Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Mount Daniel; Highest point; Elevation: 7,960+ ft (2,430+ m) NGVD 29 [1] Prominence: 3,480 ft (1,060 m) [1] Coordinates: 1]: Geography; Location: King / Kittitas counties, Washington, U.S.: Parent range: Cascade Range: Topo map: USGS Mount Daniel: Geology; Rock age: Oligocene: Climbing; First ascent: 1925: Easiest route: Hike from Peggys Pond: Mount Daniel is the highest summit on the Cascade ...
Mount Tire'm is a small 1,060-foot (320 m) mountain adjacent to Keoka Lake in the town of Waterford, Maine.The Daniel Brown Trail offers access to the summit; its trailhead is on Plummer Hill Road just northwest of the village of Waterford.
Its nearest higher peak is The Citadel, 1.7 mi (2.7 km) to the southwest, and the dominant mountain in the area, Mount Daniel, rises 2.2 mi (3.5 km) to the west-northwest. [1] Precipitation runoff from the peak drains into tributaries of the Yakima River.
Mount Hinman and Mount Daniel are a short distance southeast. [3] Because Bald Eagle Lake is at the heart of the Alpine Lakes Wilderness, the lake is a popular area for hiking, swimming, and fishing. Access to Bald Eagle Lake is from the Necklace Valley Trailhead on Forest Road 68 which splits off U.S. Route 2. [3]
The Alpine Lakes Wilderness is a large wilderness area spanning the Central Cascades of Washington state in the United States.The wilderness is located in parts of Wenatchee National Forest and Snoqualmie National Forest, and is approximately bounded by Interstate 90 and Snoqualmie Pass to the south and U.S. Route 2 and Stevens Pass to the north.
The Columbia Plateau State Park Trail is a 130-mile-long (210 km), 20-foot-wide (6.1 m) corridor in eastern Washington state maintained as part of the Washington State Park system. The rail trail runs along the abandoned right-of-way of the former Spokane, Portland and Seattle Railway .
Dip Top Peak is a 7,291-foot-elevation (2,222 meter) mountain summit located in the Alpine Lakes Wilderness in eastern King County of Washington state. [3] It is part of the Cascade Range and is set on land managed by Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest.
The railway was in operation before these trails existed and they cross railroad property. A Cog locomotive ready to push a passenger car up the Mount Washington Cog Railway on a foggy day in October 2012. Access to the base station by car is by three routes, each culminating with the upper portion of the dead-end Cog Base Road.