Beacon Rock State Park, Washington
Rodney Falls and the Pool of the Winds on the Hamilton Mountain Trail.
-S. Kramer, Photo
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To climb Beacon Rock, you pull off SR-14 to the right, but to reach the falls, turn left at the Rock, down the road that disappears into the woods. This road passes a picnic area, and
playground, which doubles as a trailhead for an extensive network of trails leading to Hamilton Mountain. Unless you research the area, or read
guidebooks, these falls seem to be a well-kept secret: a waypoint on a much larger network of dirt paths.
The Trail to Hamilton Mountain
The CCC-built picnic shelter near the Hamilton Mountain Trailhead
-S. Kramer, Photo
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Like A Waterfall Collection
M. Kramer on a rock ledge on the edge of the trail. -S. Kramer, Photo |
Unlike most
notable waterfalls, the first "falls" it isn't a single waterfall at all, but a collection of
lesser waterfalls. A series of cascades tumbles down a basalt Rick pile forming
hundreds of tiny waterfalls in the process. Left of this, beside the lookout, a
small creek tumbles down a sheer wall. Both meet at the bottom, and continue in
a large horsetail-like falls, out of sight from the lookout, and nearly
impossible to see from any angle. It’s reminiscent of some sort of surreal
"waterfall collection" like some wizard gathered waterfalls on his
travels and brought them to this mountain for display. I can't speak for other travelers, but having grown up visiting the likes of Multnomah Falls, I had been hoping for something a bit more, and I mistakenly believed we
had reached the main attraction. I had been promised waterfalls after all, and
I had found falls, and had I been alone, I may have turned around, but thankfully I
wasn't, and our party continued onward half a mile uphill, downhill, around a bend, then
downhill to an ancient, yet sturdy bridge lashed together with logs and primitive
planks, passing over a stretch of white water. And unlike the previous
waterfall collection, the bridge went right over Rodney Falls: it's impressive,
and impossible to miss. I smiled at Rodney Falls, then I looked uphill and…
My Jaw Dropped.
The summit of Hamilton Mountain seen from the clearing on the Hamilton Mountain Trail.
-S. Kramer, Photo
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For a place with such a name, you would
expect a scene from a fantasy novel, something extraordinary: that is exactly
what you get. Hardy Creek over time dug a slot canyon into the hillside, forming
a waterfall, Rodney Falls, almost entirely walled in, draining into a shallow basalt room filled with
water: the Pool of the Winds itself. This drains through a small keyhole just
wide enough for the creek. There are some places where God puts his handiwork
on display: you don’t want to leave the falls.
But you have to. Some continue on to Hamilton Mountain, while others make the return trip down to the parking lot. We all have lives to return to in the modern world, but we do so having pulled back the metaphorical curtain, and explored just a bit of the wonderland hidden beneath the forest canopy. -KPLike my content? Consider leaving a comment, and/or sharing!
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Sources:
Washignton State Parks Map of Beacon Rock State Park:
https://www.protrails.com/gallery/740/oregon/portland-columbia-river-gorge/pool-of-the-winds#image-8