Joyride: Explore Skamania County’s Sasquatches
Where are the Sasquatches?
Suggestions from the The Skamania
Chamber of Commerce
Find out for yourself on this journey through Skamania County - a true Sasquatch Refuge!
Cape Horn Overlook. You can either stop at the pullout on MP-26, or take a short hike from the picnic area.
Beacon Rock State Park. (Discover Pass Required) During the summer of 1970, three reports were made with sightings or evidence of Sasquatch in the Beacon Rock area. A Portland man encountered a creature in a cave, another person measured footprints that were 9 inches wide and almost 19 inches long, and a local woman changing a tire in the middle of the night had a face-to-face experience that she detailed in very descriptive terms. Take the hike to the top of Beacon Rock, the core of an ancient volcano. The mile-long hike is open year-round and provides panoramic views.
Places to Stop
3. North Bonneville’s Bigfoot Discovery Trail system. Enjoy more than 12 miles of paved trails that wind through the small town and seek out the 15 Bigfoot statues that live there. While exploring, take the path to Beacon Rock Golf Course for lunch outside on their deck. Hearty sandwiches and juicy burgers are their specialties. Who knows, you might spy something peeking out from the many trees lining the fairways.
Day Trippin’
4-6. Stevenson. In September 1969, Skamania County Sheriff Bill Closner photographed two tracks, 15½ inches long by 9 inches wide, at a logging operation five miles north of town. While seeking evidence of your own, check out Bigfoot Coffee Roasters (4) for a delightful variety of Sasquatch memorabilia along with fabulous coffee. Just down the street at the Skamania County Pioneer’s offices, you can read special issues of the local paper that document many of these stories. Don’t miss the photo opportunity in front of the Skamania County Chamber of Commerce (5) – put your face in Bigfoot and say cheese! As you leave Stevenson and head east, stop at The Cabin Drive-Thru (6) for another photo op. Make sure you have a cone full of their tasty frozen custard as you stand next to Bigfoot holding his own.
Explore More - Continue your Adventure!
7. Carson, Washington is the southeastern gateway to the Gifford Pinchot National Forest and Mount St. Helens. This part of Skamania County is rich with Sasquatch appearances, dating back to the 1850s. Best to spend the night in Carson and prepare for an intense day of “squatching” tomorrow. Carson Hot Springs Resort has been in operation for over a 100 years, providing healing waters for those seeking respite from aches and pains. The remote location is perfect for increased anticipation of another potential sighting. Reserve a Wind River room with a hot tub on the balcony and treat yourself. Or choose a standard guestroom and take advantage of the new soaking pool. Either choice will rejuvenate you for the next day’s adventures.
8. Continue north past the Carson National Fish Hatchery and then up and over Old Man Pass. In April 1969, three men from Gresham photographed tracks that appeared to have been made by someone with a five-foot stride, about 20 miles north of Carson. For generations hunters seeking deer and elk have reported sounds and smells unattributable to anything human. At the intersection with Forest Road 90, turn north on FS 25 to Windy Ridge. In the summer of 1955, workers at a YMCA camp at Spirit Lake claimed to have viewed an albino Sasquatch, hurdling logs between Coldwater Lake and St. Helens Lake. Look for yourself along FS 99 while checking out the interpretive signage at the McClellan Observation site (8) re-telling eruption details from 1980.
9. Challenge yourself by climbing the 368 steps of the sand ladder at Windy Ridge and be rewarded with the closest viewing of the Mt. St. Helens crater available. On the trip back down the east side of the mountain, imagine escaping the avalanche of mud and ash that occurred during the historic blast. Endless numbers of unexplained experiences have been reported around Mt. St. Helens and the only answer seems to be—it must have been Bigfoot.
Thank you to the Skamania Chamber of Commerce for letting us use your itineraries as a starting point for exploring the Columbia Gorge. Click here to see the Chamber’s Sasquatch Sightings map.