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South Breitenbush Gorge Hike

From Oregon Hikers Field Guide

Revision as of 03:34, 9 February 2017 by Bobcat (Talk | contribs)

South Fork Breitenbush River (bobcat)
Footbridge over the North Fork Breitenbush River (bobcat)
Pinedrops (Pterospora andromedea), South Breitenbush Gorge Trail (bobcat)
Big Douglas-fir, South Breitenbush Gorge Trail (bobcat)
The South Breitenbush Gorge National Recreation Trail marked in red (not a GPS track) (bobcat) Courtesy: Caltopo

Contents

Description

The South Breitenbush Gorge Trail #3366 is a National Recreation Trail that runs through shady old-growth along the South Fork Breitenbush River. The cool gorge itself, reached by a steep, narrow scramble trail, is a secluded spot where only the roar of the constricted river permeates the atmosphere. To do this as an in and out, you can begin the hike near the site of the old Breitenbush Guard Station, just above the Breitenbush Hot Springs Retreat and Conference Center. A car shuttle or hike-bike option (traverse hike) is also possible by leaving a second vehicle at the Roaring Creek Trailhead.

The parking area is the site of the old Breitenbush Guard Station, which burned to the ground in the year 2000. Walk down the road about 100 yards and come to a closed gate marking the boundary with the private inholding of the Breitenbush Hot Springs Retreat and Conference Center. Go left here on the trail. A boardwalk angles through a cool bottomland, and then the trail makes two short switchbacks up. Then drop, switchbacking once, to a funky set of footbridges over the alder-shaded North Fork Breitenbush River (These bridges, maintained by the retreat, replace other iterations destroyed by the river). The trail passes by a grove of old cedar trees and the wide South Fork Breitenbush River courses along to the right. Hike up in a foothill forest of Douglas-fir, western hemlock, and western red-cedar to a junction with a tie trail leading out 90 yards to the South Breitenbush Gorge Trailhead on FR 4685.

Soon the trail drops in a woodland of old-growth Douglas-firs. Cross an old road bed and reach the South Breitenbush Gorge-Emerald Forest Trail Junction: the Emerald Forest Trail heads down to cross the river on a footbridge and then switchbacks up to Devils Ridge. Keep straight in the old growth, passing some boggy springs near the trail and getting a view of the Devils Ridge from a sunny clearing created by numerous fallen giants. The trail drops and a spur leads steeply down to the right to a view of the 300-foot-long South Breitenbush Gorge. You can continue steeply down, hooking left under some blowdown to a dark, narrow cleft where the river rushes among mossy boulders in deep woods. Back at the main trail, continue below a spring and make another detour to the right to another viewpoint over the river. Right after this, the trail reaches the sturdy Roaring Creek Footbridge, a good turnaround point and a haven for dippers darting about in the cool spray.

If you are doing this as a shuttle, you can hike past the footbridge and take a tie trail up to the Roaring Creek Trailhead. To extend the hike, it's another three and a half miles up the South Fork Breitenbush to the South Breitenbush Trailhead.


Fees, Regulations, etc.

  • Do not venture on to private property

Maps

Trip Reports

Related Discussions / Q&A

Guidebooks that cover this hike

  • 101 Hikes in the Majestic Mount Jefferson Region by Matt Reeder
  • 60 Hikes Within 60 Miles: Portland by Paul Gerald
  • Hiking Oregon's Central Cascades by Bruce Grubbs
  • Hiking Oregon's Three Sisters Country by Bruce Grubbs
  • Oregon: The Creaky Knees Guide by Seabury Blair, Jr.
  • Best Old-growth Forest Hikes: Washington & Oregon Cascades by John & Diane Cissel
  • 50 Old-Growth Hikes in the Willamette National Forest by John & Diane Cissel (map)
  • Wild in the Willamette edited by Lorraine Anderson with Abby Phillips Metzger
  • 100 Hikes in Central Oregon Cascades by William L. Sullivan
  • Portland Hikes by Art Bernstein & Andrew Jackman
  • Best Short Hikes in Northwest Oregon by Rhonda & George Ostertag
  • 60 Hiking Trails: Central Oregon Cascades by Don & Roberta Lowe
  • Oregon Hiking by Sean Patrick Hill
  • Pacific Northwest Hiking by Scott Leonard & Megan McMorris
  • Best Hikes With Dogs: Oregon by Ellen Morris Bishop
  • Canine Oregon by Lizann Dunegan

More Links


Page Contributors

Oregon Hikers Field Guide is built as a collaborative effort by its user community. While we make every effort to fact-check, information found here should be considered anecdotal. You should cross-check against other references before planning a hike. Trail routing and conditions are subject to change. Please contact us if you notice errors on this page.

Hiking is a potentially risky activity, and the entire risk for users of this field guide is assumed by the user, and in no event shall Trailkeepers of Oregon be liable for any injury or damages suffered as a result of relying on content in this field guide. All content posted on the field guide becomes the property of Trailkeepers of Oregon, and may not be used without permission.