Name of Waterfall

Ecola Falls

Description

Ecola Falls are located approximately 1.6 miles up the Larch Mountain Trail from the Multnomah Falls Lodge. The trail wraps around a buttress near the top of the falls, looking down on the plunge pool before paralleling Multnomah Creek upstream. Accessing the base of the falls involves a very steep, crumbly scramble down the side of the canyon which is not recommended.As one hikes up the ever climbing Larch Mountain Trail, one can't help but pause at the numerous waterfalls along Multnomah Creek. Ecola Falls is the last major waterfall seen along the route. The most prominent feature of this waterfall is the controversy surrounding its name. When it was first listed in "A Waterfall Lovers Guide to the Pacific Northwest", the falls were grouped with its downstream sibling (Wiesendanger Falls) and listed as one waterfall. Later on when the book "Romance of Waterfalls" was published it was listed as Hidden Falls - a name stemming from its hard to see position and the fact that the forest service had recently placed a plaque marking Wiesendanger Falls by name, but not at Ecola Falls. At the same time that Wiesendanger Falls was officially named, this feature was as well, though it never appeared in any sort of publicized manor, so for at least a decade the official name was not very well known. As of current however, the signs and maps are updated and the controversy put to rest.This waterfall had remained unofficially named when Wiesendanger Falls, its downstream counterpart was given an official title back in the late 90's. Several guidebooks applied their own titles to the falls, most commonly calling it either Double Falls (grouped with Wiesendanger downstream) or Hidden Falls. It appears now that the Forest Service is recognizing Ecola as its official name. Ecola is a Chinook Jargon word for Whale.

Other Names

['Hidden Falls', 'Double Falls']

Magnitude

45.66

IWC Rating (International Waterfall Classification)

1.66

Total Height (ft)

55

Number of Drops

1

Average Width

20

Average High Volume (Cubic ft per second)

100 cfs

Average Low Volume (Cubic ft per second)

0 cfs

Pitch

90 degrees

Run (ft)

5

Watershed or Feeder Stream

Columbia River (Snake River to Portland) Multnomah Creek