DOG MOUNTAIN #147
Dog Mountain
Ranger District: Mt. Adams
Trailhead: Dog Mountain - Trailhead is on north side of State Highway
14 at milepost 53. Two routes lead to summit of Dog Mountain.
Length: 6 miles (9.7 km)
Trail Uses:
Elevation: High: 2,800 feet, Low: 150 feet
Season of Use: March-December
Visitor Use: Heavy
Access: State Highway 14, nine miles east of Stevenson, after mile
post 53.
Special Conditions: Watch for poison oak and rattlesnakes along the
trail. Please stay on the trail. Not suitable for mountain bikes.
Description: This heavily used loop opportunity climbs rapidly in the
first 0.5 mile, gaining 700 feet in elevation. The trail forks, giving hikers the
option of heading north on the more direct, but steep route to the summit, or to the east
for a longer but more gradual climb.
The eastern fork climbs 2,000 feet in elevation in 2.5 miles to the site of a former
fire lookout. A 1-mile loop trail to the summit provides easy access through
flowered hillsides and offers an incredible view of the western portion of the Columbia
River Gorge You can also get superb views along the eastern fork of the trail,
without having to climb all the way to the summit.
The northern route climbs steeply for 2.5 miles through a dense forest to the lookout
site. The trail intersects the loop trail to the summit of Dog Mountain.
Features: Poison Oak and rattlesnakes (which are poisonous) are along
the trail, so please stay on the trail. The snakes are as afraid of you as you are of
them; please respect them.
Wildflowers blanket the mountainside meadows in late spring-early summer, especially
balsam root! Spectacular views of the Columbia River Gorge both east and west are well
worth the exertion required to reach the summit!
Dog Mountain was used as a "fire lookout point" sometime around 1920 in order
to serve the Mt. Hood National Forest to the south. In 1931 a fire lookout was constructed
by the Columbia National Forest (the previous name of the Gifford Pinchot National
Forest). The lookout was reconstructed in 1952 by the Mt. Hood National Forest. The
lookout, unofficially known as "puppy lookout" was dismantled in 1967 as it
became more common to detect fires from the air and the expanding road system.
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