Beautiful Falls at Dry Creek


Winter hiking in the Columbia River Gorge’s rain forest is reminiscent of a pretty woman without her makeup or dazzling jewelry. The autumn leaves have fallen off the hardwood trees, the lower canopy bushes have died back, there are no colorful wildflower displays and everything appears as a wide continuum of drab browns and greens. But look closer and subtle beauty remains. There are snowberries, burgundy leaves from autumn remaining on Oregon grape plants and bright yellowish-green lichen hanging from tree branches.

A mid-February day presented the promise of a nice outing. It was a good excuse to drive to the Herman Creek Campground east of Cascade Locks. My objective was to visit two waterfalls and some interesting pinnacles. In a little over one mile I had hiked over a ridge and down to a footbridge over Herman Creek. The Herman Creek Canyon forms the east side of the 4,000-foot Benson Plateau (the Eagle Creek Canyon forms the west side.) I enjoyed the exceptionally beautiful area while hiking to the west, meeting the Pacific Crest Trail in less than one mile at about 1,000 feet above sea level. Instead of turning uphill for the five-mile hike to the Benson Plateau, I continued west. In less than one-half mile the 40-foot Pacific Crest Falls was reached, two wispy waterfalls hidden in a dark canyon. From there it was a short transverse across a large talus slope to a group of tall, crumbly rock spires near the Trail. They reminded me of the “tors” in the Angel Rocks’ area north of Fairbanks.

After exploring the pinnacles, I headed west for another 1 1/2 miles to Dry Creek. A short distance up the Creek was a grand waterfall, dropping 70 feet down basalt cliffs. I explored the area for a while, ate a light lunch and then began the trip back to the Trailhead. All in all the hike was ten miles in length with 1,700 feet of elevation gain.  A very pleasant hike indeed!

Trek Tip no. 6: While hiking alone in wilderness areas in the fall and winter, wear articles of clothing in hunter orange (fluorescent orange.) If you become hurt or lost, hunter orange can be seen by rescuers easier than any other color. I tend to wear a hunter-orange hat and vest.

Dry Creek Falls

Pinnacle along the Trail

Herman Creek

Trail passing over large talus slope

Wispy 40-foot Pacific Crest Falls

Fresh snow on Nick Eaton RIdge

Pacific Crest Creek

Categories: Columbia River Gorge HikesTags: , , ,

1 comment

  1. simply gorgeous

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