
On Sunday Mickey and I had a plan to do some hiking up near Union Creek and to have Pie at Beckie's Restaurant....It turned into quite a drive, and we ended up in the North Umpqua Watershed, and we were hoping to 'do' Toketee Falls....We got there and the trail was shut down...so we visited Whitehorse Falls and Clearwater Falls....It was so worth the drive, plus seeing the beautiful spire of Mount Thielsen as well!!!! and I got my pie!!! actually I got MY pie and most of Mickey's pie too!!!!
There were picnic tables and trails leading down next to the falls.
A great place to bring your family or a romantic rendezvous!!!!!
Rattlesnake Rock - visible from highway 138 along the Umpqua River.
The Old Man - Also visible from highway 138, North Umpqua River Road.
Vine Maple
Above Whitehorse Falls
Mickey and I at Clearwater Falls
Taken with Mickey's IPhone at Whitehorse Falls
The creek up above Clearwater falls was soooooo peaceful and still - perfect as a reflection pond!
A little Brown Creeper - look closely
Western White Pine - Cone


Clearwater Falls
Douglas Fir - Pseudotsuga menziesii



The first and last place to EAT on our stop....Beckie's Restaurant
We had a really yummy breakfast there, then stopped on the way back for PIE!!!! I had Huckleberry Pie which you can only get in season, and Mickey had Chocolate pie....well she had SOME of her chocolate pie...I ate the rest of it!!!!....and lots of BLACK coffee...mmmmmm
Rattlesnake Rock - visible from highway 138 along the Umpqua River.
The Old Man - Also visible from highway 138, North Umpqua River Road.
Mickey and I at Clearwater Falls
Taken with Mickey's IPhone at Whitehorse FallsThe Sporangia are the reproductive structures of the ferns and fern allies. They are miniature sacks or capsules that produce the dustlike spores that are the "seeds" by which ferns are propagated. Several sporangia grouped together are called a Sorus. The arrangement of sporangia varies greatly in ferns. Most ferns that we would see as we walk through the forest would have their sporangia on the underside of the frond, arranged in an organized pattern usually associated with veins in the pinnule (leaf). Many times (but not always) the ferns provide a protective covering for the Sorus called an Indusium.
Hah! Well there you have it.....
We saw several of these, mostly ones growing on decaying Fir trees!!!!

The American Dipper aka Water Ouzel - This is one interesting little grey bird....read what Wikipedia has to say about it!!!!!
We had a really yummy breakfast there, then stopped on the way back for PIE!!!! I had Huckleberry Pie which you can only get in season, and Mickey had Chocolate pie....well she had SOME of her chocolate pie...I ate the rest of it!!!!....and lots of BLACK coffee...mmmmmm

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