We drove east to Hood River, a cutesy little town on the Columbia River, and took Route 35 south out of town, heading towards some sites of the Oregon Trail. Where I thought the Barlow Road Tollgate was - wasn't there. Did find a US Forest Service and stopped to talk about sights to see and where the Tollgate was located. Got the info and continued on. Started the climb up in elevation towards Mt. Hood and saw the cutoff for the Barlow Road. Right before it we passed over White River - no water but a river of rock. Impressive.
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Came up out of the Columbia River area and - bam! |
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How did the emigrants survive the trip? |
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White River - white rocks, not water |
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Barlow Road was cut out through the woods |
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And this Barlow guy charged $5 for passage - lots of money back then! |
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Did not see any trail ruts - but gets sooo much snow here, not surprised |
Took the Pioneer Woman Grave Trail road back into the woods where the Barlow Road is located. This was a short cut for the Emigrants who did not want to travel the rest of the way via the Columbia River. Lots of drownings occurred. Instead, they took this cut off which was hacked through the woods. We found the marker for the Barlow Road, never found the grave. However, did walk a tidge on the Pacific Crest Trail, saw a recent camp sight for hikers along the trail, saw one of their places to get water (not fresh - would have to treat it with chemicals), and saw a lovely view of Mt. Hood.
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Pacific Crest Trail passes right by Barlow Road |
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Impressive view from the Barlow Road crossing |
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Better treat the water, hikers! |
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Water station along the PCT |
The Ranger told us of a nice easy hike at Trillium Lake, just south of Mt. Hood. We decided to make that our day hike, found the road into Trillium Lake, and changed into walking boots, and off we went. Pretty hike, lots of people enjoying the lake as well as camping right along it. Kayaks, canoes, wind surfers, swimmers, paddle boarders, looked like fun. Finished the hike and continued driving along and decided to go to the Timberline Lodge.
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Our 2 mile hike yesterday |
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Lots of people enjoying the water |
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Remember this photo - will zoom in later in blog |
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Passed this hammock - someone inside it reading |
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Reminded me of days long ago, windsurfing on Pymatuning Lake |
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Our lunch spot along the trail, on east side of trail |
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Almost made it around - on the west side of the lake |
This is the lodge that was featured in the movie "Shining" which starred Jack Nicholson. The lodge is now a national historical landmark, it's beautiful, huge, and very populated. Open all year, they offer mountain climbing (Mt. Hood is the second most mountain climbed in the world - the first being Mt. Fuji), backpacking, hiking, and of course all the winter sports you can imagine. Built by the CCC during the Depression, President Roosevelt came to dedicate it in 1937. We talked with a staff person who said that there was some skiing done today, not the best conditions. But, come mid November - big time visitors.
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Beware of those 'artillery' attacks! |
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First bullet - "there is no guarantee you will be rescued." |
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I think you can find your ski trail - lots to choose from |
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Timberline Lodge - movie, "Shining" filmed around here |
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Walking along Trillium Lake, did not know we were looking at the Lodge. Zoomed in - right above the words - 'we were' - at tree line. |
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Hand crafted wood panels |
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Many stained glass panels through out |
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Tile work |
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Lobby was impressive - hand made furniture, stonework, woodwork |
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Front door |
We also found out that tomorrow, the 26th, there will be 12,500 runners that will partake in the Hood to Coast marathon, consisting of 8 to 12 members on each team, doing relays of about 9 miles each relay, for a total of 98 miles, over a 2 day period (yep, they run at night too). It starts at the Lodge and ends at Seaside, a town on the Oregon coast. Yikes - we are glad we saw the Lodge prior to the crunch of the runners!
Standing outside looking south, we could see Mt. Jefferson, the second tallest mountain in Oregon, and a peak at the Three Sisters Mountains that lay just south of Mt. Jefferson. Did not want to hike at all at the Lodge (we were at 7000 feet and felt the effects), and it was late in the day, so we drove back the way we came. Once we passed out of the range of Mt. Hood, we could see Mt. St. Helens to the north. Did not get a good picture of that mountain - got plenty of time to do that another day.
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Mt. Jefferson as seen from front door, looking south |
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Lodge sits right at base of mountain |
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