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Difference between revisions of "Gnarl Ridge from Hood River Meadows Hike"

From Oregon Hikers Field Guide

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=== Hike Description ===
 
=== Hike Description ===
[[Gnarl Ridge]], near [[Timberline High Point|the highest point]] on the Timberline Trail, can be approached from the north (See the [[Gnarl Ridge from Cloud Cap Hike]]) or the south. The latter approach keeps your car on a paved surface and begins at the popular [[Elk Meadows Trailhead]]. This lollipop loop takes you across Newton Creek twice, allows you to visit [[Elk Meadows]], and with a little off-trail scramble, puts you on top of [[Lamberson Butte]], staring up at the imposing Newton Clark Glacier and down past dark breccia crags to the always changing spate of Newton Creek.  
+
[[Gnarl Ridge]], near [[Timberline High Point|the highest point]] on the Timberline Trail, can be approached from the north (See the [[Gnarl Ridge from Cloud Cap Hike]]) or the south. The latter approach keeps your car on a paved surface and begins at the popular [[Elk Meadows Trailhead]]. This lollipop loop takes you across Newton Creek twice, allows you to visit [[Elk Meadows]], and with a little off-trail scramble, puts you on top of [[Lamberson Butte]], staring up at the imposing Newton Clark Glacier and down past dark breccia crags to the always changing spate of Newton Creek. If you're backpacking, there's water at [[Elk Meadows]] and [[Newton Creek Crossing on Timberline Trail|Newton Creek]].
  
From the trailhead, head northeast on the Elk Meadows Trail #645. The trail travels through forested flats for a short distance before passing an abandoned trail on the left, then reaching the marked [[Elk Meadows-Umbrella Falls Trail Junction]], the first of many trail junctions on this hike. You’ll also notice blue nordic ski route markers along this section of trail. These ski trails are perpendicular to the Umbrella Falls Trail, so if you just keep going straight you are on the right track. Continue straight to another [[Elk Meadows-Clark Creek Trail Junction|trail junction]] and the [[Clark Creek Bridge on Elk Meadows Trail|L-shaped bridge]] over the rushing waters of Clark Creek that form the boundary of the Mount Hood Wilderness. Cross the bridge, which has handrails.
+
The Elk Meadows Trail begins in mountain hemlock forest, with silver fir, Douglas-fir, noble fir, Engelmann spruce and western white pine. There’s a huckleberry understory that invites plunder in late summer. Cross one firebreak and then another one. There’s an unmarked trail junction, with a trail leading left to a parking area for the Meadows Nordic Center. Reach the [[Elk Meadows-Umbrella Falls Trail Junction]] and keep straight. Drop to cross [[Clark Creek Bridge on Elk Meadows Trail|Clark Creek]] on its handrailed footbridge after passing the [[Elk Meadows-Clark Creek Trail Junction]] on the right. Before the bridge, there’s a Wilderness permit box.  
  
Continue across the valley floor, crossing two small creeks, then one larger stream on stepping stones. Reach [[Elk Meadows-Newton Creek Trail Junction|a junction with the Newton Creek Trail]] #646 on the left at the one mile mark. This will be your return route if you opt for the longer hike.
+
After crossing the bridge, the trail heads up a bank and enters the Mt. Hood Wilderness. The trail levels and drops to cross two small creeks, then heads gradually upward. Cross a creek on a footbridge and then, on a level section, reach the [[Elk Meadows-Newton Creek Trail Junction]]. The trail rises and then drops into the Newton Creek channel. A plank usually affords a good crossing of [[Newton Creek Crossing on Elk Meadows Trail|Newton Creek]]; otherwise, especially early in the season, you will have to pick your way across (See [[Tips for Crossing Streams]]). Cairns mark the route to the trail on the opposite bank. The dusty trail switchbacks up, passing over many lush seeps and small brooks. Switchback again and note the many large Douglas-firs on this steep hillside. Pass through thimbleberry thickets with active mountain beaver warrens. There are more springs. Switchback five more times into drier woods with bracken and bear-grass for the carpet. There are two more switchbacks, and the trail then winds gradually up under mountain hemlock, silver fir, and subalpine fir. The path levels and meets the four-way [[Elk Meadows-Bluegrass Ridge-Gnarl Ridge Trail Junction]]. To the left is the Gnarl Ridge Trail #652. To the right is the Blue Grass Ridge Trail #647.  
  
Continue straight a short distance to the silty torrent of Newton Creek. There is no bridge to help you here, though trail workers usually pile a few logs to form an impromptu bridge. Cross carefully - a hiking pole is recommended here. In the spring or after heavy rains this can be impassable.  See [[Tips for Crossing Streams]].
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Turn left here for a more direct route up to [[Gnarl Ridge]], but if you want to visit [[Elk Meadows]], keep straight at this junction. Head down through huckleberries under a mountain hemlock canopy. Come to the [[Elk Meadows-Elk Meadows Perimeter South Trail Junction]], and make a left. A spur leads right to the upper slopes of [[Elk Meadows]], and you'll get a view to the burned out slopes of Bluegrass Ridge. Gradually descend along the western fringe of the meadows through a carpet of lupine and huckleberry. After passing by a small spring where there's another spur to the meadows, turn left a the [[Gnarl Ridge Tie-Elk Meadows Perimeter Trail Junction]].
  
Clark and Newton Creeks are the twin glacial streams formed by the broad Newton Clark Glacier, which dominates the view of Mount Hood throughout the hike. Newton Creek, in particular, is one the most unruly of Mount Hood’s glacial streams, periodically sending huge floods of debris onto Highway 35, far below. The raging power of the stream is evident at several points on the hike, where the river channel is continually changing, tossing boulders and trees around like so many pebbles and matchsticks.
+
Hike up through a carpet of grouseberry, huckleberry, and lupine. If you look carefully to your left, you might spot a section of the #9 wire which led to the tent lookout on [[Lamberson Butte]]. Ascend open meadows of lupine, goldenweed, penstemon, and wood rush to reach the [[Gnarl Ridge-Gnarl Ridge Tie Trail Junction]]. Hike up through glades of mountain hemlock and subalpine fir to the [[Timberline-Gnarl Ridge Trail Junction]]. You'll be returning to this junction, but keep right for now.  
  
Locate the resumption of the trail on the far side of the creek, and begin climbing a series of switchbacks up the eastern wall of Newton Creek Canyon. The route first travels through lush forest, and a grove of especially large douglas fir, before reaching familiar forests of noble fir and beargrass as you near the ridge crest.
+
Enter denser mountain hemlock woods, and cross a rocky gully. Then pass through extensive open meadows. The trail swings left through glades of woodrush, lupine, fleece flower, and Jacob's ladder. As the ridge narrows, you can get a view north to the slopes scorched by the 2008 Gnarl Ridge Fire. Hike along a rocky bench, with Cooper Spur on the northern skyline. Below you, the nearest ridge is Lamberson Spur, which runs from the Timberline trail into the Gnarl Ridge Burn (See the [[Lamberson Spur Loop Hike]]). The top of [[Mount Hood]] hoves into view as you cross a rocky slope of young whitebark pines and mountain hemlocks. To your left, you'll see the ruins of the Gnarl Ridge Shelter, which once had a corrugated steel roof. Soon reach [[Gnarl Ridge]], which hosts thickets of contorted, krummholz whitebark pines. Above you is the expanse of the Newton Clark Glacier on [[Mount Hood]]'s rugged southeast slope.  
  
At the 2.0 mile mark, reach a [[Elk Meadows-Bluegrass Ridge-Gnarl Ridge Trail Junction|four-way trail junction]] on a broad, forested  saddle. Turn left on the Gnarl Ridge Trail (no. 652).
+
To head up to the summit of [[Lamberson Butte]], go left to get views almost straight down into the Newton Creek Canyon. Highly eroded breccia formation are a feature of this ridge. Stunted clumps of common juniper, ceanothus, and Sitka alder cling to life. Pass over a false summit, and continue along the rim before detouring down to the left, passing by the next prominence before diverting up to the top of [[Lamberson Butte]]. The summit here is crowned by a twisted congregation of whitebark pine skeletons. Views extend down the Newton Creek drainage, up the slopes of [[Mount Hood]], and over to Cooper Spur, where you can make out Tie-in Rock. You can leave the summit by cutting down at a gentle angle on the back slope of [[Lamberson Butte]]. Once below the summit ridge, you'll be hiking through open glades, and you may well startle a deer or two. You may even trip over the #9 wire that led to the old lookout site. Err to the left rathe than the right, and you'll soon meet the Timberline Trail to descend to the [[Timberline-Gnarl Ridge Trail Junction]].
  
If you wanted, you could do a slightly longer detour and walk around Elk Meadows.  Continue straight, turn right at [[Elk Meadows-Elk Meadows Perimeter South Trail Junction|a junction]] with Elk Meadows Perimeter Trail, stay left at the junction with the Bluegrass Tie Trail, turn left on the Elk Meadows Perimeter Trail, stay right at the [[Gnarl Ridge Tie-Elk Meadows Perimeter Trail Junction]], and join the main route by going right at the junction with the Gnarl Ridge Trail.  This adds 0.8 miles and 150' elevation gain.  See [[Elk Meadows Hike]].
 
  
The main route proceeds on the Gnarl Ridge Trail from the Elk Meadows Trail junction. Go steeply up. At mile 2.7 the Gnarl Ridge Tie Trail joins from the right at the [[Gnarl Ridge-Gnarl Ridge Tie Trail Junction]], keep going straight (up). At the 3 mile mark the Gnarl Ridge Trail ends at the Timberline Trail. Turn right on the Timberline Trail.
 
 
The Timberline Trail goes steeply up until it reaches the top of [[Gnarl Ridge]] at mile 4 and the end of this hike. You get great views all around. If you'd like a spot to camp, just before the ridge crest, is the remains of a shelter with nice campsites on the opposite side of the trail. The closest drinking water is the Newton Creek crossing of the Timberline Trail (there's a silt free stream on the other side), the outlet of Elk Meadows, or the [[Timberline High Point]]. Return the way you came to the junction of the Gnarl Ridge Trail with the Timberline Trail. If you skip this leg of the hike you save two miles round trip and 1100' of elevation gain.
 
 
From the junction of the Gnarl Ridge Trail with the Timberline Trail this hike returns via the scenic Newton Creek Trail, but you could return the way you came, saving 0.9 miles and 200' of elevation.
 
 
Continue (West) on the Timberline Trail, over a difficult Newton Creek crossing ([[Newton Creek Crossing on Timberline Trail]]). See [[Tips for Crossing Streams]]. Continue to the [[Timberline-Newton Creek Trail Junction|Newton Creek Trail]]. Turn left and go down the Newton Creek Trail where you get some great views. Turn right on the Elk Meadows Trail and follow it back to the trailhead.
 
 
Another nice camp spot is on the Timberline Trail just after the Newton Creek crossing. There is a small drinking water stream there also.
 
  
 
=== Maps ===
 
=== Maps ===

Revision as of 00:38, 12 October 2018

The View from Gnarl Ridge (Tom Kloster)
Mountain hemlock cones on Gnarl Ridge (bobcat)
Dwarf ocean spray (Holodiscus dumosus) on Gnarl Ridge (bobcat)
File:Gnarl3.jpg
Lupine meadow on Gnarl Ridge (bobcat)
  • Start point: Elk Meadows TrailheadRoad.JPG
  • Ending Point: Lamberson Butte
  • Trail Log: Trail Log
  • Distance: 9.5 miles round-trip
  • Elevation gain: 2480 feet
  • High Point: 6633 feet
  • Difficulty: Moderate
  • Seasons: July to November
  • Family Friendly: No
  • Backpackable: Yes
  • Crowded: On summer weekends

Contents

Hike Description

Gnarl Ridge, near the highest point on the Timberline Trail, can be approached from the north (See the Gnarl Ridge from Cloud Cap Hike) or the south. The latter approach keeps your car on a paved surface and begins at the popular Elk Meadows Trailhead. This lollipop loop takes you across Newton Creek twice, allows you to visit Elk Meadows, and with a little off-trail scramble, puts you on top of Lamberson Butte, staring up at the imposing Newton Clark Glacier and down past dark breccia crags to the always changing spate of Newton Creek. If you're backpacking, there's water at Elk Meadows and Newton Creek.

The Elk Meadows Trail begins in mountain hemlock forest, with silver fir, Douglas-fir, noble fir, Engelmann spruce and western white pine. There’s a huckleberry understory that invites plunder in late summer. Cross one firebreak and then another one. There’s an unmarked trail junction, with a trail leading left to a parking area for the Meadows Nordic Center. Reach the Elk Meadows-Umbrella Falls Trail Junction and keep straight. Drop to cross Clark Creek on its handrailed footbridge after passing the Elk Meadows-Clark Creek Trail Junction on the right. Before the bridge, there’s a Wilderness permit box.

After crossing the bridge, the trail heads up a bank and enters the Mt. Hood Wilderness. The trail levels and drops to cross two small creeks, then heads gradually upward. Cross a creek on a footbridge and then, on a level section, reach the Elk Meadows-Newton Creek Trail Junction. The trail rises and then drops into the Newton Creek channel. A plank usually affords a good crossing of Newton Creek; otherwise, especially early in the season, you will have to pick your way across (See Tips for Crossing Streams). Cairns mark the route to the trail on the opposite bank. The dusty trail switchbacks up, passing over many lush seeps and small brooks. Switchback again and note the many large Douglas-firs on this steep hillside. Pass through thimbleberry thickets with active mountain beaver warrens. There are more springs. Switchback five more times into drier woods with bracken and bear-grass for the carpet. There are two more switchbacks, and the trail then winds gradually up under mountain hemlock, silver fir, and subalpine fir. The path levels and meets the four-way Elk Meadows-Bluegrass Ridge-Gnarl Ridge Trail Junction. To the left is the Gnarl Ridge Trail #652. To the right is the Blue Grass Ridge Trail #647.

Turn left here for a more direct route up to Gnarl Ridge, but if you want to visit Elk Meadows, keep straight at this junction. Head down through huckleberries under a mountain hemlock canopy. Come to the Elk Meadows-Elk Meadows Perimeter South Trail Junction, and make a left. A spur leads right to the upper slopes of Elk Meadows, and you'll get a view to the burned out slopes of Bluegrass Ridge. Gradually descend along the western fringe of the meadows through a carpet of lupine and huckleberry. After passing by a small spring where there's another spur to the meadows, turn left a the Gnarl Ridge Tie-Elk Meadows Perimeter Trail Junction.

Hike up through a carpet of grouseberry, huckleberry, and lupine. If you look carefully to your left, you might spot a section of the #9 wire which led to the tent lookout on Lamberson Butte. Ascend open meadows of lupine, goldenweed, penstemon, and wood rush to reach the Gnarl Ridge-Gnarl Ridge Tie Trail Junction. Hike up through glades of mountain hemlock and subalpine fir to the Timberline-Gnarl Ridge Trail Junction. You'll be returning to this junction, but keep right for now.

Enter denser mountain hemlock woods, and cross a rocky gully. Then pass through extensive open meadows. The trail swings left through glades of woodrush, lupine, fleece flower, and Jacob's ladder. As the ridge narrows, you can get a view north to the slopes scorched by the 2008 Gnarl Ridge Fire. Hike along a rocky bench, with Cooper Spur on the northern skyline. Below you, the nearest ridge is Lamberson Spur, which runs from the Timberline trail into the Gnarl Ridge Burn (See the Lamberson Spur Loop Hike). The top of Mount Hood hoves into view as you cross a rocky slope of young whitebark pines and mountain hemlocks. To your left, you'll see the ruins of the Gnarl Ridge Shelter, which once had a corrugated steel roof. Soon reach Gnarl Ridge, which hosts thickets of contorted, krummholz whitebark pines. Above you is the expanse of the Newton Clark Glacier on Mount Hood's rugged southeast slope.

To head up to the summit of Lamberson Butte, go left to get views almost straight down into the Newton Creek Canyon. Highly eroded breccia formation are a feature of this ridge. Stunted clumps of common juniper, ceanothus, and Sitka alder cling to life. Pass over a false summit, and continue along the rim before detouring down to the left, passing by the next prominence before diverting up to the top of Lamberson Butte. The summit here is crowned by a twisted congregation of whitebark pine skeletons. Views extend down the Newton Creek drainage, up the slopes of Mount Hood, and over to Cooper Spur, where you can make out Tie-in Rock. You can leave the summit by cutting down at a gentle angle on the back slope of Lamberson Butte. Once below the summit ridge, you'll be hiking through open glades, and you may well startle a deer or two. You may even trip over the #9 wire that led to the old lookout site. Err to the left rathe than the right, and you'll soon meet the Timberline Trail to descend to the Timberline-Gnarl Ridge Trail Junction.


Maps

Fees, Regulations, etc.

  • Port-a-potty, picnic table, information kiosk at trailhead
  • Self-issued wilderness permit

Trip Reports

Related Discussions / Q&A

Guidebooks that cover this destination

  • Hiking Oregon's Geology by Ellen Morris Bishop

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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.

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