Larch Mountain (Clark County, Washington)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- This article is about Larch Mountain in Clark County, Washington. For others, see Larch Mountain (disambiguation).
Larch Mountain | |
---|---|
Elevation | 2,660 feet (811 metres) |
Location | Washington USA |
Range | Cascades |
Coordinates | |
Topo map | USGS Capitol Peak 46123-H2 |
Larch Mountain, elevation 3,496 feet, is the highest free-standing peak in Clark County, Washington. (The andesite plugs Pyramid Rock and Sturgeon Rock are higher but are outcroppings on ridges of Silver Star Mountain.) It is laced by a network of gravel roads as part of the Yacolt Burn State Forest. The eastern flank of the mountain was scorched by a gigantic forest fire in September 1902, and subsequently experienced a massive rockslide that rendered that side mostly unvegetated. The southern section of the mountain is part of the Jones Creek Off-Road Vehicle recreation area. From the picnic area at the top, the view is west toward the Vancouver, Washington area and east to Silver Star. A minimum security prison/work camp is situated nearby, whose inmates construct fire roads, fire trails, maintain campgrounds, and help fight fires in the area.
[edit] Livingston Mountain Washington
Livingston Mountain is the sister Mountain to Larch Mountain. It is apart of Camas Washington a town that borders the Columbia River. Livingston Mountain has gain popularity in recent years by developers. The Mountain is only 25 minutes from the Portland Airport. The Livingston and Larch area is abundant with wild life including Deer, Black Bears, Coyotes, Grouse, Bald Eagles, Lynx, and the occasional Mountain Lion. The Flora is also quite abundant tall evergreens, lush ferns, huckle berries, and many more. due to the Hokinson burn most trees are only half a century old but it is not uncommon to find a tree or two that escaped the burn and now towers over the surrounding trees. A comical story about the mountain is about the old goat lady who years back was known to have many goats supposedly numbering in the hundreds. Well these goats some how got free and descendants still inhabit the mountain.
[edit] External links
- Maps and aerial photos
- WikiSatellite view at WikiMapia
- Topographic map from TopoZone
- Aerial image from TerraServer-USA
- Surrounding area map from Google Maps
- Location in the United States from the Census Bureau