Whenever possible we try and take a hike in the Old Cascades in the morning on the 4th of July. This year we chose one of the few remaining hikes from Matt Reeder’s “101 Hikes in the Majestic Mount Jefferson Region” (2nd edition) that we had yet to do. Many hikes featured in that book have been affected by fires over the last 5 years, primarily in 2020, but Mount Lowe has thus far been spared. Located along the Rho Ridge Trail, Mount Lowe rises to 5338′ and was home to a Forest Service lookout from 1916 into the 1960’s. We had hiked a portion of the Rho Ridge Trail in 2017 when we visited the Hawk Mountain Lookout (post). Much of that section of the trail was burned in the 2021 Bull Complex Fire.
While there are several potential starting points to reach Mount Lowe, we chose to start at Graham Pass where we had also parked for our 2017 hike.

Forest Road 6350 from the large parking area at Graham Pass.
This starting point creates a moderate 6.8-mile out-and-back with approximately 1400′ of elevation gain with options to extend it. From the parking area we walked down the gravel road, crossed FR 6350, and followed FR 4670 for 200′ to a sign for the Rho Ridge Trail.

Penstemon

Oregon sunshine and maybe a vetch?

The Rho Ridge Trail paralleled FR 4670 for just under half a mile before returning to the road.



Queen’s cup

Rhododendron

Flagging was present along most of the route. Here the trail is crossing a decommissioned logging road.

Bunchberry


Flagging at the point where the trail rejoined FR 4670.
For the next two tenths of a mile we walked along FR 4670 before spotting the resumption of the Rho Ridge Trail on the left side of the road across from a dirt spur road.


Paintbrush and penstemon

Continuation of the Rho Ridge Trail.

The dirt spur. This road leads to a few campsites and the Rho Creek Trail which is not shown on maps but is sometimes maintained by the Trail Advocates and is on our bucket list to check out some day.
The Rho Ridge Trail was in relatively good shape albeit a little overgrown in places. There was also some occasional blowdown, but it was all easy to either climb over or go around.


Pacific coralroot

Arnica

Beargrass

After a short climb the trail lost a little elevation as it dropped into a lovely forest before nearing FR 4670 again.


This was one we had to go around.

Beardtongue
We came to an open rocky section of the ridge covered in wildflowers as the trail neared FR 4670.

Mount Lowe from the trail.

Columbine

Paintbrush, lupine, penstemon, and false sunflowers.

Larkspur hiding in the grass.

Yarrow and paintbrush

Bleeding heart

Catchfly

Arrowleaf buckwheat and sunflowers.

Penstemon

FR 4670 from the trail.

Wallflower, catchfly, and penstemon.

FR 4670 and the Rho Ridge Trail (to the right).

Sub-alpine mariposa lily

Sisi Butte (post)

Barestem buckwheat

Sisi Butte in the center with Olallie Butte to the right (post).

Olallie Butte

Trail sign facing FR 4670.
The trail began to climb again from here gaining a little over 400′ in just under a mile to the summit of Mount Lowe.

Washington lilies along the trail. These beautiful flowers are also by far the best smelling flowers that we encounter on hikes.

False sunflowers

Washington lily

Serviceberry

Snowberry

Thimbleberry

Larkspur

Rainiera, Lyall’s angelica, and columbine


Anemone’s and a queen’s cup

False sunflowers

Bastard toadflax

Blue-head gilia

Vetch

Red-flowering currant

Sisi Butte, Oallie Butte, and Mt. Jefferson

Mt. Jefferson

Sticky currant


Better view of Mt. Jefferson.


Scarlet gilia

Junco

First view of Three Fingered Jack, Mt. Washington, and the Three Sisters.

Three Fingered Jack, Mt. Washington, and the Three Sisters.


The trail passed below a talus slope where there may have been a view of Mt. Hood, Mt. Adams and Mt. Rainier had we scrambled up it, but we didn’t want to disturb the residents.

Pika near the top of the talus slope.

One-sided wintergreen


Mt. Hood

View to the west above another pika filled talus slope.

Schreiner Peak, Knob Peak, Big Slide Mountain (post), and Bull of the Woods (post) in the Bull of the Woods Wilderness.

Spur trail to the summit on the left.


Paintbrush and penstemon

Windbreaks near the former lookout stie.

View west towards the Bull of the Woods.

View South toward Mt. Jefferson and the Central Cascades.

Bachelor and Coffin Mountains (post).

Broken Top poking up on the far left with Three Fingered Jack, North Sister, South & Middle Sister, and Mt. Washington.

The view North included Mt. Adams (center between the tress) and the tops of Mt. Rainier and Mt. St. Helens but those would not show up in photos.

Subalpine fir cones

Douglas fir cones.

Stonecrop

Penstemon
After a nice break at the summit we headed back down from the summit and followed the Rho Ridge Trail back to FR 4670.

The Rho Ridge Trail continues left at this fork below the summit another 1.5-miles to a northern trailhead.

Orange agoseris

Star-flowered solomonseal

Phacelia

Rainiera

Vanilla leaf

Rose

Oregon bedstraw

Arriving at FR 4670.
We decided to detour here and check out a little of the Rho Creek Trail so we crossed FR 4670 and turned onto the dirt spur road.

We weren’t entirely sure where the trail began and there were a few spurs to campsites. We simply picked one and then headed cross country from it looking of any sign of tread or flagging.


The cross country was fairly easy and we were able to use our GPS and the map we’d downloaded from the Orgon Hikers Field Guide to pick up the tread.

The trail was in surprisingly good shape and we followed it downhill a little over a quarter of a mile to an unsigned junction.



The unsigned, but flagged, junction. Here the Rho Creek Trail turned left while the right-hand fork was said to lead to the remains of the Rho Ridge Guard Station.
The remains had been our goal for this brief detour so we went right.

Valerian

Flagging marking the trail.

More flagging marking the route.

Spirea
Somehow we never spotted the guard station remains, but the flagged route continued and theoretically would lead us back to Graham Pass so we just kept following the flagging.


Rhododendron
The tread got pretty faint the closer we got to the Rho Ridge Trail but the flagging made the route obvious enough.



We eventually popped out onto the decommissioned logging road just 100′ from the Rho Ridge Trail.

We turned right here and then left onto the Rho Ridge Trai and 500′ later were back on FR 4670.

With the detour our hike wound up being 7.4-miles with approximately 1600′ of elevation gain.

The hike to Mount Lowe was a really great one. There were views, flowers, wildlife and solitude. The trail itself was in good enough condition to not make the hike challenging while adding a feeling of it being a little wild. While we missed the remains on our side-trip the experience with the Rho Creek Trail encouraged us to get back there and hike more of it. Maybe next time we’ll locate the old guard station. Happy Trails!
Flickr: Mount Lowe




















































Arnica


























Spirea, tiger lilies, columbine, valerian, and cinquefoil.















































































Cow Creek Gorge

Prince’s pine
















































































































































Clearly the trail has been realigned based on where the map shows it is and where our track shows we were.






























There was a lot of white-stemmed frasera blooming which was exciting because we had been too early for the bloom when we were in the area Memorial Day Weekend (



































Please note that this campground is one of several that the Forest Service has contracted private concessionaires to manage and there is a $10.00/day parking fee for day-use. An annual NW Forest Pass is accepted in lieu of the fee but a single day NW Forest Pass and some interagency passes may not be. There is conflicting information online through the Forest Service website and what is posted at the trailhead.
Signage at the trailhead still shows that a variety of passes are honored there but the link for the campground provided above only lists the annual NW Forest Pass as accepted.






Clockwise provides the gentlest climbing for the loop which is the direction we were hiking so I went left.




























Mt. Adams between the trees.
Larkspur

















Rosy pussytoes










The pullout only has room for two cars, a third might be able to squeeze in but it would be tight. DO NOT drive past the gate if it happens to be open as motor vehicle use by the public is not allowed beyond the gate.























A section of intact forest.




False lily-of-the-valley



Chipmunk



Salmonberry























Another junco




Mt. Rainier




Dandelion (non-native) in the penstemon. There were surprisingly few non-native wildflowers which was nice.

Looking back after having made it onto the ridge. The loop route is the road seen on the right cutting along the hillside, not the roadbed straight ahead going up the knoll.









Lomatium






























Small parking area at Wildwood Falls Park.





















We’ve found that the Forest Service seems to sometimes round milage shown on trail signs.






























We took a break in this rocky section of trail which was the only place we could find where the mosquitoes weren’t too plentiful. The lower portion of the trail had been fine but as we climbed the mosquitoes became more plentiful. While we were taking our break we heard the distinctive “meep” of a pika “meep”, but we weren’t able to spot any.



















































Rough tread on the Marten Flume Trail.










Dotted line is the current loop. Green is our track from 2016 and red is a part of our Brice Creek Hike in 2014.
The Tygh Creek Trail across FR 27 from the Tygh Creek Trailhead.
The only two trees down that needed to be climbed under/over.
Tygh Creek
Distance + low light + moving animal = blurry photo.
The skunk had been at the far end of this section of trail which was lined with lupine.
The little stinker had a pretty cute face.
The trail is to the right in this photo.
Paintbrush, balsamroot, and a strawberry blossom.
Ball Point
Rough eyelashweed
When a trail looks steep in a photo that tells you something.
More paintbrush and balsamroot.
Townsend’s solitaire
Buckwheat
My goal, the turn around point, was up on the crest of that ridge ahead.
Lupine, balsamroot, and a death camas.
Dogwood tree among the ponderosa pines.
Mahala mat
Getting close to the ridge and still steep.
The trail got less steep near the ridge.
Gordon Butte to the right. Broken Top, the Three Sisters, and Mt. Jefferson would also have been visible if not for the clouds.
Level trail on the ridge!
Looking ahead at the trees atop the “small” ridge.
Sandwort
Oregon sunshine
Wildflowers on the “small” ridge.
Almost to the crest.
The clouds here are hiding Mt. Hood which should be visible behind the ridge. What is visible is Flag Point (
Looking toward Mt. Jefferson.
Parts of Mt. Jefferson peeking out through the clouds.
I’d seen a couple whitestem frasera going up but coming down I realized just how many there actually were, although none of the plants were quite blooming yet.
Groundsel
Broken Top and some of the Three Sisters were visible on the way down.
Tam McArthur Rim (
I missed this whole patch of silvercrown earlier.
Pine Hollow Reservoir and Central Oregon.
Elkhorn clarkia aka ragged robin.
Threadleaf phacelia
Paintbrush with Ball Point in the background.
Vetch
Penstemon
Bastard toadflax
Back in the forest near Tygh Creek.
Tygh Creek
Squirrel
Starflower
Coral fungus
The trailhead in sight.
The Tygh Creek track along with a portion of Saturday’s hike on the School Canyon Trail at the bottom.




Phacelia
Fleabane
Thistle
Madia
Fiddleneck and lupine
The first of several deer we spotted during the day.
The distinctive cliffs behind the lupine are across the river from the parking area so we were almost always able to tell where we had parked.
This jeep track would veer to the left to pass between the smaller hills and cliffs ahead.
Western meadowlarks could be heard throughout the hike.
The view south.
Desert yellow fleabane
The view west.
Mt. Hood peaking over the canyon rim to the NW.
Mt. Hood
Butterfly on yarrow
Grasses and wildflowers added color to the landscape.
The route became very faint at times.
Balsamroot
Looking back at the route so far.
View from the trail after passing between the hills and cliffs.
An old fence.
Mt. Hood and Lookout Mountain (

Buckwheat

Rough eyelashweed
Paintbrush


Another stretch of faint tread.
It was often easier to see the road ahead than below our feet.
Balsamroot and lupine
Grand collomia and lupine.
Spreading dogbane
Digging in.
Small water trough (empty).
View from the water trough.
Haven’t identified this bird yet.
Looking back at the route again.
Mt. Hood again.
Ochre ringlet. There were hundreds of butterflies.
Looking at the climb ahead. At this point most of the rest of the hike would be in direct sunlight, and it was already getting warm.
Buck
Buck number two.
We had to get pretty high up before we could see Washington’s Mt. Adams and even once it was in view the lighting made it hard to make out.
Mt. Adams
The newer barbed wire fence at the public land boundary. This is around 3.5-miles from the parking area.
Hawksbeard
The fence went up and down steeply so that meant we got to as well.
Crow
Fritillary
Cattle trail
Western kingbirds
A milkvetch
Another butterfly on balsamroot.
Stag Point is the high triangular point along the plateau in the foreground.
Zoom in on Stag Point. (The lone post on top gives it away.)
First and only brief view of the top of Mt. Jefferson.
Mt. Jefferson
The newer fence turned left at the corner.
Onion
This rocky gully was a little tricky to cross.
Checkerspot
Old stone structure along the fence.
Western meadowlark
Lark sparrow
Probably cattle bones.
Checkerspot on fiddleneck.
Balsamroot and Mt. Hood from the road.
Phlox
Indra swallowtail
Checkerspot
Another checkerspot
A blue or copper of some sort.
Oregon sunshine
Skipper
Colorful rocks
Looking back up along the switchback section.
Gate along the road at the end of the switchbacks.
Allumroot

Cusick’s sunflowers and desert yellow fleabane.
Cusick’s sunflowers
Looking back up the road toward the snake.
The still coiled snake to the right of the track.
The fainter jeep track split off here to the right. It’s really hard to see it in the photo but was a little more obvious in person.
The goal was to aim for the knoll ahead then find two junipers that were relatively close together and descend between them.
Looking back up from the jeep track.
The view upriver with a private house.
Going between the two junipers.
Looking back up at the two junipers.
It’s a checkerboard of public and private land along the road. While this portion of the road is open to hikers, public fishing along the riverbank is limited to the public land portions. No trespassing signs line the road in the private sections.
Heather spotted this rattlesnake off the side of the road. We couldn’t tell if it was still alive and didn’t really want to find out.
One of the few bits of shade along the road walk.
Probably some sort of flycatcher.
There were a lot of osprey along the river.
There were also quite a few Bullock’s orioles.
Mock orange along the river.
Mallard
Bindweed
Another unknown bird and an angler in the river.
Cliff swallow
Dove
More osprey
Portland Deschutes Club Gatekeepers House

Geese
Common merganser
Yarrow covered hillside.
Rock formations above the road.
The distinctive cliffs on the opposite side of the river from the parking area.
Arriving back at the parking area.
Yellow is our track from 2023.