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babyshoe+falls Latitude and Longitude:

46°15′26″N 121°36′52″W / 46.25731°N 121.61433°W / 46.25731; -121.61433
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Babyshoe Falls
Location Midway High Lakes Area, Skamania County, Washington, United States
Coordinates 46°15′26″N 121°36′52″W / 46.25731°N 121.61433°W / 46.25731; -121.61433
TypeTiered Horsetails
Elevation4,046 ft (1,233 m)
Total height200 ft (61 m)
Number of drops2
Longest drop130 ft (40 m)
Total width~10
Average width10 ft (3 m)
WatercourseUnnamed (Part of the Lewis River Watershed)
Average
flow rate
5 cu ft/s (0.14 m3/s)

Babyshoe Falls drops 200 feet (61 m), with a main drop of 130 feet (40 m), in Babyshoe Pass. It is on an intermittent stream that drains a small marsh (0.25 square mile) on the south side of Babyshoe Pass, at an elevation of 4,046 feet (1,233 m). It is located in the Midway High Lakes Area northwest of Mount Adams, in the Gifford Pinchot National Forest of Washington state. The falls are seasonal, typically drying up in the summer, but starting to flow again after periods of prolonged rainfall or snow melt.

Sources



babyshoe+falls Latitude and Longitude:

46°15′26″N 121°36′52″W / 46.25731°N 121.61433°W / 46.25731; -121.61433
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Babyshoe Falls
Location Midway High Lakes Area, Skamania County, Washington, United States
Coordinates 46°15′26″N 121°36′52″W / 46.25731°N 121.61433°W / 46.25731; -121.61433
TypeTiered Horsetails
Elevation4,046 ft (1,233 m)
Total height200 ft (61 m)
Number of drops2
Longest drop130 ft (40 m)
Total width~10
Average width10 ft (3 m)
WatercourseUnnamed (Part of the Lewis River Watershed)
Average
flow rate
5 cu ft/s (0.14 m3/s)

Babyshoe Falls drops 200 feet (61 m), with a main drop of 130 feet (40 m), in Babyshoe Pass. It is on an intermittent stream that drains a small marsh (0.25 square mile) on the south side of Babyshoe Pass, at an elevation of 4,046 feet (1,233 m). It is located in the Midway High Lakes Area northwest of Mount Adams, in the Gifford Pinchot National Forest of Washington state. The falls are seasonal, typically drying up in the summer, but starting to flow again after periods of prolonged rainfall or snow melt.

Sources



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