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Difference between revisions of "Two Chiefs Trail Hike"

From Oregon Hikers Field Guide

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=== Regulations or restrictions, etc ===
 
=== Regulations or restrictions, etc ===
* None
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* $5 parking fee at Bonneville Hot Springs & Spa
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* Dogs on leash at spa and make sure you clean up after your pet!
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* $1 toll at the [[Bridge of the Gods]]
  
 
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Revision as of 01:27, 28 May 2016

Winter view of Table Mountain from the Two Chiefs Trail (cfm)
The new landslide east of Greenleaf Creek (cfm)

Contents

Hike Description

Walk up the gravel track at the west end of the large parking area. The corridor here supports a natural gas pipeline. The former beginning of the Dick Thomas Trail headed through a clump of blackberries: now walk a little farther west in the pipeline corridor, crossing a flowing rivulet, to pick up the trail entering the woods on your right. Cross a four-log footbridge and then drop to step across a small creek. The old trail alignment comes in from the right here. Continue up on a rooty tread, winding through sword ferns under Douglas-fir, western hemlock, and big-leaf maple. Drop to skirt a vernal pool and then gradually descend through a sword fern/Oregon grape carpet. At the Carpenters Creek Crossing, use the makeshift footbridge.

Reach the Aldrich Butte-Dick Thomas Trail Junction, with grassy, alder rimmed Carpenters Lake, a former beaver marsh, to your right. Go right at the junction, and after 60 yards, at the Aldrich Butte-Two Chiefs Trail Junction, an old jeep track, go right. This is the Two Chiefs Trail (also known as the Greenleaf Falls Trail, and marked on most maps as Moffit Springs Road). Continue on this road and you'll soon loop around Carpenters Lake heading east. The trail heads up a small valley that, in spring, fills with little streams and skunk cabbage. About a mile up this trail you'll cross the Pacific Crest Trail.

Keep straight on this wide trail that, for many years, was used by ATVs. A small sign on a tree announces this as the Two Chiefs Trail. A trail to the right leads to a campsite on a wooded knoll. Descend into an alder grove, then rise along the face of a ridge. Get a view of the town of North Bonneville and head down again. Note along this trail how some creeks just disappear into the jumble of the Bonneville Landslide and must reemerge lower down. There are several seasonal pools in this area choked with water parsley. Cross a more recent slide and look up to the left to see Sacaquawea and Papoose Rocks and also the face of Table Mountain. Soon come to the Table Mountain Slide Area where the whole amphitheater of the slide’s origin opens up before you. At least eight layers of lava seem to compose Table Mountain’s core. Look south to get a panoramic view of the Columbia River Gorge and the snowy top of Mount Hood above the deep cleft of the Eagle Creek Gorge. One can also see an old travel route that came up the scree directly from below. After this, you will reach the Greenleaf Creek Crossing and the roaring twenty-foot plunge that is the bottom of the falls. The water rushes through a jumble of large boulders, all mossy and liverworted in this cool dell.

Greenleaf Creek is the end of the moderate hike described here, but there are a couple of options for the more adventurous.

Extra options:

1) The more dramatic Greenleaf Falls is located upstream. There is no trail and you will have to bushwack up the steep unstable slope, encountering steep faces of the crumbly Eagle Creek Formation, to view it. This extra push is for experienced off-trail hikers only.

2) Where the road meets the creek the bridge has washed out, but you can wade across or keep your feet dry by scrambling downstream and walking across on logs. Cross the creek and continue on the old road to visit the new landslide. Debris from the toe of the slide has wiped out part of the road, but users have created a new trail around it. The road continues all the way to Blue Lake if you would like to do this as a shuttle.

Maps

Regulations or restrictions, etc

  • $5 parking fee at Bonneville Hot Springs & Spa
  • Dogs on leash at spa and make sure you clean up after your pet!
  • $1 toll at the Bridge of the Gods

Trip Reports

Related Discussions / Q&A

Guidebooks that cover this hike

More Links

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.