Name of Waterfall

Upper Dalles Creek Falls

Description

Located north of Mt. Rainier National Park, along the Mather Memorial Parkway (Highway 410). From the town of Greenwater, proceed south towards Mt. Rainier, for about 9.8 miles, to a wide turnout on the left side of the road, just after crossing Dalles Creek, and about 1/3 of a mile south of the Skookum Falls viewpoint. Palisades Trail # 1198 starts here, and climbs 1/5 of a mile to a junction with the White River Trail. Stay straight, following the signs for the falls, and in another mile, Lower Dalles Creek Falls are encountered, at the end of a short spur trail. Keep along the main trail, constantly switching back up the gorge. The unnamed ephemeral waterfall is encountered about 1/3 of a mile beyond the Lower Falls. Here, the trail climbs a neat staircase, etched into a fallen log, as it climbs more or less parallel with the small waterfall. Once at the top, continue another 1/2 mile to the Upper Falls. Not having gone in the full two miles, I can't say what the condition of any viewpoint may be. The bottom part of the falls can be accessed by hiking 500 feet upstream from the second bridge over Dalles Creek.If you, like I did, attempt to follow the directions of "A Waterfall Lover's Guide to the Pacific Northwest" to find the upper falls on Dalles Creek, you're likely to be disappointed. The book, first of all, calls Dalles Falls a two-tiered waterfall, which is wrong, because the two falls it's referring to are on different streams. After that fact, the falls the book cites as the upper falls isn't even the real upper falls. It's a small, unnamed ephemeral tributary of Dalles Creek, which drops maybe 100 feet total, over a pretty mossy cliff, which is, unfortunately, covered with logs and trees, so little of the falls can be appreciated (though even if it were completely visible, it's not of enough significance for mention in the database). The true Upper Dalles Creek Falls lies another 1/2 mile up the trail. While I know I didn't hike the full 2 miles which the trail sign stated was necessary, I had assumed that the tributary stream was the upper falls because of what I read in the book. Just to be sure, I went to the second bridge over Dalles Creek, where I noticed a waterfall about 500 feet upstream. This turned out to be a pretty 30 foot plunge which proved me and the book wrong. On a repeat visit, just to make sure I wasn't overlooking anything, I hiked well past the bridge and couldn't see anything else on Dalles Creek as notable as this drop. Because Dalles Creek has a small watershed, the falls become less impressive in the summer, and deserve a lower rating accordingly.The name of the falls, obviously derived from the stream, is recognized by the Forest Service, as seen on the trail signs.

Other Names

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Magnitude

17

IWC Rating (International Waterfall Classification)

0

Total Height (ft)

30

Number of Drops

1

Average Width

5

Average High Volume (Cubic ft per second)

15 cfs

Average Low Volume (Cubic ft per second)

0 cfs

Pitch

90 degrees

Watershed or Feeder Stream

Puyallup River Dalles Creek