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Difference between revisions of "Ramona Falls Loop Hike"

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[[Category:Mount Hood]]
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[[Category:Creek Hikes]]
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[[Category:Crowded Hikes]]
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[[Category:Moderate Hikes]]
 +
[[Category:Mount Hood Area]]
 +
[[Category:Mt Hood National Forest]]
 
[[Category:Northwest Oregon]]
 
[[Category:Northwest Oregon]]
 +
[[Category:Wilderness Hikes]]
 +
[[Category:Waterfall Hikes]]
 +
[[Category:Loop Hikes]]
 +
[[Category:Hikes]]
  
[[Image:Ramonafalls.JPG|thumb|400px|Ramona Falls with bridge at base of falls]]
+
[[Image:Ramonafalls.JPG|thumb|400px|Ramona Falls with bridge at base of falls ''(Jerry Adams)'']]
 +
[[Image:Looking down the Sandy River, Sandy River Trail.jpg|thumb|250px|Looking down the Sandy River, Sandy River Trail ''(bobcat)'']]
 +
[[Image:Mt. Hood from the Sandy River crossing, Sandy River Trail.jpg|thumb|250px|Mt. Hood from the Sandy River crossing, Sandy River Trail ''(bobcat)'']]
 +
[[Image:Ramona1.jpg|thumb|250px|Ramona Creek below the falls ''(bobcat)'']]
 +
[[Image:Ramona2.jpg|thumb|250px|Andesite cliffs above Ramona Creek ''(bobcat)'']]
 +
[[Image:Large pyrola (Pyrola asarifolia), Sandy River Trail.jpg|thumb|160px|Large pyrola ''(Pyrola asarifolia)'', Sandy River Trail ''(bobcat)'']]
 +
[[Image:RamonaFallsMap.png|thumb|500px|The lollipop loop to Ramona Falls (not a GPS track) ''(bobcat)'' Courtesy: ''Caltopo'']]
  
== Info ==
+
{{Start point|Ramona Falls Trailhead}}
* Start point: [[Ramona Falls Trailhead]]
+
 
* End point: [[Ramona Falls]]
 
* End point: [[Ramona Falls]]
* Distance: 3.3 miles using the river side trail, 3.6 miles using the creek side trail
+
* Trail Log: [[Ramona Falls Hike/Log]]
* Elevation gain: 1050'
+
{{Distance|7.1 miles}} round trip
* Difficulty: Moderate
+
* Hike Type: Loop
* Seasons: spring, summer, fall
+
{{Elevation gain|1035 feet}}
* Family Friendly: yes
+
* High point: 3,470 feet
* Backpackable: yes
+
{{Difficulty|Moderate}}
* Crowded: yes during summer and weekends
+
* Seasons: Late spring to early fall
 +
* Family Friendly: No
 +
* Backpackable: No
 +
* Crowded: Yes
  
== Hike Description ==
+
=== Hike Description ===
[[Image:Ramonath.JPG|thumb|400px|Ramona Falls Trailhead]]
+
The Ramona Falls Hike is a favorite summer destination for outdoor enthusiasts due to the gradual elevation gain, relative proximity to Portland, and its beautiful climax at the wondrous [[Ramona Falls]]. What used to be a popular family hike is no longer a walk in the park, however. A road washout in the mid-1990s caused the trailhead to be located 1.4 miles farther away at the Old Maid Sand Pit. In 2014, a hiker was swept off the seasonal footbridge at the [[Sandy River Crossing]] and drowned by rapidly rising waters after a sudden storm. The Forest Service has decided not to replace the bridge, so the crossing of the river, which you have to do going and coming, is now a ford or a careful balancing act on logs that change their position annually. Also, [[Ramona Falls]] became part of the Mt. Hood Wilderness in 2009, so consider this a hike into the backcountry with all the attendant precautions. Wear proper footwear, carry emergency essentials in your pack, and turn back if there is heavy rain. Do NOT attempt a crossing of the Sandy if the river is running fast, deep, and furiously.
  
The Ramona Falls trail is one of the easier, more popular hikes in the Mount Hood area.
+
Two longer hikes that include [[Ramona Falls]] are the [[Muddy Fork Loop Hike]] and the [[Yocum Ridge Hike]]. This loop is also done in the winter on snowshoes or skis, but remember that the access road is gated further down from December 1st to April 1st.
Ramona Falls is very scenic and makes a great destination. 
+
 
+
Start South from the past the information board.  The first mile goes along the South side of the Sandy River.  Be careful because the Sandy River can undercut the trail causing it to collapse.
+
  
[[Image:Sandybr.JPG|thumb|400px|Bridge across Sandy River on Ramona Falls Hike]]
+
Take the wide, sandy trail leading up from the southeast corner of the parking area. You will be hiking among stunted mountain hemlock, Douglas-fir, and lodgepole pine on a carpet of moss, pinemat manzanita, and reindeer lichen. Beginning in about 1780, pyroclastic flows from [[Mount Hood]] buried the Sandy River, which continues to change its course as it carves through the soft strata. Pass the first of at least three glacial river crossing signs warning about safe passage when waters are high. (There has been more than one drowning death in the area). Come to the [[Sandy River-Ramona Falls Trailhead Trail Junction]], and proceed past a large boulder to a stop sign, where you’ll need to fill out a free wilderness permit.
  
At about mile 1 is a bridge across the Sandy river. The bridge is put in about May and removed about
+
Hike onward through the trees, where the trail has been moved back away from the river after sections that were too close to the riverbank washed away. At 1.1 miles reach the bank of the river and then descend to the [[Sandy River Crossing]]. A bridge is no longer provided here, so you’ll need to pick one of the logs strewn across the water or attempt a ford (See [[Tips for Crossing Streams]]). This crossing is easiest from mid-summer to early fall. The trail picks up on the opposite bank and winds through an alder-colonized debris fan. Drop in and out of a gully, and head up parallel to the river in shady woods. Come to the [[Pacific Crest-Sandy River Trail Junction]], and go left. The trail soon reaches [[Ramona Creek Bridge on Pacific Crest Trail|a footbridge over Ramona Creek]] and heads up the bank of the creek. At the well-signed [[Ramona Falls-Pacific Crest Trail Junction]], keep right.  
October each year. This bridge occasionally gets washed out during the hiking season. Contact the  
+
Mount Hood Info Center to see if it's in currently. It's possible to cross the Sandy River without
+
the bridge. People have been killed crossing this river so be careful.
+
  
At about mile 1.2 is the junction with the River Side Ramona Falls Trail (#797) which goes right and  
+
Pass through a stile (no horses are permitted on the Ramona Falls Trail) and head up through the shady woodland that has revegetated the pyroclastic flows. Cross a log footbridge, and hike up along lovely, burbling Ramona Creek, which flows through the duff carpet and mossy stones. Look left to note the wonderful pink and sandy andesite cliffs across the creek. Leave the stream to pass above a gully, and keep rising through mountain hemlock, western hemlock, Douglas-fir, western red-cedar, lodgepole pine, rhododendron, and Sitka alder. Reach the junction with the Timberline Trail, and stay right to admire [[Ramona Falls]]' splashing veil from the footbridge that spans the creek here. There are plenty of places to sit and contemplate a while under the shady canopy although on a summer weekend, there may be throngs that have the same idea. <b>Do not climb the rocks at the base of the waterfall for better photos, as it is slippery and dangerous and blocks other people's views of the falls.</b>
the Creek Side Ramona Falls Trail (also #797) which goes left. I assume you take the  
+
River Side Trail and come back on the Creek Side Trail, but you can take either.
+
  
At mile 2.8 on the River Side Trail is the junction with the Pacific Crest Trail, which goes
+
Continue on the Timberline Trail, and pass through a stock fence near a horse hitch. The trail drops among stunted mountain hemlocks and lodgepole pines to the [[Pacific Crest-Timberline Middle Trail Junction]], where you will turn right. The forest, with a salal understory, becomes shadier, and you get views down to the Sandy’s wide debris channel. Pass out of shady old growth to the stunted Old Maid Flat forest. The trail drops off the bench again and wends down among rhododendrons to the [[Pacific Crest-Sandy River Trail Junction]]. Keep left here to make the [[Sandy River Crossing]] and return to the trailhead.
right. You can take this a short distance down to the Sandy River or continue up
+
a long steep grade to Paradise Park and then further around the mountain.
+
  
Assuming you stay left on the Ramona Falls Trail, at mile 3.3 you reach Ramona Falls at
 
3450' elevation.  "The only way to describe Ramona Falls is 'cathedralesque'...what a
 
beautiful spot!" to quote jeffstat in a trip report.  There is a large area at the base of
 
the falls in a grove of trees.  This is a cool spot in the summer for a bite of lunch.
 
There will probably be some other people there also, but it's a large enough area to
 
not be on top of each other.
 
  
If you're backpacking, there are many places to camp on the trail between Ramona Falls
+
=== Maps ===
and the Sandy River. In the summer it can be pretty busyPeople that are hiking
+
{{HikeMaps|latitude=45.3856|longitude=-121.7916}}
around the mountain typically camp out one night at Ramona Falls. But, especially
+
* [https://www.fs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/stelprdb5359738.pdf  Sandy River Trail #770 (USFS)]
towards the Sandy River you can probably find a spot not on top of others.
+
* [https://www.fs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/fseprd517650.pdf Ramona Falls Trail #797 (USFS)]
 +
* Green Trails Maps: ''Government Camp, OR #461''
 +
* Adventure Maps: ''Mt. Hood Area''
 +
* U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service: ''Zigzag Ranger District''
 +
* Discover Your Northwest: ''Mt. Hood National Forest North: Trail Map & Hiking Guide''
 +
* U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service: ''Mt. Hood National Forest''
 +
* National Geographic Trails Illustrated Map: ''Mount Hood Wilderness''
 +
* National Geographic Trails Illustrated Map: ''Mount Hood''
 +
* Discover Your Northwest: ''Mt. Hood National Forest North''
  
To get back to the trailhead, take the Creekside Ramona Falls Trail. Start on the  
+
=== Fees, Regulations, etc. ===
bridge across Ramona Creek at the base of the falls.
+
* Northwest Forest Pass (or America the Beautiful Pass) required at trailhead. Pass must be acquired beforehand as they are not sold at the trailhead.
 +
* Self-issued wilderness permit
 +
* Exercise caution at the [[Sandy River Crossing]]
  
At the far end of the bridge, the Timberline Trail takes off to the right.  This used to
+
{{TripReports|Ramona Falls}}
also be the Paciic Crest TrailThe PCT was rerouted because of the difficult
+
* [https://www.oregonhikers.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=26310 Ramona Falls 1/14]
crossing of the Muddy Fork of the Sandy River.  Stay left on the Ramona Falls Trail. 
+
It's 3.6 miles to the trailhead.
+
  
The trail follows Ramona Creek. There is a huge rock wall to your right (Northeast).
+
{{RelatedDiscussions|Ramona Falls}}
There are many places to stop for lunch if you didn't do so at Ramona Falls.  In the
+
* [https://www.oregonhikers.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=28179  Ramona Falls Sandy River Crossing 2019]
summer, this section of trail will be fairly cool.
+
  
At about 2.5 miles from the trailhead, the trail veers off of Ramona Creek.  At 2 miles
+
=== Guidebooks that cover this hike ===
from the trailhead is the junction with the Pacific Crest Trail which goes right.
+
* ''60 Hikes Within 60 Miles: Portland'' by Paul Gerald
It goes a short distance to a bridge across the Muddy Fork. A little further on the
+
* ''Afoot & Afield: Portland/Vancouver'' by Douglas Lorain
Ramona Falls Trail is another junction with a horse route across the Muddy Fork of the  
+
* ''I Heart Oregon (& Washington)'' by Lisa D. Holmes
PCT. Stay left on the Ramona Falls Trail.
+
* ''Best Hikes Near Portland'' by Fred Barstad
 +
* ''Best Short Hikes in Northwest Oregon'' by Rhonda & George Ostertag
 +
* ''100 Hikes in Northwest Oregon & Southwest Washington'' by William L. Sullivan
 +
* ''Trips & Trails: Oregon'' by William L. Sullivan
 +
* ''105 Virtual Hikes of the Mt. Hood National Forest'' by Northwest Hiker
 +
* ''PDX Hiking 365'' by Matt Reeder
 +
* ''50 Hikes in Oregon'' by David L. Anderson
 +
* ''Take a Hike: Portland'' by Barbara I. Bond
 +
* ''Portland Hikes'' by Art Bernstein & Andrew Jackman
 +
* ''Hiking Mount Hood National Forest'' by Marcia Sinclair
 +
* ''Hiking Oregon's Geology'' by Ellen Morris Bishop
 +
* ''Hiking Waterfalls in Oregon'' by Adam Sawyer
 +
* ''Best Hikes With Kids: Oregon'' by Bonnie Henderson
 +
* ''Oregon's Wilderness Areas'' by George Wuerthner
 +
* ''Around & About Mount Hood'' by Sonia Buist with Emily Keller
 +
* ''62 Hiking Trails: Northern Oregon Cascades'' by Don & Roberta Lowe
 +
* ''70 Hiking Trails: Northern Oregon Cascades'' by Don & Roberta Lowe
 +
* ''Oregon's Columbia River Gorge: Camping & Hiking'' by Tom Stienstra & Sean Patrick Hill
 +
* ''Oregon Hiking'' by Sean Patrick Hill
 +
* ''Pacific Northwest Hiking'' by Scott Leonard & Sean Patrick Hill
 +
* ''Best Hikes With Dogs: Oregon'' by Ellen Morris Bishop
  
At about 1.4 miles from the trailhead, the Creek Side Ramona Falls Trail crosses Ramona  
+
=== More Links ===
CreekAt 1.2 miles from the trailhead is the junction with the River Side Ramona Falls  
+
* [https://www.fs.usda.gov/recarea/mthood/recarea/?recid=53472  Sandy River Trail #770 (USFS)]
Trail and the Sandy River TrailStay right on the Sandy River Trail and go back the
+
* [https://www.fs.usda.gov/recarea/mthood/recarea/?recid=53460  Ramona Falls Trail #797 (USFS)]
way you came to the trailhead.
+
* [http://www.fs.usda.gov/recarea/mthood/recarea/?recid=53600  Ramona Falls Trailhead (USFS)]
 +
* [http://www.nwhiker.com/MHNFHike21.html Ramona Falls Hike (Northwest Hiker)]
 +
* [https://rootsrated.com/portland-or/hiking/ramona-falls  Ramona Falls - Hiking (Roots Rated)]
 +
* [http://www.oregon.com/recreation/ramona-falls  Ramona Falls (Oregon.com)]
 +
* [http://www.backcountrycow.com/blog/2017/ramona-falls-hike-or  Ramona Falls Hike — Mt. Hood Wilderness, Oregon (Backcountrycow)]
 +
* [https://www.outdoorproject.com/adventures/oregon/hikes/ramona-falls-hike  Ramona Falls Hike (Outdoor Project)]
 +
* [http://thatoregonlife.com/2016/08/ramona-falls-oregon/  The Ramona Falls in Oregon is a Must-Do Adventure (That Oregon Life)]
 +
* [https://kristidoespdx.com/2016/10/hike-ramona-falls/  Hike: Ramona Falls (Kristi Does PDX)]
 +
* [https://www.alltrails.com/trail/us/oregon/ramona-falls-trail  Ramona Falls Trail (All Trails)]
 +
* [https://www.hikingproject.com/trail/7024808/ramona-falls-loop Ramona Falls Loop (Hiking Project)]
 +
* [https://www.theoutbound.com/oregon/photography/hike-to-ramona-falls  Hike to Ramona Falls (The Outbound Collective)]
 +
* [http://www.traditionalmountaineering.org/News_Hood_HikerDrowned.htm  Mt Hood solo hiker drowned while crossing swollen Sandy River (Traditional Mountaineering)]
 +
* [http://www.oregonlive.com/clackamascounty/index.ssf/2014/08/post_153.html  "Ramona Falls Trail still may be dangerous; washed-out footbridge may not be replaced soon" (Oregon Live)]
 +
* [http://www.waterfallsnorthwest.com/nws/falls.php?num=3992  Ramona Falls (Northwest Waterfall Survey)]
  
  
== Maps ==
+
=== Contributors ===
[[Image:Map.jpg|thumb|Map, GPS track in jpeg format]]
+
 
+
 
+
== Fees, Regulations, etc. ==
+
Northwest Forest Pass required
+
 
+
== Trip Reports ==
+
* ([http://portlandhikers.com/forums/thread/8535.aspx Ramona Falls hike 10/22/06])
+
(Click [http://portlandhikers.com/forums/AddPost.aspx?ForumID=8 here] to add your own)
+
 
+
== Related Discussions / Q&A ==
+
(Click [http://portlandhikers.com/forums/AddPost.aspx?ForumID=141 here] to ask a question or start a conversation)
+
 
+
 
+
== Guidebooks that cover this hike ==
+
* ''Title'' - 1st Edition, by Author
+
 
+
== More Links ==
+
* See more information at [http://www.somewebsite.com Describe the link here]
+
 
+
== Contributors ==
+
 
* [[User:retiredjerry]] (creator)
 
* [[User:retiredjerry]] (creator)

Revision as of 22:20, 27 December 2019

Ramona Falls with bridge at base of falls (Jerry Adams)
Looking down the Sandy River, Sandy River Trail (bobcat)
Mt. Hood from the Sandy River crossing, Sandy River Trail (bobcat)
Ramona Creek below the falls (bobcat)
Andesite cliffs above Ramona Creek (bobcat)
Large pyrola (Pyrola asarifolia), Sandy River Trail (bobcat)
The lollipop loop to Ramona Falls (not a GPS track) (bobcat) Courtesy: Caltopo
  • Start point: Ramona Falls TrailheadRoad.JPG
  • End point: Ramona Falls
  • Trail Log: Ramona Falls Hike/Log
  • Distance: 7.1 miles round trip
  • Hike Type: Loop
  • Elevation gain: 1035 feet
  • High point: 3,470 feet
  • Difficulty: Moderate
  • Seasons: Late spring to early fall
  • Family Friendly: No
  • Backpackable: No
  • Crowded: Yes

Contents

Hike Description

The Ramona Falls Hike is a favorite summer destination for outdoor enthusiasts due to the gradual elevation gain, relative proximity to Portland, and its beautiful climax at the wondrous Ramona Falls. What used to be a popular family hike is no longer a walk in the park, however. A road washout in the mid-1990s caused the trailhead to be located 1.4 miles farther away at the Old Maid Sand Pit. In 2014, a hiker was swept off the seasonal footbridge at the Sandy River Crossing and drowned by rapidly rising waters after a sudden storm. The Forest Service has decided not to replace the bridge, so the crossing of the river, which you have to do going and coming, is now a ford or a careful balancing act on logs that change their position annually. Also, Ramona Falls became part of the Mt. Hood Wilderness in 2009, so consider this a hike into the backcountry with all the attendant precautions. Wear proper footwear, carry emergency essentials in your pack, and turn back if there is heavy rain. Do NOT attempt a crossing of the Sandy if the river is running fast, deep, and furiously.

Two longer hikes that include Ramona Falls are the Muddy Fork Loop Hike and the Yocum Ridge Hike. This loop is also done in the winter on snowshoes or skis, but remember that the access road is gated further down from December 1st to April 1st.

Take the wide, sandy trail leading up from the southeast corner of the parking area. You will be hiking among stunted mountain hemlock, Douglas-fir, and lodgepole pine on a carpet of moss, pinemat manzanita, and reindeer lichen. Beginning in about 1780, pyroclastic flows from Mount Hood buried the Sandy River, which continues to change its course as it carves through the soft strata. Pass the first of at least three glacial river crossing signs warning about safe passage when waters are high. (There has been more than one drowning death in the area). Come to the Sandy River-Ramona Falls Trailhead Trail Junction, and proceed past a large boulder to a stop sign, where you’ll need to fill out a free wilderness permit.

Hike onward through the trees, where the trail has been moved back away from the river after sections that were too close to the riverbank washed away. At 1.1 miles reach the bank of the river and then descend to the Sandy River Crossing. A bridge is no longer provided here, so you’ll need to pick one of the logs strewn across the water or attempt a ford (See Tips for Crossing Streams). This crossing is easiest from mid-summer to early fall. The trail picks up on the opposite bank and winds through an alder-colonized debris fan. Drop in and out of a gully, and head up parallel to the river in shady woods. Come to the Pacific Crest-Sandy River Trail Junction, and go left. The trail soon reaches a footbridge over Ramona Creek and heads up the bank of the creek. At the well-signed Ramona Falls-Pacific Crest Trail Junction, keep right.

Pass through a stile (no horses are permitted on the Ramona Falls Trail) and head up through the shady woodland that has revegetated the pyroclastic flows. Cross a log footbridge, and hike up along lovely, burbling Ramona Creek, which flows through the duff carpet and mossy stones. Look left to note the wonderful pink and sandy andesite cliffs across the creek. Leave the stream to pass above a gully, and keep rising through mountain hemlock, western hemlock, Douglas-fir, western red-cedar, lodgepole pine, rhododendron, and Sitka alder. Reach the junction with the Timberline Trail, and stay right to admire Ramona Falls' splashing veil from the footbridge that spans the creek here. There are plenty of places to sit and contemplate a while under the shady canopy although on a summer weekend, there may be throngs that have the same idea. Do not climb the rocks at the base of the waterfall for better photos, as it is slippery and dangerous and blocks other people's views of the falls.

Continue on the Timberline Trail, and pass through a stock fence near a horse hitch. The trail drops among stunted mountain hemlocks and lodgepole pines to the Pacific Crest-Timberline Middle Trail Junction, where you will turn right. The forest, with a salal understory, becomes shadier, and you get views down to the Sandy’s wide debris channel. Pass out of shady old growth to the stunted Old Maid Flat forest. The trail drops off the bench again and wends down among rhododendrons to the Pacific Crest-Sandy River Trail Junction. Keep left here to make the Sandy River Crossing and return to the trailhead.


Maps

  • Maps: Hike Finder
  • Sandy River Trail #770 (USFS)
  • Ramona Falls Trail #797 (USFS)
  • Green Trails Maps: Government Camp, OR #461
  • Adventure Maps: Mt. Hood Area
  • U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service: Zigzag Ranger District
  • Discover Your Northwest: Mt. Hood National Forest North: Trail Map & Hiking Guide
  • U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service: Mt. Hood National Forest
  • National Geographic Trails Illustrated Map: Mount Hood Wilderness
  • National Geographic Trails Illustrated Map: Mount Hood
  • Discover Your Northwest: Mt. Hood National Forest North

Fees, Regulations, etc.

  • Northwest Forest Pass (or America the Beautiful Pass) required at trailhead. Pass must be acquired beforehand as they are not sold at the trailhead.
  • Self-issued wilderness permit
  • Exercise caution at the Sandy River Crossing

Trip Reports

Related Discussions / Q&A

Guidebooks that cover this hike

  • 60 Hikes Within 60 Miles: Portland by Paul Gerald
  • Afoot & Afield: Portland/Vancouver by Douglas Lorain
  • I Heart Oregon (& Washington) by Lisa D. Holmes
  • Best Hikes Near Portland by Fred Barstad
  • Best Short Hikes in Northwest Oregon by Rhonda & George Ostertag
  • 100 Hikes in Northwest Oregon & Southwest Washington by William L. Sullivan
  • Trips & Trails: Oregon by William L. Sullivan
  • 105 Virtual Hikes of the Mt. Hood National Forest by Northwest Hiker
  • PDX Hiking 365 by Matt Reeder
  • 50 Hikes in Oregon by David L. Anderson
  • Take a Hike: Portland by Barbara I. Bond
  • Portland Hikes by Art Bernstein & Andrew Jackman
  • Hiking Mount Hood National Forest by Marcia Sinclair
  • Hiking Oregon's Geology by Ellen Morris Bishop
  • Hiking Waterfalls in Oregon by Adam Sawyer
  • Best Hikes With Kids: Oregon by Bonnie Henderson
  • Oregon's Wilderness Areas by George Wuerthner
  • Around & About Mount Hood by Sonia Buist with Emily Keller
  • 62 Hiking Trails: Northern Oregon Cascades by Don & Roberta Lowe
  • 70 Hiking Trails: Northern Oregon Cascades by Don & Roberta Lowe
  • Oregon's Columbia River Gorge: Camping & Hiking by Tom Stienstra & Sean Patrick Hill
  • Oregon Hiking by Sean Patrick Hill
  • Pacific Northwest Hiking by Scott Leonard & Sean Patrick Hill
  • Best Hikes With Dogs: Oregon by Ellen Morris Bishop

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.