
About This Waterfall
Located near Paradise, within Mount Rainier National Park. Coming from the Nisqually Entrance of the park, drive as you would to Paradise. As the main road makes a sweeping turn uphill to the left, about 8/10 of a mile from Narada Falls, turn right towards Stevens Canyon and park immediately in the large pullout where the two roads meet. Coming from the Stevens Canyon Entrance, drive towards Paradise and park on the left side of the road shortly after crossing the Paradise River. Find the signed Narada Falls trail on the east side of the bridge, and follow the trail downstream for no more than 1/5 of a mile to views back up into the cascades from the bottom. The entire falls are visible from the bottom from the trail, so there is no need to stray off the trail at all, and for the sake of not trampling meadow flowers, don't. You can also hike upstream from Narada Falls for about 4/10 of a mile, along the same trail, to the falls.The Washington Cascades are a series of falls in the Paradise River over a stretch of maybe 100 yards. No single fall is over 20 feet tall, but they all add up. I don't know how I'd missed this one for so long. I'd visited Mt. Rainier National Park over 15 times in my life prior to even knowing the falls existed, despite it sitting, literally, right under my nose. When I first found the falls, I assumed they consisted of the falls on either side of the SR 706 bridge over the river, but just recently I've discovered that that waterfall is officially named Ruby Falls, and the Washington Cascades start about 200 feet downstream of 706, where the river slides down numerous less vertical ledges. The bottom of the falls can be glimpsed from SR 706 just as it makes a double hairpin turn about 1/2 mile before the turnoff to Paradise.The falls were named on August 24th, 1893, by Henry Schwargel, for the state of Washington. On some early postcards of the cascades, the caption cited the falls as the Washington Torrents, rather than Cascades. The name may have been lost in translation because this variant appeared on German printed postcards. Additionally, we've uncovered a circa 1911 photograph, possibly from R.L. Glisan, which captioned this waterfall as Seven Sisters Falls. Thus far this is the only source using this name, so it may have been a casual name because the photographer was not aware that it had been named several decades prior.
Waterfall Details
Waterfall Form
Gradual Cascade
Best Time to Visit
Year Round
Total Height
92ft
Tallest Drop
28ft
Number of Drops
5
Run
300ft
Avg Width
10ft
Pitch
45°
Magnitude
23.02
High Flow
100cfs
Getting There
GPS Coordinates
46.778170, -121.740580
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Quick Facts
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Tips
Best photos during golden hour or after rain.
Parking available nearby.
Safety Info
Stay on marked trails. Rocks near waterfalls are extremely slippery.
Never swim at the top of a waterfall. Strong currents can be deceptive.
Respect the environment. Pack out everything you bring in.