Name of Waterfall
Twin Falls
Twin Falls
Twin Falls is yet another case of a long forgotten, yet surprisingly significant waterfall amid much more impressive scenery. Located near the headwaters of Lookout Creek, the falls skip around 600 feet down a large cliff, splitting into two channels about 1/3 of the way down. When viewing the falls from below, the falls appear as follows; the right channel possesses the most volume, probably 75 percent or more, and consists of a 250 foot twisting three-tiered drop (pictured above), followed by 150 feet of steep cascades made up of a series of 20 to 30 foot falls. The left channel, which only appears to flow well when the creek is running higher, drops a sheer 300 feet over a solid wall, then cascades steeply for about 100 feet to the confluence with the left channel. The top 175 to 200 feet of the falls appear to be virtually impossible to see. Despite its proximity, and visibility from the Glacier Creek Road, two factors work against this waterfall. One; Lookout Creek possesses a very small watershed, and though it appears to flow all year long, by the late summer, it's nothing more than a trickle. Two; even though part the falls can be seen from the road (that being the top of the 300 foot fall on the left channel of the falls), due to the small volume of the stream, and the tall trees surrounding the streambed, you really have to be looking for the falls in order to successfully find them. On my first trip up the Glacier Creek Road, I was keeping watch for anything waterfall-like, but I didn't notice this one. Upon returning, I easily found the location of the falls, but the stream flow was low enough that I didn't even bother hiking to the base of the falls.The falls were obviously named for the side-by-side segments which the creek forms as it drops over the falls. Though both segments can't be seen in tandem today, I suspect they may have been visible together when the falls were named. The falls were marked by name on a 1912 map of the Mount Baker area, and may have been discovered by the Easton Party. The Glacier-Mount Baker Trail, which climbed to the cabin at Camp Heliotrope (now gone), crossed Lookout Creek near the base of the falls. The grade which the trail climbed can still be seen between the two segments of the falls.
[]
36.32
580
300
4
15
25 cfs
0 cfs
68 degrees
500
Nooksack River Lookout Creek