Sunday, September 30, 2018

Paddle Oregon 2018: Paddle, Food, and Education

Paddle Oregon 2018: Paddle, Food, and Education

Clothes Maketh the Man

Paddle Oregon launched off right in the middle of the "new normal" super hot and wildfire smokey season in Portland. The trip was moved North around 15 miles this year (about one day's paddle) perhaps to avoid the rather dangerous first day we had last year (see HERE ) from the many swift water sections and numerous snag hazards. Or maybe it was moved so that we could take advantage of a much nicer spot to camp on the last night and add some additional and beautiful river sections to the paddle. I guess I could ask...



The trip this year starts and ends at the historic Saint Paul 4th of July Rodeo Grounds in beautiful Saint Paul Oregon. My Partner and I drive through this little town (450 residents) on a semi-regular basis because we like to launch (or retrieve) from the San Salvador park boat ramp, which is a little county park at the end of a long road through the hops fields. This year, Paddle Oregon is going to end the week at the same boat ramp. Now, this is a little tiny park. Room for maybe 15 cars. Certainly not enough space to have a hundred cars lined up waiting to pick up people and boats. So what they did was have us drive our cars and boats to the Rodeo Parking area (lots of space there, and semi-secured). There we were met by a number of vans pulling boat hauling trailers (something like 20 boats per trailer) and two sight seeing busses. We put our gear into the storage below the bus and climbed aboard. The staff (along with many workers from local Kayak shops) loaded all of the boats, sweet. And then we all drove off south to the boat launch at a little park just south of Peoria. At the end of the paddle, they had the vans with trailers meeting us at San Salvador and shuttling us the 10 minutes to the rodeo grounds to meet up with our vehicles. A well thought out and excellent way of doing things.

Our Twin Tempest 170s ready to go


Last year, my partner and I arrived a night early at the put-in and camped overnight so as to be sure to be there in the morning. This was because we were (I was) worried about the traffic that was predicted in conjunction with the 2017 Total Eclipse of the Sun by The Moon (TETSBM). We didn't have that worry this year as the 2018 TETSBM was cancelled due to all of the Wild Fire Smoke (WFS). I must say that catching the shuttle, even at 7:00 in the morning, is much preferable to spending an additional night out camping in a straw field. The bus was actually pretty luxurious. How those drivers make those turns in that small park was pretty impressive.

At check-in at the McCartney Park and boat ramp, we sign our legal agreements (promise not to sue when we drown, etc.) and get a t-shirt and a lunch box and are assigned to a pod. The pods are the safety and social groupings of the paddle. There are around 12 paddlers and 3 leaders in each pod. Our pod was called "Luckiamute". No, this isn't some funny phrase made up on whim, it is actually the name of one of the tributaries of the Willamette. It comes into the Willamette just north of the Santiam confluence. Turns out that all of the pods are named after  tributaries of the Willamette.

Luckiamute Pod at a break



The pods also have different personalities, based somewhat on the pod leaders (the safety trained volunteers) but also on the specific function of the pod. For instance, there is a fast pod and a slow pod (the pokey pod). There is also a Nature Pod (they spend more effort getting Eco talks and paddling to interesting objects). Our pod was a "didn't specify but everyone claims to know how to paddle" pod. We had a pretty good cross section of people including a "guy from Chicago" and most of the retired lawyers from Roseburg.

No matter how hard they try to get us on the water quickly, it always takes longer than planned. I think we hit the river around 11:00. We didn't have a very long paddle for the first day, but we didn't have all that much time, either, so we were going to have to paddle hard and fast to get to the campsite in time. In time for what? Well, there you have the mystery of the event. In time to get a good camping spot (there are plenty). In time for Happy Hour (that lasts like 4 hours and doesn't start until pretty late). In time for Dinner? (well, that is like at 7:00). In time for someone to get a frigging massage? Perhaps part of it is that you want to be done because you are going to be so Tired. Of course, you might not have been so tired if you had taken it easy. Many pods do take it easy. They would get into camp an hour after we had our tents set up. But they spent that time On The River. So. Something to think about. I am also willing to admit that if I was the guys coming in last I might be wishing that my tent had been up for an hour and I had been relaxing in some dry place for a bit.

Somebody lost it on a submerged log. This is the end of the quick recovery.

hmmmm, blackberries are ripe all along the river



Many parts of the bank are very steep. No landing. But... there may be agates


Our first night camping was at the public softball fields in Corvallis. The second night was at the park in Albany. I have written about those sections of the river last year. I refer you there  if you are interested. I would like to talk about some of the new things that occurred during that time.

Where we put our boats. Note the Volunteer tent who stayed to keep watch


Camping on the ball fields in Corvallis

A typical Breakfast

At some points along the river, there were places marked out for educational eco talks. Just downstream from the Corvallis bridges is a stretch of river where Fresh Water Muscles are making a come back. Travis (Head Honcho of Willamette River Keeper) had pulled in and was giving a talk to paddlers about river keeper efforts to study, document, and improve the fresh water muscles eco system.

Just to show you that I was paying attention, I will give you a fact. These Muscles need to move upstream at some time (because if they only breed and move downstream, they end up not being fresh water muscles anymore) and they do this by attaching themselves to fish when they are little babies in their free floating form. Also, these muscles live a long time. A hundred years. Wow.

More Details Here and don't let the T-shirt ad up front throw you, there is good stuff on that page.

Travis Teaches us about Muscles.

At Albany, we had a guest speaker. My partner and I happened to sit next to him and his wife during
hors d'oeuvres. He is an author (self published, which I find intriguing) of books concerning the ice age Missoula floods and how these floods shaped Washington, Oregon and, more specifically, the Willamette Valley. He explained to us the years of research he had done compiling his book (It is a very educational read. I want to go find all of the locations he mentions). Later he gave a slide presentation about his research. I found it fascinating. One of the things he pointed out was that the "flood" that occurred when the Glacial Dam broke up in Montana wasn't a big wall of water, it was a big wall of dirt, sand, rocks, and boulders mixed with maybe 30% water. Just enough water, that when under high powered agitation, would form a liquified solid and go roaring down the gorge.  Wow. He had videos of similar phenomena in modern times, I believe they were during volcanic eruption events. Anyway, during these flood events, the Willamette Valley would fill up to 400 feet with flood water, and the dirt and debris that washed down is why the Willamette valley has such deep fertile soil and why Eastern Washington is scraped clean Scab Land. Here is the author's site: Rick Thompson.

Sunrise in Albany. Note the Smoke Colored Sun.

Some nice river on the third day. We ate lunch at the confluence of the Santiam and Willamette rivers. The Santiam is going right down from the mountains and has very cold water. There is a good rock bar right at the confluence, but it hasn't been washed over in a few years so the pickens are slim for Agates. There is a good deep slow stretch after that, a great place to practice rescues. So my partner and did that. One of pod people took a video that I will share. You get to see my partner do a great heal hook entry back into her boat whist I stabilize. Unfortunately, you don't get to see me empty her boat or water or hear her curse when I tip over and she wasn't ready...



On the third night, we were on a farmer's land just south of Independence. This farmer graciously permits people to stay on his river bottom property for free, as long as they indemnify him (which makes sense to me). He comes out and gives talks about the history of the farm and what he is currently growing. His father bought the land the year he was born (1940?) and he and his children and grand children are still farming. Right now he is saying that filberts (hazelnuts) are a good crop, though difficult to grow. He also mentioned that he uses a lot of technology. Specifically, he uses computer controlled herbicide spreaders that will recognize and target a weed such that it limits the amount of herbicide used.


Add caption



Though I appreciate his letting us stay on his property, I will say that his rocks are very hard and don't make very comfy bedding. I am glad I got a new (cheap) Coleman sleeping pad from Bi-Mart.


Our rocky Camp Ground. And No Agates !!


This Bald Faced Hornets nest was right
 next to the little trail up the hill for food
Right next to.



That night at dinner we had a guy come in to talk about Fossils. He was from Woodburn High School where he is (amongst other things) a history teacher. It seems that 10 years or so ago they were digging on the school grounds for some new building and, at about 12 feet down, ran into a layer of sediment dirt that had a lot of fossils in it. Well, the U of O came out and did a dig and wrote some papers and such like that and then left.  The teacher got to thinking, there surely is a lot more school property that we can dig down 10 feet. Perhaps we should do that. The city of Woodburn thought that was a good idea also, so every year they come out with a backhoe and dig a 12 foot hole and the kids go down and find fossils and do projects. One of the things they found was a complete Bison skeleton. Mostly they find frog bones. This is because this area was a marsh at the time it was on the surface, which turns out to be just after the end of the big floods.  The upshot is that this local high school has a paleontology program that their students can access that has led to things such as high school seniors doing research papers with local college professors and presenting them at real scientific venues.


Agate Hunting on the Sly.

And now, as we paddle down the Willamette on the 4th day, we get to new river that I have never written about in Paddle Oregon context. My partner and I would like to be doing more Agate hunting.  However, it is sort of hard to get good agate hunting time when everyone else in your pod can't figure out why you want to walk around looking at rocks. Luckily, one of our pod leaders found a HUGE and beautiful agate during her first half hour of searching with us. This pretty much hooked her and made it easier for my partner and I to steal away and hunt rocks.  I want to say that this is a stretch of the river that is good for that, but it is probably true that EVERY stretch of the river is good for rock hunting and you just have to know where to look.  The places change. This year the pod agreed to stop on this one little island that my partner and I had hunted a few years ago. It is a rock bar that is just up river from Mission State Park on the west bank. She and I had paddled from the Wheatland Ferry launch up-river and we had found a large expanse of open rocks to explore. But I guess we haven't had a good high river winter since then because that empty rock bar is now a grown over island of brush and sticks and such. Not nearly as easy or as fun to hunt. Dang. The same thing happened to the DSL island that we used to like to camp and (agate) hunt on further down river.  We need either new hunting grounds or a good wet flooding-river winter.


We saw many GBH

AHHHH RAPIDS

One of the 3 Ferries on the Willamette

Killdeer. 


One of the river hazards that our pod leaders were concerned about on this trip is the old Boat house that is just upriver from downtown Salem. I think it used to be a boat house for launching skulls for the college rowing team. It was situated at a turn in the river and was floating out in the eddy created by the turn. Some years, the river would shift a bit and the current would flow right into (and under) the floating dock. One year, evidently, a paddler got swept up into the side of the dock and then her boat got rolled and pulled right under the dock. Fortunately, she knew what the dock was and that it was open on the inside, so she just went with the boat and then popped up inside the building. Still, something to be avoided. Last year, I remember, there was an extra safety boater just hanging out at the boat house to keep people away from it. This year we went around the corner and saw no safety boater. Hell, I thought the boat house was right there. Our leader was out front and was going to be leading us away from the boathouse, but it is easier to stay away from something when you can see it.  And then I did see it, it was 20 feet up on shore upside down. Did it get washed there by high water or just pulled up there by machinery to get a hazard our of the river? Oh, I see, there was a fire earlier this year and the boathouse burned up! Like I said, things change on the river.

This is our Pod

 


Get Hot? Take a swim.

Hey. Another Ferry. This is the Wheatland Ferry.

Last year, the trip ended in downtown Salem. This year, we paddled right through because we are going to be camping tonight down near the Wheaton Ferry for our last night on the river. This was a good long day of paddling, but you know what, we have all been working so hard and getting so much better at paddling that we are not having such a hard go of it. Hell, I am really feeling great. I think that night on the rocky river bank did good things for my back. My partner things it may be that I haven't had the stress of being at work for a week.



Some more fun water to play with today. There is the Keiser Rapids. Also called the Keiser ripple or the Kieser shallows. Not much going on here today, but when the river is high it goes over the large basalt formation that is at the foot of the Keiser turn and that may make it more interesting. This was one of the more difficult places for Steamboats to navigate 200 years ago when the Willamette was the main road for farm goods and trade products up the valley. Boats would come across the Columbia Bar at Astoria. From there, steam boats would carry goods and people up river to Vancouver, Portland, and Oregon City. There was a short overland wagon ride around the Falls of the Willamette and then different (and smaller) Steamboats running on the upper Willamette. These boats would stop in places where Farmers had set up storage areas or people were trying to start small communities. Many of these places  ended up not being viable because of the frequent large scale flooding of the Willamette. So places like Butteville and Champoeg were just wiped out by flooding. And this wasn't some big loss of life or anything. The river would just keep rising day by day and eventually you had to leave before everything just started floating away. These days, we have dams pretty much everywhere Dams can go and there are a LOT of artificial river banks and controls, so the flooding doesn't happen as often or as badly. But you can still see high river markers that are way above the roofs of the structures (mostly temporary) that are down near the water.  Need a picture of one, don't I?

This is the boat launch next to Wheatland Ferry. Would our campground have been underwater? 
To get to our winery campground, we have to take a left turn at the Wheatland bar and go down the little back channel behind the bar. There is a sweet little rapid to negotiate to get into the back channel and then you just coast on down to the bank where sits the Wheatland Vineyard and Arcane Winery and tasting room. This place is officially part of the Willamette river trail and evidently you can camp here any time, just let them know you are coming. we had like 100 tents set up, so there is plenty of room. My partner and I set up in the little orchard right out in front of the main house. We had apples clumping down to the ground around us all night (though we didn't hear them).  This is another spot with a shower truck. I love the shower trucks. It feels so good to be clean after a day on the river and the shower trucks have plenty of hot water.

The Landing at the Wheatland Winery

We camped in the Orchard.

Shower Truck !!



Tonight we have a local ranger talking about Steamboat history and all of the little towns up and down the river that used to depend on Steamboat traffic. He said a couple of things I want to comment on.

One, he said that the Indigenous peoples were in the valley long before white settlers and they did a lot of land management and river control. Mainly they would do burns to open up space for farming and such. He also said that Champoeg was the first gather together of peoples to make a government in Oregon. Now, I have a problem with that, it seems to me if the indigenous peoples were managing their land and doing burns and such, they surely were working together and so they surely had some sort of government in place.

The other thing the Ranger said was that for a while, the river was the center of all trade and it got a lot of attention. But once the railroads and roads were put in, the river lost its value and people stopped paying attention to it and turned to using it to dump their waste, sewage, and industrial poisons. So the river was really bad off for quite a while. Then more recently, people have begun to make laws and enforce them and the river is making a come back. Not sure it can ever get back to what it used to be, but people like the Riverkeepers organization are working hard on a number of projects to get the river to be a little more clean, a little more wild, and to preserve it for recreational use and for the sure beauty into the future.

That is a Big Agate

An Osprey and a Sea Hawk

I got this

Some Pilots like to land on the river rock banks. This guy was being a bit rude.

This year, the Willamette Riverkeepers received a gift of a hunk of river bottom land off down near the DSL island where my partner and I used to camp. It is Here. Travis, the executive director of Riverkeeper is very excited about this piece of property. His goal is to try and remove all of the exotic invasive plants (Himalayan Blackberry, Ivy, Scotch Broom) and plant more indigenous species and get the area back to a more historic flora. I think I would like to sign up to volunteer for some of that work. It is a place I paddle past a lot and would enjoy helping to restore it.

The last day on the river was not a long one. We took our time and had some fun. We went down a few of the back channels of some of the islands and took a nice lunch break to hunt agates and go swimming. There are some nice swimming holes down behind some of the DSL islands. Here is a fun thing. We all have river maps that we use when paddling. They were given to us during registration and are printed by a consortium of groups but is instigated by Willamette Riverkeepers (I say this because I notice that the executive Director of Riverkeepers took all of the pictures). As part of my on going theme of "The river keeps changing" I would like to mention a few things. First there are human things that change. I have already mentioned the removal of the boat house hazard just upriver of Salem, there is also at least one set of Power Line crossing that are shown on the maps but are no longer present. Not a big deal really, unless you get confused as to where you are because you were looking for those lines. The most interesting differences tend to be on the little rock bars and islands. Since I paddle the Wheatland to San Salvador let me point out something there. At river mile 64, there are some DSL islands listed. In the map it shows 2 islands very close together (see map). Currently those 2 islands have formed into one and additional islands and channels have developed just downstream of the objects shown in the map (see google map entry). In addition, at RM 65, there is an area called Lambert Bar. No islands are shown at this spot, yet today there is a little chain of islands there, one of them with  trees growing that appear to be on the order of 10 years old. (I am checking the age of the data shown in the maps). Any winter now, we could have another big wet season and these islands could radically change or wash away completely. One thing I wonder is whether or not these islands that appear (like at the Lambert bar) are automatically considered to be DSL islands (Department of State Lands).



By the way, I think the islands at Lambert bar may be big enough for camping now, though good look finding anything other than a rocky place to pitch a tent.

The take out for this trip is San Salvador park. This is a very little park with a small boat launch and some narrow beach. The park is out at the very end of a long farm road. It is sometimes a very nice place and other times it fills up with trash and illegal campers. For the last month or so there has been family living there in an old camper trailer. There are no hookups or bathrooms out there, so this is a very sustainable situation. I think the river keepers must have requested the family to move their trailer over out the way so the kayak recovery vehicles could come through and load up. I think that the park is owned by the state, they need to spend a little effort to keep people from trying to live there, since all that does is ruin the park for everyone.  For a take out for 100 people, it was OK. This is mainly due to the fact that people were sort of dribbling in by pod and that gave the shuttle vehicles time to load up people and boats and transfer them the 10 minutes out to the Rodeo where we had left our cars.
Once back at the rodeo, there was lots of room and time (and ice-cream) to get our boats loaded. Luckily we had brought the impreza. It has a low roof which makes getting the boats on the roof with tired muscles much easier.










Monday, September 10, 2018

Ramona Falls - Revisited

Ramona Falls Revisited





It has been a few year since I hiked Ramona Falls. For those of you not in the know, Ramona falls is a wonderful "Wilderness" area hike on the East side of Mt Hood that is one of the most popular go to hikes for the Portland area. I haven't been recently and one reason was that the park service stopped maintaining the seasonal bridge across the Sandy River. The place you cross the Sandy is just a couple of miles away from the headwaters of the Sandy at the Reid Glacier, so it usually isn't a huge expanse of water this late in the summer, still it isn't a trivial crossing for an old man with bad knees and a pack. This year there were a lot of random dead fall  the crossed the creek and most people were walking across one of these (it even had a low little handrail that looked like someone had rigged up). My partner went across it easy enough. She even carried my pack across for me. I thought I might just put on the sandals I brought for the purpose and walk across thought the running water, but I just wasn't sure I could do it without taking a swim. The hillside is steep there and the water is moving fast and the water is very silty, you can't see the bottom. I ended up being shamed into crossing on the log.

But why is the bridge no longer maintained? It used to be a simple little bridge. A couple of 2x8s and some planking, maybe 10 foot long. no big deal. Did they really run our of money for it? I mean, during the summer weekends, the Trail Head parking lot will have upward of 100 cars in it. Perhaps they are trying to limit access as opposed to promoting it. They certainly have a number of swift water warning signs put up all over the place.  Seems like a boy scout troop, a couple of axes, and a weekend couldn't but help ending in a nice bridge each spring. It turns out that a few years ago some people were crossing the bridge right after a sudden rain storm. The stream came up and swept a guy off of the bridge and he drowned in the river. I can see how it would be easy to drown, by the way, the river is surely gong to knock you off your feet, and everything is rocks to hit you head on. So, no bridge because of legal liability? Because it has GOT to be more dangerous to cross the river the way my partner and I (and everyone else) does.

The old bridge from a few years ago

River Crossing Warnings

The terrain before the River



This year the river crossing looks like this:

 







There is an absolutely beautiful view of Mt Hood up the river flood plane once you get across.




This is one of the things to see in the area; the interesting geography. I had mentioned (and you can see in the photos) that the river is very silty. I believe this is because the water comes off of the Reid Glacier and the ice that calves off the end of the glacier is loaded with silt that has been picked up as the glacier slides down the rock face of Mt. Hood.  But this sandy silty stuff is everywhere in this little valley.  I believe this valley, this extended river flood plane, was created by a pyroclastic flow coming down from the mountains (here is a video of something like it):




So the flow comes down. Kills everything. Leaves behind a thick but undulating layer of ash and rock. Then the glacier builds up and as it melts it cuts the river valley. Vegetation that can grow on thin soil with little (retained) water grows over most of the flow. Some willow and alder down by the river, other places scrub pine and rhododendron. Then a little side creek flows over the cliff face creating Ramona Falls. It flows through this white dry valley, hugging the huge wall cleft for a bit, but then drifting out through the middle of the valley bringing this narrow little belt of green most and big fur trees with the supply of water.

That is what you see as you explore this lovely and unique little valley. I especially love the part of the hike from Ramona Falls down along Ramona creek, where the white dirt and low trees give way to the green ferns and bunchberry and large firs that grow close to the Ramona river.

 


So during the hike, if you go counterclockwise around the loop as we did, you are going to see first the scrub pin forest, with views of the deep Sandy River cut. The tiny little Sandy is gurgling away down there. You can see evidence of seasonal high water down there in the river canyon; dead trees pushed around and dry channels dug. This leg of the hike is a hundred feet or so above the river and stays pretty close to the steep cliffs of white dusty sand that go down the canyon. You hike around 2 miles and ascend around 1000 feet, and then make a left turn and wind your way through the rhododendrons for a few minutes before you come suddenly on a case of big firs with a rocky cliff facing on one side, down which cascades the Ramona river. What a gorgeous little falls. This is the ideal place to eat lunch, just pull up some boulders at the feet of the firs and enjoy the cool shade and the sound the view of Ramona Falls.

Hard to take pictures of the beautiful falls, the Sun and Shade fight me

Our Lunch Spot


On leaving the falls you cross a bridge at their foot and then turn left to go down the Ramona river trace. This is that lovely green section. Towering fir and Maple for trees and lots of fern and bunch berry for ground cover. And this lovely creek digging a deep little furrow right through it. The furrow of the creek really is quit unusual. Other creeks like this would have deep canyons all around them, but this little guy just has a 5 foot cut he has made. What is that? Is this a relatively new creek that just got diverted over into this area? Perhaps there is very hard rock right under the white dirt we walk on in the dry sections of this valley? I am researching but no news right now.

 




Bunch Berry


These Cliffs follow the trail for a ways.


Another feature of this area is a 200 foot soaring rock wall. The rock is very light color and doesn't break away in the standard pattern of Basalt. But it isn't sandstone either.

And now a precautionary tale.

We met a couple a the falls whilst eating lunch. They were a few minutes behind us on most of the way down the return trail but then passed us at the intersection for the trail back to the "parking lot" and the one going the other way. We met up with them again just a short way from the crossing of the Sandy. They were consulting their smart phones and their paper map and trying to figure out where they were. They had parked their car at the lot but this return path just didn't seem right to them. The person with the map was pretty certain that she had followed all of the instructions for hiking the trail. In fact, she was following the same instructions as we were, and since they were in the same place as we were, it seemed likely that they were fine. But the description they gave us of where they parked and how far they had walked before they crossed the river (3 miles) must didn't jib with what we knew (and had scene) about the trail. It soon became apparent they they were lost and didn't know how to get back to their car.

Well. No problem. We told them to tag along with us and we would get them back to their car (which they knew to be at the Top Spur trail head, though none of us knew where that was and none of us had a map with that trail on it).  So we crossed the river together and had a fine chat with them. It is fun to meet people on the trail and certainly gives one a nice feeling to be able to help someone out from time to time. I also got to give them a lesson. My safety talk.

It goes like this: When I go out hiking, my assumption is that I am going to fall down and break my leg. I won't be able to get out under my own power and I am going to have to survive in place until help can be found to get me out. When I hiked alone, I used to carry a satellite message device (a "find me spot") so I could call for help (maybe). But now I have my partner and she could go for help.  So still. I assume that I would have to spend the night. I have a little tarp (this one) a emergency bivioc bag (this one). I usually have extra water and I have tablets for purifying more water. I have a few emergency bars (like Cliff bars). I usually have a raincoat and I always always, even in the height of summer, carry a fleece. I often feel a little silly having all of this gear, but I content myself on thinking how silly I would feel if I broke my leg and didn't have it.

On this hike and many other hikes out in on Mt Hood, you are entering into a semi-controlled wilderness designated area. Your cell phone probably won't work. If you are deep in a canyon your emergency sattlelite link may not work. You have to be prepared to take care of yourself and be able to orient yourself to get out if you can or have to.

So. What happened with our lost friends? They did a few completely reasonable things that added up into getting them very lost. First: They went out and got hiking directions. These are written directions that get you from the parking lot to the falls and back. The same directions that we used, it turns out. Then they asked Google to give them driving directions to Ramona Falls. Sound reasonable? The deal is, if there isn't a road to a place, Google will give you directions to the closest trailhead to the destination. Which isn't necessarily where you want to go because closes is "as the crow flies". In this case, it took them to the Top Spur Trailhead. Now, this sounds like a great hike to do sometime, but it isn't the easiest way to get to Ramona falls. It sort of climbs up the mountain and then comes down to the falls on a trail that we passed but didn't use. The funny thing is, however, that if you read the written hiking directions just a little wrong, you can convince yourself that the trail from Top Spur is really the trail from the Ramona Falls Trailhead.  I mean, you hike a ways, you ford a river (the Muddy instead of the Sandy) and then you hike some more following signs to Ramona Falls, and then you eat lunch and then follow signs to the parking lot and then you find you are 10 miles away from your car.  Just like that.

So. We gave them a ride back to their car. And we decided to make sure we had better maps for the next time we were out in the wilderness. Perhaps I should renew my Spot membership...

A final view of Mt Hood before we cross the Sandy.