailhead.
September 5th, Indian Heaven Wilderness along Falls Creek.
September 13th, Deschutes River





A bank of clouds was sitting directly over Portland but we could see the edge in the distance. We hopped that the clouds would either burn off or move along.




Junction with the Birch Trail.
A wren busy pecking at a log.
Junction with the Aspen Trail. As we descended we left most of the snow, and the icy conditions, behind.
Holman Lane Junction.
Balch Creek and the Lower Macleay Trail (Currently closed due to construction.)

Icicles over Balch Creek.


Going uphill before it got really slick.
Wilwood Trail at Macleay Park Trailhead.






We took this raven to be the “lookout”.


Bench at the end of the Creek Trail.
Pond along the Jay Trail,
Junction with the Woodpecker Trail.
Big Douglas fir.
I continue to struggle to get a clear photo of a varied thrush.
Jay Trail junction with the Wren Trail.
Nearing the pond from the other side.




Stairs up to the trail junction.

Baseball sized jelly fungus, the largest we’ve seen.
Descending to the South Collins Trail.
More ice formations.


We planned on returning via the Upper Macleay Trail.
Heather descending the slick section with a trail runner behind that had attempted to get up the hill but was turning back.
Cumberland Trail junction.


The trail runner in blue.
Heather coming up behind me.
Arriving at the
Pittock Mansion
A line of blue sky beyond the cloud cover.
Portland from Pittock Mansion.
Snowy foothills in the sunlight beyond the Columbia River.



Entering the Macleay Park Trailhead.
One last look at the Witch’s Castle.
Holman Lane started out snow and ice free.
Back to the snow and ice higher up.
NW 53rd Drive
Birch Trailhead
The microspikes went back on before descending the Birch Trail and stayed on for the remainder of the hike.
Sparrow foraging on the Birch Trail.
Back to the Wildwood Trail.
Wild Cherry Trail junction.
Little snowman near the junction.
Is that a bit of blue in the sky finally?
Snowy mushrooms
A break in the clouds provided some blue sky above the Keil/Dogwood Trail junction.
Woodpecker that wasn’t a bit concerned about my presence.
The Subaru waiting for us at the trailhead.

Banks-Vernonia State Trail in January. (
Row River Trail in December. (
John Day River from the Lost Corral Trail
Ninemile Ridge in the North Fork Umatilla Wilderness in June. (
Devil’s Staircase Wilderness in July. (
Black Canyon Wilderness in July. (
Monument Rock Wilderness in July. (
Ledbetter Point, the last of the hikes from the coast book. (
Badger Lake, the last hike from the northwestern book. (
Redwoods

Falls Creek – February
Cascade Head from God’s Thumb – March
Columbia River from Mitchell Point – March
Mt. Hood from Sevenmile Hill – March
Dalles Mountain Ranch – April
Mt. Adams from Grayback Mountain – May
Navigating a downed tree along the Pawn Old Growth Trail – May
Rogue River Trail – May
Golden Falls – May
Lenticular cloud over Mt. Hood from Surveyor’s Ridge – May
Whychus Canyon – May
Deschutes River – May
Whychus Creek Overlook – May
Forest on Mary’s Peak – June
North Fork Umatilla River – June
Tower Mountain Lookout – June
Malheur River – June
Meadow on Round Mountain – June
Santiam Lake – July
Three Fingered Jack from Lower Berley Lake (and a butterfly photobomb) – July
The Husband and Three Sisters from Substitute Point – July
Ochoco
Red Sun through wildfire smoke from the Monument Rock Wilderness – July
Canyon Mountain Trail, Strawberry Mountain Wilderness – July
Aldrich Mountains – July
Mt. Mitchell summit on a rare poor weather day – August
Mt. Bachelor – August
Cottonwood Camp, Big Indian Gorge in the Steens Mountain Wilderness – August
Wildhorse Lake, Steens Mountain Wilderness – August
Evening at the Steens Mountain Resort – August
Little Blitzen Gorge – August
Riddle Ranch – August
Morning in the Pueblo Mountains – August
Oregon Desert Trail, Pueblo Mountains – August
Mt. St. Helens and Spirit Lake – August
Harmony Falls – August
Loowit Falls – August
Mt. St. Helens from Norway Pass – August
Mt. Hood from the PCT in the Indian Heaven Wilderness – September
Mt. Adams and Soda Peaks Lake, Trapper Creek Wilderness – September
Jubilee Lake – September
Rough Fork Trail, Blue Mountains – September
Heritage Landing Trail, Deschutes River – September
McDonald-Dunn Forest – October
Cascade Mountains from the Mt. Jefferson Wilderness – October
Three Fingered Jack from Round Lake – October
Mt. Hood from the Flag Point Lookout
Mt. Hood from Lookout Mountain – October
Silver Falls State Park – October
Laurel Hill Wagon Chute – October
Barlow Ridge, Mt. Hood Wilderness – October
Fern Ridge Wildlife Area – November







Ivy disguising itself as a tree.
Mallards and Christmas lights.
Layng Road crossing. The lights on the signs were activated when sensors picked up something approaching.

Currin Covered Bridge on Layng Road.
Cormorants flying overhead.
Approaching the bridge over the Row River.
Row River
Lesser scaup. I would have liked a better picture but it was still early and not very light and the little guy was a ways away on the river.
This was a new sign to us.
Row River Road with some snowy hillsides in the distance.
Arrows and other yellow markings identified bumps and holes in the trail for equestrian and bike users.
Jelly fungus
Hamblen Creek
Turkeys in a field.
Sign along a private driveway.
Not very many mushrooms but these were good sized.

Do squirrels jog?
Madrone along the trail.
Row River Road was overhead to the left along this rocky section.
Nearing a bench along the trail facing Dorena Lake Dam.
Interpretive sign near the bench.


Snow in the Calapooya Mountains.
White pelicans on the other side of Dorena Lake.
Still no rain despite the clouds.
Red-tailed hawk


A kingfisher and a great blue heron.
Pelicans and other waterfowl on the move.
Cerro Gordo from Row Point.
Not much water at all in the eastern end of the reservoir.
A great blue heron on the far left with a bunch of white pelicans and cormorants.
Actual sunlight hitting the dam.
Spotted towhee
Rat Creek Bridge
Rat Creek
June 2020 from the Rat Creek Bridge.

Gold tree in front of Cerro Gordo.
The little hill to the left provides access to the north end of the dam.





No luck.

Rabbit
American wigeons
Nature slowly reclaiming an old farm truck.
Mosby Creek
The trailhead sign for the Clay Creek Trail is ahead on the opposite side of the road.
Siuslaw River
Clay Creek on the left emptying into the Siuslaw.
Stairs at the Clay Creek Recreation Area across the river.

The Clay Creek Trail climbing above Clay Creek.


It’s hard to tell size here but the diameter of this tree was well over 5′.
The junction for the loop.
One of several reroutes we encountered.
On the ridge top.
Madrone trunk and bark, always fascinating.
Lots of mushrooms pushing up through the forest floor.
No idea what you might see on a clear day.

The viewpoint.


Nearing the footbridge.
The fog had lifted off the river at least.
Note that Royal Ave and the trail to the viewing platform are open year around with the other restrictions listed below.
We took a picture of this map to assist us with our route.

White crowned sparrow
Northern harrier on the hunt.
Wetlands in the Royal Amazon unit.
The bittern taking off.
A hawk on a stump.
American coots
Gibson Island (with the eagles in the snag to the far left)





A flock of geese above the coots.
Continuing west.
We used the stones to the right to cross the water here.
Great blue heron (with Highway 126 in the background).

End of the line.

Seagull
Perhaps the same northern harrier.
The path to the platform.
The platform.
The first signs that the fog/clouds might be breaking up.
Looking back at a little blue sky and a visible Gibson Island



Fisher Butte is the low hill ahead to the right.
Gibson Island was now lit by direct sunlight.
The dike running between Fields 3 & 4.
Looking back over the ditch.
California scrub jay
Northern shovelers and a bufflehead.
Buffleheads and two hooded merganser females.

Kingfisher
American robin
The gravel road and another small portion of the wildlife area on the other side.
Noisy geese.
Back on the mowed track.
Spotted towhee and friend.
As of yet unidentified little bird.
This path headed north from the trailhead, something to explore on our next visit.

Mt. Hood from the trailhead.




The left at the 4-way junction.

Looking down the chute.
Sunlight starting to hit the SE side of Mt. Hood.
Ravens photo bombing a close up of the mountain.


A portion of the original Barlow Wagon Road.
Barlow Road (FR 3530)








Wilderness sign along the Barlow Butte Trail.
Getting steeper.
This was the worst of the blow down we had to navigate on this section.
Nearing the junction.

It was a little chilly with temps in the mid 30’s combined with a stiff breeze adding to the wind chill.
On the right of the far ridge is Bonney Butte (
Remains from the lookout.

Barlow Butte and the top of Mt. Hood.
Frog Lake Buttes (
Western larches
Mt. Jefferson behind some clouds.
Sisi Butte (double humps) and Bachelor Mountain (




Barlow Butte to the left of Mt. Hood.
Mt. Jefferson still behind some clouds.

Parts of Mt. Jefferson peaking through the clouds.
Tom Dick and Harry Mountain (with the rock fields near the top).
Small cairns in a meadow.
One of the aforementioned diamonds.
Approaching the high point.
Clouds were starting to pass over Lookout Mountain at this point.
Mt. Hood from the high point of Barlow Ridge.
Carin in the trees ahead.
Elk or deer tracks leading the way.
Another section of frost.
We took this as a blaze.
That blaze led to this large cairn.
Things were starting to get interesting here.
Stopped here to listen for pikas, no luck though.
This could be trail.
Still on the right track, note the folded trail sign on the tree at center.
The small meadow.
Officially off-trail now.
This looked like a place the trail would go.
A final look at Mt. Hood from Barlow Ridge.
This doesn’t look so bad.
One of several big trees we encountered.
Little orange mushrooms, how appropriate for Halloween.
Starting to encounter more debris.
If there had been a trail good luck finding it.
Heather coming down behind me.
Pretty decent game trail here.
This section was fun.
A bigger orange mushroom.
Uphill on this game trail.
Thickets of brush kept us from getting all the way over to the ridge we needed so we just kept going downhill knowing that we would eventually run into one of the forest roads at the bottom.
Look Ma a road!
It doesn’t look that steep from down here.
Barlow Road.





Western larches above Barlow Road.
Grindstone Campground
Barlow Creek
Crossing Barlow Creek near Devil’s Half Acre Meadow.
Clouds on top of Mt. Hood towering over the trees.
Barlow Road at the campground.
Devil’s Half Acre Meadow.
Finally back to where we’d left the road in the morning.
Arriving back at the Barlow Pass Trailhead
The first other people (not counting the two drivers in the pickups) that we’d seen all day.









East Fork Salmon River




Park map at the viewpoint.
Willamette Valley



Sign post for the Newt Loop and mountain biking skills station.
As much blue sky as we were going to get on this day.
A massive old growth nursery log. The tree stood for hundreds of years and will spend hundreds more slowly decaying and providing nutrients for younger trees.
Nursery stump. While some old growth exists in the park it was also logged heavily which was the primary reason it was passed over for National Park status.
The Smith Creek Trail junction.

Does anyone know their salamanders? Not sure what type this one was.
The Nature Trail junction.






From the spot that we entered the campground you could just see a hiker sign at the far end of the paved campground road.





No wildlife to view today.

The Howard Creek Loop Trail.

Howard Creek
Sign for the trailhead.













Blue appeared to mean Buck Mountain Loop (the posts along the Howard Creek Loop had been red and later the Smith Creek Trail posts were yellow.)


The mix of tree trunks here caught our eye.
Approaching the trail junction.


The 2020 Beachie Creek Fire threatened the Park and did in fact burn over nearby Shellburg Falls (
Orange fence marking the closure of the Catamount Trail.
The first footbridge which spans Howard Creek. The creek was obscured by brush.
The second footbridge over a tributary not shown on the topo map.
This stream was a little easier to see.


A reminder of how close the Beachie Creek Fire was.
The 4-way junction.



Approaching the Smith Creek Trail junction.












Ramps in the background at the skills station.

The Catamount Trail arriving on the left.
The 214 Trail from the Newt Loop.

A few larches along Road 2730
Fret Creek Trail across from the pullout.
Entering the Badger Creek Wilderness.




Starting to climb again.
Sign for Oval Lake.

June 28, 2014
A bit of snow left from the recent snowfall.
The Divide Trail.
Some snow near a switchback along the trail.
Mt. Adams starting to peak over a ridge to the north.
Mt. Adams with some larch trees in the foreground.
Lookout Mountain from the Divide Trail (The bare peak in between the two bare snags. Just to the right of the left snag.)
Side trail to Palisade Point.
Broken Top, The Three Sisters, Mt. Washington, Three Fingered Jack (just the very top), Mt. Jefferson, and Olallie Butte (
Mt. Jefferson with the tip of Three Fingered Jack to the left and Olallie Butte to the right.
Mt. Hood peaking up over the rocks.
Panoramic view with Badger Creeks valley below.
Rocks below Palisade Point.
We ran into this jumble of downed trees shortly after leaving Palisade Point but fortunately it was the worst of the obstacles.
Flag Point Lookout from the trail.
A small meadow that was full of flowers a couple of months ago.
A stand of larches.
A better view of Mt. Hood.
Zoomed in.
Looking back through larches at a Badger Creek Wilderness sign near Road 200.
Looking back at the Divide Trail.
Road 200
Nearing the lookout.

Mt. Rainier and Mt. Adams to the north.
Mt. Rainier and Mt. Adams


Three Fingered Jack, Mt. Jefferson, and Olallie Butte
View east to the hills above the Columbia River.
Passing the Fret Creek Trail.
We did need to gain almost 800′ of elevation to reach Lookout Mountain which at times was a fairly steep climb.
Another viewpoint along the way where Badger Lake was visible.
Badger Lake

The final pitch to the summit, there is at least one hiker visible up top.

Looking back to Flag Point.
Looking NE toward The Dalles and the Columbia River.
Mt. St. Helens, Mt. Rainier, and Mt. Adams
View south past Badger Lake to Mt. Jefferson.
Flag Point from the Helispot.
And of course Mt. Hood again.
Fret Creek from the road near the trailhead.