

- ANGELS REST TRAIL WEATHER FULL
- ANGELS REST TRAIL WEATHER REGISTRATION
- ANGELS REST TRAIL WEATHER SERIES
PERSONAL SAFETY: Your physical and emotional safety is our number one priority. Conduct, speech, or expressions that target any individual or group will not be tolerated by TKO, regardless of whether they are based on age, citizenship, disability, ethnicity, gender identity/expression, geographic origin, language, marital status, nationality, race, religion, sexual orientation, socioeconomic status. We commit to being part of the solution to this problem and to enact change. Not everyone feels safe or welcome in the outdoors due to issues that include racism, bias, and hate. We are privileged to be here today and we express gratitude to these tribes and their descendents for being the original and continuing stewards of these spaces.ĮQUITY & INCLUSION: TKO seeks to make Oregon’s trails a place where people can go to connect with nature & one another. In every corner of what we now call Oregon, these people were forced to cede their land, their home, to the US government at various times from 1853 – 1871.

LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT: TKO recognizes that the trails we work on travel through the traditional lands of many Indigenous tribes.
ANGELS REST TRAIL WEATHER REGISTRATION
The registration confirmation and pre-event emails will contain further details and links. **You will be asked to electronically sign the e-waiver for this event, provide proof of vaccination or recent negative COVID-19 test result, and perform a self-assessment health screening within the 24 hours preceding the event.** The crew leader for this event will verify that you have completed these requirements at the trailhead safety talk before the trail party begins. For safety reasons, please do not arrive late or expect to be able to leave early. You should plan to participate in this trail party for its entirety. Cars will be safely behind a locked gate on a Forest Service Road. We will hike down from road access at Devil’s Rest. This will be a self-supported trip, which means the volunteer will be responsible for bringing their own food and gear. We’ll be camping out overnight at Wahkeena Spring, and brushing Angel’s Rest trail headed west from Wahkeena Spring. When you're ready to head back down, simply retrace your steps back to the trailhead.Crew Leader: Josh Durham Max Size of Crew: 12 Hike Distance: 3.5 miles Elevation Gain: (in ft) 1200 ft Hike Difficulty: Moderate Work Difficulty: Easy/Moderate Work Type: Brushing It goes without saying that Angel's Rest makes a fine spot to enjoy lunch. Get ready to enjoy the excellent views of the Columbia Gorge you've earned. As you traverse along the spur there's just one small scramble section between you and the edge of the outcropping. Looking straight ahead will reveal the long line of tall cliffs that make up Angel's Rest. Hike down past Fairy Falls, a 20 to 30 foot tiered waterfall, before reaching Wahkeena Falls and the return trail to Multnomah Falls. Continue on from this panoramic viewpoint through Wahkeena Creek basin to Wahkeena Trail 420. Make sure to investigate the views behind you before moving on.Ī final switchback brings the trail to the junction with the Viewpoint Spur. The first 4.8 miles of this hike is the Angels Rest Trail 415. Just past the switchbacks is a boulder field traverse that lets you know your close to the top of the hike.
ANGELS REST TRAIL WEATHER SERIES
Ahead you'll soon reach Coopey Falls as it musically cascades over 150'.Ĭontinuing on, the trail begins to moderately steepen as it heads towards a series of tightly clustered switchbacks.

This viewpoint leads into a section of close growing vegetation that creates the pleasant impression of a tunnel during the growing months.
ANGELS REST TRAIL WEATHER FULL
The trail is full of interesting points, like a rocky section that provides a great view of the river as it cuts across a beautiful mossy slope. The broad path soon narrows to easily manageable singletrack with a little rock mixed in. The Angel's Rest Trail starts gradually through a lush forest that is dotted with wildflowers in the spring and glows with the changing color of leaves in the fall.
