Thursday, December 10, 2015

Winter Hiking: Salt Creek Falls – Diamond Creek Falls Loop

Salt Creek Falls
Distance: About 3.5 miles
Directions: From Oakridge, head east for about 20 miles. Turn right at the sign for Salt Creek Falls.

As temperatures plummet, 286-foot Salt Creek Falls plunges over a solid cliff of ice. For those
capable of braving slick roads and potentially foul conditions, a few miles of easy snow hiking delivers a pretty sweet return.

From wherever you can find a place to ditch your rig, start slogging through the snow towards the main parking lot, gated and buried in white. On the southeastern side of the parking lot, you’ll find the path. Follow it to the right, and soon waterfall views abound below you.
My brother creeping down the slide

If you continue to follow the path up several small, probably slippery, stairs, you’ll find the path that switchbacks down  to the waterfall base. Towards the bottom of the trail, a landslide tore through, rending path and guard fence to rubble. In the winter, it may be a bit sketchy heading on from there.

Regardless whether or not you choose to slide down to the falls’ base, the adventure continues by heading back up the way you just came down. Once back at the parking lot, follow the other fork of the trail that heads up the creek. After crossing a bridge, you’ll come to a fork – one going to Vivian Lake, the other to Diamond Creek Falls. Both go the same place.
For now, take the right fork towards Diamond Creek Falls. Enjoy a few views, including a waterfall concealed in the trees, before forking to the right and heading down a steep embankment (not recommended in moody weather), crossing a slightly dicey bridge, and continuing on slightly further to the base of Diamond Creek Falls.

Retrace your steps back to the main trail, then follow it up to a view from the top of the falls.

Diamond Creek Falls

Follow the trail until it forks. Take the left fork to a logging road. Heading straight will bring you to the road as well, but the left fork takes you to exactly where it crosses to the other side. Follow the trail on the other side down some mild switchbacks, cross another road, and take the trail back to the first fork and the bridge leading back to the parking lot.


For more Western Cascade adventures, check out my Cascade Foothills page.

Sunday, August 16, 2015

Lassen Peak



Craters on Lassen Peak
Length: 2.5 miles one-way
Minimum Elevation: 8500 feet
Maximum Elevation: 10457 feet
Total Elevation Gain: 2000 feet
Directions: From the southwest entrance station of Lassen Volcanic National Park, head north on Highway 89 about 7 miles. The trailhead will be on the left. 

The trailhead
One of the easiest mountains to hike standing over 10000 feet tall, Lassen offers great views of much of Northern California. With a wide, gentle (in terms of climbing route standards) trail dotted with interpretive signs and resting spots, it makes for a great family hike or midmorning stroll.

Lassen’s history, however, is far from gentle.

The trail has only been fully re-opened since this year. Before that, it had been shut down for some time for park staff to make improvements, prompted by a rockslide that killed a young boy. 

Further into its past, the mountain had a notable series of eruptions in the early 1900s. It’s eastern side blew out highly destructive pyroclastic flows – superheated avalanches of volcanic gas, ash, and rock that can travel at speeds in the hundreds range mph – annihilating forest on Lassen’s northeast side up to 4.5 miles from the volcano. Towns and farmlands further downhill from the mountain were devastated by lahars – mudflows created by Lassen’s snow rapidly melting and mixing with landslide and other debris. The largest eruption sent a cloud of ash seven miles into the sky.

Vulcan's Eye
The mountain is currently sleeping, however, and the hike hazard-free. From the trailhead, just follow the switchbacks up the mountain. Timberline comes pretty quickly along the trail, yielding scattered lupine amid volcanic talus. Take a look at the large crags above you – one on the left has a natural oval-shaped engraving on it known as Vulcan’s Eye. 

At the end of the 2.5 miles, the trail tops out on a large, rolling nob. Craters cut into mountain to the left. Directly ahead is a large rocky point – the true summit. Head straight to it for a scramble to the top, or veer to the left for a slightly milder grade.




The summit

Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Burney Falls



Distance: .6 mile out-and-back
Directions: From McCloud, CA, follow Highway 89 South for about 40 miles. Turn right at the sign for McArthur-Burney Falls Memorial State Park.


A short, paved path takes you out of the hot, dry summer heat of California’s northeastern Cascades and brings you to an icy blue pool at the base of a 129-foot waterfall. 

Burney falls is much more interesting than just a relief from the California summer, however. All but two of its streams (coming from the creek above) pour directly out of basalt cliffs in a massive series of springs.

The water originates as precipitation on Burney Mountain, where it filters through porous volcanic rock to provide a consistent year-round flow for the falls. The water then flows down the remainder of Burney Creek to Lake Britton, providing opportunities for fishing, boating, swimming, and camping.

The path to the fall’s base is just the beginning of this short roadside adventure. Hiking down Burney Creek, hiking up the opposite side of the falls, and accessing the Pacific Crest Trail are all further hiking prospects within the park.


Monday, July 27, 2015

Broken Top Crater

Broke Top Crater's unnamed lake


Distance: 15.6 miles out-and-back
Maximum Elevation: 8400 feet
Minimum Elevation: 6100 feet
Total Elevation gain: 2400 feet
Directions: From Bend, take the Cascade Lakes Highway 24 miles. Turn right at the sign for Todd Lake (Road 370). The parking area is about a half mile from the turnoff. 


One of the most spectacular alpine wonderlands in the Three Sisters Wilderness, Broken Top Crater basins a frigid lake rimmed with glacier, massive, multi-colored crags, and a scree-sloped viewpoint of all the Oregon Cascades from the South Sister north.

Mt. Bachelor
The meandering trail network from Todd Lake trailhead to the crater is pretty awesome in itself. Even from the parking lot, 9,068-foot Mount Bachelor rises up for a picturesque view.

The trail begins on a .1-mile section of gated road to a four-way intersection. If you want to take a 1.5-mile detour and hike a loop around Todd Lake, head left or straight. To continue the adventure to Broken Top, take a right on Todd Trail.

Broken Top from a distance
After 2.5 miles of forests and meadows, take a slight right/straight onto Soda Creek Trail. In another .9 mile, crossing a couple of creeks on the way, take a sharp right. On the next 1.8-mile stretch, you trod through beautiful pumice fields dotted with flowers. Broken Top’s jagged crags rise off to the left. And a note to avoid confusion: most of this stretch is actually outside of the wilderness. You’ll re-enter it just after the next intersection, which you turn left on. 

Waterfall on Crater Creek
The next 1.8 miles gets really exciting. The trail follows Crater Creek the entire way, displaying stair steps of waterfalls and chutes in rock-carved gorges. 

Broken Hand
Broken Top looms directly ahead, and is joined by Broken Hand and a couple other large buttes. By this time, the only trees still clinging to life are a few scattered groves of gnarled whitebark pines.

Here, the trail climbs briefly steep, then crosses a few gentle-sloped snowfields. Up ahead is a large moraine with a jagged gap through it – the path of the creek, as well as yours. Scrabble up through it, and welcome to the crater. 

Before you is the lake. Head around it on a well-used trail to the right, where the steep moraine levels out a little. Fragile alpine flowers dot the talus crater walls. 

Broken Top's crags above the lake


After you’ve finished checking out the lake, continue following the original trail up the north side of the crater. At the top a glorious view awaits. 

Three Sisters from Broken Top's viewpoint


Note on the Route: This is one option of several different routes to get to Broken Top Crater. For the shortest route, if you have a vehicle that can take a beating on one rough road, drive past the Todd Lake Trailhead on Road 370 for 3.5 miles. Turn left on Road 380 to Broken Top Trailhead. Follow the trail straight (don’t go left at the one intersection .4 miles from the trailhead) to the crater for a 5.8-mile out-and-back.

For a longer route that includes more creeks and waterfalls, take the Soda Creek Trail from the Green Lakes trailhead (a few miles further west of the Todd Lake turnoff). After 4.3 miles, turn left at the Soda Creek-Todd Lake junction and follow the original route the rest of the way, making for a 19 mile round-trip.

Different routes can also can be combined into a loop trip.

For more High Cascade adventures, check out my Cascade Crest page.

Friday, July 24, 2015

Henline Falls

Henline Falls


Distance: 2 miles out-and-back
Maximum Elevation: 1780
Minimum Elevation: 1600
Total Elevation Gain: 200
Directions: From Salem, take Highway 22 and drive 23 miles to Mehama. Turn left on Little North Fork Santiam. Head about 16 miles on it, then head left on Road 2209. In less than a quarter mile, the parking area for the trailhead will be on the left.

My roomate and the waterfall
This short hike gives a small, but very satisfying, taste of Opal Creek Wilderness: a 120-foot waterfall, a pristine creek, and an old mining operation.

The cave entrance
The wide, gentle trail (actually an old mining road) passes a half mile though a thick forest to a steep fork on the right. Ignore it – it goes nowhere. Continue straight on the main trail for about another half mile. Close to the destination, you’ll begin to hear the rush of the creek and waterfall. Next, you’ll see the creek, at first quite far below you in a ravine. Then, the first glimpse of the falls.

The trail squeezes around a big chunk of concrete – the remnants of Silver King Mine’s power building. A short distance further, an easy scrabble-route climbs up to a dark, damp opening in the cliff face – Silver King’s mining shaft. You can explore the first 25 feet of the shaft – the rest is blocked off by an iron grate. If it wasn’t there, you could continue on .25 miles into the mountain’s basement.

The waterfall itself is impressive. A 120-foot sheet of water crashes into a crystal-clear pool, opalescent rocks glinting below the surface.

This hike makes a great warm-up for a longer adventure along Opal Creek.
Looking out from the mining shaft

Thursday, July 23, 2015

Collier Loop Part 3: Glacier Creek to Obsidian Trailhead

Middle Sister from Glacier Creek Meadow


Distance: 5.7 miles
Note: A permit is required for all hiking in camping in the Obsidian Area. You can find more about it here.
A continuation of Collier Loop Parts One and Two

The final stretch of the loop takes you along a refreshing creek, across more lava, and through several miles of mountain hemlock forest. As a bonus, it’s almost all downhill – which is largely appreciated after already hiking 9.4 miles.

I’ll admit that this wasn’t the most exciting part of the loop, or of the Obsidian Area, but it makes for a nice, relatively easy homeward journey.

Glacier Creek
From the charming meadows at the PCT-Glacier Creek junction, head .7 mile down Glacier Creek Trail to its junction with the Obsidian Trail. Going left at this fork would take you back to the PCT to see Obsidian falls. Heading straight/right continues the loop. 

Soon after, you’ll cross White Branch creek, a wide ford so shallow that barely the soles of your boots may get damp in the crossing. 

A lava flow immediately awaits the other side of the creek – and the only real uphill jaunt I remember on this section of the trail. As you descend the other side of the flow, be on the lookout for obsidian mingling in the boulders.

About 3.5 of tree-shaded trail leads to the Obsidian Trailhead. Just before reaching it, however, take a right on the well-marked Scott Trail connector. In .6 miles, the connector joins Scott trail. Head left/straight and it’s .3 miles to the car – the end of a 15.1-mile loop.

For more adventures in the High Cascades, check out my Cascade Crest page.

White Branch Creek

Monday, July 20, 2015

Collier Loop Part 2: Pacific Crest Trail Section Scott Meadow to Glacier Creek

Left to right: North Sister, Middle Sister, and Little Brother from the PCT


Distance: 4.6 miles one-way
Maximum Elevation: 6200 feet
Minimum Elevation: 7200 feet
Total Elevation Gain: 1200 feet
A continuation of Collier Loop Part 1


Shortly after beginning this next section of the loop, I passed a fellow hiker along the trail, doing the same hike but in the opposite direction. He said great views were awaiting – in fact, he said his friend had called this section of the PCT one of his favorite parts of the entire 2,650-mile trek.

I would quickly find out why. The trail passes through meadows, forest, a spring, lava planes, and jagged obsidian crevices, to climax on a side trail up Collier Cone’s alpine viewpoint at the foot of the North and Middle Sisters. The spectacular views of some of the central Cascades’ best seemed to never cease on this four and a half-mile stretch of trail. 

Minnie Scott Spring
After turning right onto the PCT from Scott Trail, you’ll head south through the meadow with the North and Middle Sisters dominating your horizon. After leaving the meadow and crossing through a forested section, you’ll reach Minnie Scott Spring about 1.5 miles down the trail. 

The spring lives up to its name. At its deepest, it may be a couple inches. It’s enough to filter water from, though, making it the only reliable water source so far since starting the loop. No other water source exists until you reach Glacier Creek about another three miles further on, so don’t wait to fill up if you’re thirsty. A camping spot or two also might be found close by the spring. 

Another Smeagol picture in the lava
Then the trail heads in earnest into the lava flows. Directly ahead, its red pumice splotched with snow, 7,800-foot Little Brother doesn’t look so little anymore. 

At 1.8 miles from Scott Trail meadows, a massive grey cinder cone rises to the left – Collier Cone. At this point, the PCT veers to the right to skirt the rugged slopes of Little Brother. This will be the eventual route. First, be sure to take a slight left on a smaller side-trail. Its only .3 miles one-way and the views are spectacular. 

It first winds around jagged obsidian crags, then winds through Collier Crater, a moonscape of alpine flowers and pumice at the base of the cinder cone. It climbs the crater wall, a small lava tube off to
Collier Crater
the right, to reach the viewpoint’s crest. North Sister reaches up jagged to the front left. Middle rises up behind Collier Glacier, a huge chunk of ice once known as Oregon’s largest glacier. To the right is Little Brothers, from this view just as impressive as his bigger siblings. Directly below is a murky lake, the rock-mixed meltwater of Collier Glacier.

After you’ve had your fill of the viewpoint, retrace your steps and continue down the PCT for a final couple miles. 

It continues through the lava, then drops down in a series of tight switchbacks to enter forest again. Finally, it opens in meadow to the sound of running water as you reach the Glacier Creek intersection. A beautiful, meadow-framed view of Middle Sister awaits you at the turnoff.

Part three of the loop can be found here.

For more High Cascade adventures, check out my Cascade Crest page.

North Sister and Middle Sister from the Collier  Crater viewpoint

Collier Loop Part 1: Scott Trail and 4-In-1 Cone

North Sister, Middle Sister, and Little Brother from Four-In-One Cone


Distance: 4.8 miles one way
Maximum Elevation: 6270 feet
Minimum Elevation: 4760 feet
Total Elevation Gain: 1600 feet
Directions: From McKenzie Bridge, head east on Highway 126. Turn right onto Highway 242/Old McKenzie Pass. Between mileposts 71 and 72, turn left at the sign for Scott Lake. Take an immediate right into the Scott Trail parking area. 


When summer weather opens the gates to the winding Highway 242, drivers can access a moonscape of high-altitude lava fields and cinder cones under the shadow of the majestic Three Sisters. Views from the top of the pass are incredible, but heading out on foot into its midst is even better. 

North and Middle Sister from lava fields
Scott Trail gets you into the thick of it. Named after Captain Felix Scott who blazed it as a wagon route 153 years ago, it meanders under mountain hemlock forests, climbs over a jagged lava flow, and ends in a beautiful blue lupine meadow as it junctions with the Pacific Crest Trail. 

Turning right (south) onto the PCT takes you on a 15-mile loop to cover some of the coolest country in the northwest region of the Three Sisters Wilderness. 

Before getting there, however, don’t miss Four-In-One Cone, where a .8-mile side-trip heads up to four craters stuck together by a long, cinder ridge yielding views of the all the Cascade peaks from the Middle Sister in the south to Mount Hood in the North. 

Front left to back right: Belknap Crater (Little Beltknap is the dark mound to its right), Mount Washington, Three Fingered Jack, Mount Jefferson. Mount hood is the small white tip just to the right of Jefferson. It's much easier to see in person.


The trail begins at the Scott Lake trailhead. It heads east, crosses the highway, and continues on to a junction .3 miles from the car. The left trail continues the adventure. Going right is a connector trail to the Obsidian Trailhead (Part 3 of Collier Loop, coming soon). Don’t pass up the tiny wild strawberries along the trail in midsummer. They might be smaller than your thumbnail, but a ripe one packs the flavor of a whole crate of the domestic kind. As the elevation increases, mountain blueberries and huckleberries also join the trailside buffet. 

Conks!
In three miles from the car, prepare to cross a river of lava – thankfully frozen. By scrabbling up its craggy chunks of broken surface rock, you may be rewarded in views of the surrounding mountains. Otherwise, hike another mile and a half, crossing a tree island in the middle of the basalt flow and following the flow to cinder fields dotted with trees, and find a rock cairn. To your left will be a mound of charcoal-grey cinders. Here, a trail veers off left towards the mound’s crest. Slog up the dune-like terrain, and find yourself atop Four-In-One Cone.

North Sister, Middle Sister, and Little Brother are the behemoths dominating your southern view. Mount Washington, Three-Fingered Jack, Mount Jefferson, and Mount Hood are the peaks visible to the north. 

My brother Smeagol-posing atop a lava crag
After heading back down the cone (classified as such only geologically; geometrically you’d think it more a weird, elongated blob), continue a final .8 mile to the PCT junction; the meadows surrounding yielding a great view of the North and Middle sister. 

Here, a choice is to be made. You can make the trip an out-and-back by just retracing the route back to the car. You can head 6 miles north on the PCT, passing the Matthieu Lakes and Yapoah Crater, to McKenzie Pass. By doing so, you’d probably need a car shuttle to get back to the Scott Trail parking lot. Or, you can head south on the PCT to complete the 17-mile loop, heading down the PCT for three miles to Glacier Creek, then heading west on Glacier Creek 4.8 miles to the Obsidian trailhead and taking the .6-mile connector back to Scott Trail and the car.

The second part of this loop, the Pacific Crest Trail section, can be found here.

For more High Cascade adventures, check out my Cascade Crest page here.

The meadows at the Scott-PCT junction

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Hemlock Butte

View from the summit. Diamond Peak center, Mount Yoran and its sister peak to the far left

Distance: 1 mile out-and-back
Minimum Elevation: 5330 feet 
Maximum Elevation: 5800 feet
Total Elevation Gain: 470 feet
Directions: From Oakridge, head east on Highway 58 for about 1.5 miles. Turn right at the sign for Hills Creek Dam. You should now be on Forest Service Road 21, known also as Hills Creek Road. In a half mile, continue straight as the road becomes Forest Service Road 23. You’ll be going to the left of the reservoir. In about 19.5 miles is the trail sign on the right for Hemlock Butte. 


This short trail leads to a great view of Diamond Peak, Mount Yoran and the surrounding area. It leaves the road to switchback through a thick forest of mountain hemlock and grand fir. Dense undergrowth and fallen logs crowd out the path in places. Near the summit, the forest opens up to a steep, rocky slope. A short, well-used scrabble route, passing fragile subalpine flowers, ascends the summit block to the 360-degree view.


Tuesday, July 14, 2015

Fitton Green Summit Loop




Directions: In Corvallis, follow Harrison Blvd west through town. After crossing Walnut Blvd/NW 53 St, the road becomes NW Oak Creek Drive. Continue following it west, then take a slight left onto Cardwell Hill Road. Turn left onto Chinook Drive. Turn Right onto Chapparel Drive/Panorma Drive. Follow signs to the parking area.


About a 10-15 minute drive from OSU’s campus, Fitton Green Natural Area is a great local site for several activities – hiking, picnicking, running, photography, watching sunsets. Better yet, it’s much less crowded than other Corvallis parks and natural areas, such as Bald Hill or Chip Ross Park.

It’s also Benton County’s newest park. Elsie Fitton Ross and her husband Charles Ross, partnered with Greenbelt Land Trust, provided the funds to acquire the land, and now open to the public since 2003, it offers 308 acres explore. 

A short, though pretty, loop begins at the parking area and follows a gated road a short distance. Soon, a dirt road heads up the hill to the left. Following it up leads to first a few awesome old oak trees, then to a panoramic view of the coast range, Mary’s Peak rising high in the center of it. 

Adventuring on this road ends at a private property sign, but a trail veers off to the right in the open ridgetop meadow. A Douglas fir up ahead grows windbent on the crest, looking oddly alpine in the otherwise Willamette Valley environment.

Views soon unfold of the wide, flat expanse of the Valley and the Cascade foothills lining its eastern border. Further in the distance, glimpses of the Three Sisters and Mount Jefferson appear sporadically. 

The trail switchbacks down off the meadow and once again becomes dirt road, again turning right to begin closing the loop. Following it straight (avoiding side roads to the left, including cryptic “Evacuation Route” signs) will eventually lead back to gravel road, where it curves once more to the right and heads slightly uphill for a short distance to return to the parking lot.


Monday, July 13, 2015

Imnaha Off-Trail

Here are some pictures of an area, far up the Imnaha, that has evaded any form of official forest service trail. To keep it somewhat hidden I won't disclose exactly where it is or any other specific information about it.