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Ramona Falls Loop
Hiking Trail
Moderate
7.16 mi
1,028 ft
Hike through dense forest and ford a glacial stream, to find a waterfall within the Mount Hood Wilderness.
Ramona Falls is tucked into a shady gorge near the foot of Mount Hood, along the Timberline Trail. The serene waterfall tumbles in sheets over columnar basalt, draped in moss and ferns, and framed by bows of hemlock trees. From the Ramona Falls Trailhead, you can hike a loop to the waterfall that includes a short section of the Timberline and also a portion of the Pacific Crest Trail. This is overall a moderate hike with gradual elevation gain, but it requires crossing a river on both the way there and the way back. Some parts of the trail may also have downed logs and brush to negotiate.
Much of the hike is alongside the Sandy River, where you’ll see the forces of erosion at work on the denuded banks. This river is carving through geologically recent ash deposits from Mount Hood, and forest is simultaneously reclaiming the surface. The trail crosses the river where there used to be a bridge, but after a flood wrecked it in 2014 the Forest Service decided not to build a new one. Now you must find a way to cross the river yourself. This can be easy or hard, depending on conditions and positions of fallen logs. The water level changes with the seasons, and the logs can shift during high flows. This is a glacial stream that flows highest in late spring and early summer, and can flash dramatically with rainfall. Use extreme caution when crossing. Hikers have been swept away and drowned here before. On the other side, the Pacific Crest Trail continues along the river, to soon join the Timberline Trail and find the waterfall. From there, another trail meanders down Ramona Creek, which does have footbridges across it, and eventually rejoins the main trail near the Sandy River crossing.
Late summer and early fall are the safest seasons for this hike because of lower water level. The hike remains popular in early summer, though the river crossing can be dangerous. In winter and spring, the trail is buried in snow and the road is only open to a point about 2 miles from the trailhead. Until April 1, or later in some years, you must walk or ski this extra distance on the road if you want to reach the trail.
Sources:
Written by Jesse Weber
Ramona Falls is tucked into a shady gorge near the foot of Mount Hood, along the Timberline Trail. The serene waterfall tumbles in sheets over columnar basalt, draped in moss and ferns, and framed by bows of hemlock trees. From the Ramona Falls Trailhead, you can hike a loop to the waterfall that includes a short section of the Timberline and also a portion of the Pacific Crest Trail. This is overall a moderate hike with gradual elevation gain, but it requires crossing a river on both the way there and the way back. Some parts of the trail may also have downed logs and brush to negotiate.
Much of the hike is alongside the Sandy River, where you’ll see the forces of erosion at work on the denuded banks. This river is carving through geologically recent ash deposits from Mount Hood, and forest is simultaneously reclaiming the surface. The trail crosses the river where there used to be a bridge, but after a flood wrecked it in 2014 the Forest Service decided not to build a new one. Now you must find a way to cross the river yourself. This can be easy or hard, depending on conditions and positions of fallen logs. The water level changes with the seasons, and the logs can shift during high flows. This is a glacial stream that flows highest in late spring and early summer, and can flash dramatically with rainfall. Use extreme caution when crossing. Hikers have been swept away and drowned here before. On the other side, the Pacific Crest Trail continues along the river, to soon join the Timberline Trail and find the waterfall. From there, another trail meanders down Ramona Creek, which does have footbridges across it, and eventually rejoins the main trail near the Sandy River crossing.
Late summer and early fall are the safest seasons for this hike because of lower water level. The hike remains popular in early summer, though the river crossing can be dangerous. In winter and spring, the trail is buried in snow and the road is only open to a point about 2 miles from the trailhead. Until April 1, or later in some years, you must walk or ski this extra distance on the road if you want to reach the trail.
Sources:
Written by Jesse Weber
Route and Elevation
Segments
Name | Distance | Elev. Diff. | Avg. Grade |
---|---|---|---|
National Forest Development Road 1828 Climb | 0.74 mi | 240 ft | 6.1% |
National Forest Development Road 1828 Climb | 0.58 mi | 279 ft | 9.0% |
Unnamed Rd Climb | 0.52 mi | 299 ft | 10.8% |
National Forest Development Road 111 Climb | 0.57 mi | 381 ft | 12.5% |