Mosier Plateau Hike
From Oregon Hikers Field Guide
- Start point: Mosier Trailhead
- End point: Syncline Viewpoint
- Hike type: In and out
- Distance: 3.5 miles
- High point: 620 feet
- Elevation gain: 760 feet
- Difficulty: Easy
- Seasons: All year
- Family Friendly: Yes
- Backpackable: No
- Crowded: Yes
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Hike Description
In the short time since its official opening to the public in Fall 2013, this short hike on Friends of the Columbia Gorge land has become very popular. There is plenty of parking near the railroad tracks in Mosier, and you need to walk 1,000 feet across the Mosier Creek Bridge to find the beginning of the trail. You’ll pass the pioneer cemetery and then Mosier Creek Falls, a popular summer swimming hole, before entering Friends property. The wildflower meadows on the plateau are spectacular in April and May, but the vistas are suberb all year. Stay on the trail, keep your dog on a leash, and respect all private property signs.
Walk east along Highway 30 and cross the Mosier Creek Bridge, built in 1920, to get views of the narrow gorge. Look to your right after crossing the bridge and see a trail leading up behind a bench marked ‘Mosier Pioneer Cemetery.’ There's also a map of the route here. The path winds up in a parkland of oaks and ponderosa pines offering views of Mosier Creek’s narrow gorge. Pass the pioneer cemetery, where members of the Mosier family are interred. You’ll reach an overlook with a plaque memorializing Helen Wortman Russell, a granddaughter of Oregon Trail pioneers. From here, there’s a full-frontal view of two-tiered Mosier Creek Falls. Continue along the grassy slope, which blooms with cryptantha and bachelor’s buttons in the spring, to reach the steep rocky slope above the waterfall. A user trail drops down to the pool between the two drops, and desert parsley forms clumps of yellow and green on the steep slope.
From this point, the trail enters Friends of the Columbia Gorge property. The path makes a traverse along the grassy slope with a few ponderosa pines and oaks. Switchback at a split-rail fence and traverse up a grassy slope above a fence to switchback twice more to a series of steps. In the spring, cluster lilies, bachelor’s buttons, buckwheat, and cow vetch bloom in abandon here. Make four short switchbacks and wind up the slope to make a couple more switchbacks and then ascend two more staircases to get commanding views of the cherry orchards south of Mosier. You can also see the top of Mosier Hill with its fire station microwave array and a cell tower. Walk along the plateau to the Mosier Viewpoint and its hexagonal basalt seats. Get views west over Mosier itself to Rocky Prairie and the Bingen Gap. IMPORTANT: Numerous signs instruct hikers to stay on the trail. Although hikers have ducked under the metal railing and created a well-worn boot path along the edge of the cliff through the wildflowers, please stay on the official trail.
From the viewpoint, wind down a sloping bench through springtime blooming balsamroot, big root, and lupine. There’s a splendid vista cross the river to Coyote Wall and the Labyrinth. Pass a concrete foundation pad and wind through plantings of ponderosa pines. Pass between two more concrete foundations pads for manufactured homes that were removed after the Friends’ Nancy Russell purchased the property. Reach a gravel road and go left down a trail to a junction. Go left here to begin a loop. Walk out to a bench under a pine and then follow the trail along a basalt rim above Highway 30. There are open views to the Coyote Wall area on the Washington side, and the wildflowers here bloom profusely in the spring. Walk up a grassy field and see a trail going left to close the loop. Otherwise, you can walk out to the gravel track that takes you up to the Mosier Viewpoint (You can also descend the road to reach Highway 30 and walk back to Mosier, but the views from the Mosier Viewpoint are worth the repeat compared to the unpleasantness of a road walk on a narrow shoulder.).
Maps
- Maps: Hike Finder
Regulations or restrictions, etc
- Dogs must be on leash to protect wildlife and the neighbors' pets and to keep your dog safe from ticks and poison oak.
- Port-a-potty at Mosier Totem Pole Park
- Picnic tables, benches
- Stay on the trail and heed private property signs
- Sign the release form to do the Plateau Trail
Trip Reports
- Search Trip Reports for Mosier Plateau Hike
- GoalTechHikes Mosier Plateau - Book-ending the Gorge
- Dog Mountain & Mosier Plateau
- Mosier Plateau - 2/6
- Two short Gorge trails: EasyCLIMB and Mosier Plateau
- East Gorge triple pak 4/25/14
- Mosier Plateau 4.20.14
- Pocket Park to Mosier plateau
- Mosier Creek Falls/The Dalles Riverfront
Related Discussions / Q&A
- Search Trail Q&A for Mosier Plateau Hike
- Scat found on Mosier Plateau 12.7.14
- New Mosier Trail Opening Friday
Guidebooks that cover this hike
- Curious Gorge by Scott Cook
- PDX Hiking 365 by Matt Reeder
- 100 Hikes: Northwest Oregon by William L. Sullivan
- Oregon Hiking by Matt Wastradowski
- Washington Hiking by Craig Hill
- Pacific Northwest Hiking by Craig Hill & Matt Wastradowski
- Day Hikes in the Columbia Gorge by Don J. Scarmuzzi
- Columbia Gorge Getaways by Laura O. Foster
- Waterfalls of the Columbia Gorge by Zach Forsyth
More Links
- Mosier Plateau (Friends of the Columbia Gorge)
- Mosier Creek Falls and Mosier Plateau (Washington Trails Association)
- Mosier Creek Falls + Plateau Trail (Outdoor Project)
- Trail of the Month: Mosier Plateau (Portland Monthly)
- Mosier Plateau: A New(ish) Trail in the Columbia River Gorge (Paul Gerald)
- Mosier Plateau (Spring 2018) (Hikelandia)
- Wildflowers on Mosier Plateau (Go! Now!) (Hello Day)
- Mosier Plateau (Linda’s Lens)
- 2018.07 - Mosier Plateau (GoalTech)
- Oregon Waterfall Hikes: Mosier Creek Falls and Mosier Plateau (This Way to Paradise)
- Mosier Plateau Hike (The (mis)Adventures of Sage)
- Hike Mosier Plateau Trail (The Outbound Collective)
- Connecting With the Gorge: Mosier Plateau Trail (Travel Oregon)
- "Mosier Plateau is one of the newest, best hikes for wildflowers in the Columbia Gorge" (Oregon Live)
- Mosier Falls (Northwest Waterfall Survey)
- Mosier Creek Falls (Oregon Waterfalls)
- Mosier Plateau (Northwest Wildflowers)
Contributors
- bobcat (creator)