Depot Creek Falls, North Cascades National Park
#50 among attractions in North Cascades National Park
Facts and practical information
Depot Creek Falls is a 967-foot -high waterfall in the North Cascades National Park, Whatcom County, Washington. ()
North Cascades National Park United States
Depot Creek Falls – popular in the area (distance from the attraction)
Nearby attractions include: Nodoubt Peak, Indian Mountain, Silver Lake, Mount Spickard.
- 3.2 miWMountain
Nodoubt Peak
82 min walk • Nodoubt Peak is a remote 7,290-foot mountain summit in the Skagit Range of the North Cascades of Washington state. Nodoubt Peak is situated in North Cascades National Park, 2.2 kilometres south of the Canada–United States border. Its nearest higher peak is Canuck Peak, 1.43 mi...
- 7.2 miSWMountain
Indian Mountain, North Cascades National Park
184 min walk • Indian Mountain is a remote 7,133-foot mountain summit in the Skagit Range of the North Cascades, in Whatcom County of Washington state. Indian Mountain is situated in North Cascades National Park, 7 miles south of the Canada–United States border.
- 2.5 miENature, Natural attraction, Lake
Silver Lake, North Cascades National Park
64 min walk • Silver Lake is located in North Cascades National Park, in the U. S. state of Washington. Silver Lake is less than 1 mi north of Mount Spickard and is partially fed by melt from the Silver Glacier which is on the north slopes of Spickard.
- 2.1 miENature, Natural attraction, Mountain
Mount Spickard, North Cascades National Park
55 min walk • Mount Spickard is a 8,980-foot mountain peak in the North Cascades, a mountain range in the U.S. state of Washington. Located 2 miles south of the Canada–US border, it is part of the Chilliwack Group, a subrange of the Skagit Range which is part of the North Cascades.
- ~1400 ftNENature, Natural attraction, Waterfall
Depot Valley Falls, North Cascades National Park
7 min walk • Depot Valley Falls is a 400-foot waterfall on the Custer Fork Depot Creek that shares the same cliff as the nearby, much larger Depot Creek Falls, both in Whatcom County, Washington, United States. It is 100 feet wide.
- 1.5 miSWNature, Natural attraction, Mountain
Mount Redoubt, North Cascades National Park
39 min walk • Mount Redoubt is a mountain in the North Cascades range in Whatcom County, Washington state. The peak is located 3.0 miles from the Canada–US border, 16.3 miles east-northeast of Mount Shuksan.
- 2.8 miNENature, Natural attraction, Mountain
Mount Rahm, North Cascades National Park
72 min walk • Mount Rahm is in North Cascades National Park in the U.S. state of Washington. Located in the northern section of the park, Mount Rahm is less than.25 mi south of the Canada–United States border and just north of Silver Lake, 2 mi north-northeast of Mount Spickard.
- 2.4 miSENature, Natural attraction, Mountain
Mox Peaks, North Cascades National Park
62 min walk • Mox Peaks is in North Cascades National Park in the U.S. state of Washington. Located in the northern section of the park, Mox Peaks consist of several summits in close proximity to each other that are nearly the same altitude, but the highest point is the eastern peak.
- 1.7 miSNature, Natural attraction, Natural feature
Redoubt Glacier, North Cascades National Park
43 min walk • Redoubt Glacier is in North Cascades National Park in the U.S. state of Washington, on the east slopes of Mount Redoubt. Redoubt Glacier descends from the 8,400-foot point on the east slope of Mount Redoubt then has a south terminus near 7,200 ft.
- 2.1 miENature, Natural attraction, Natural feature
Silver Glacier, North Cascades National Park
54 min walk • Silver Glacier is in North Cascades National Park in the U.S. state of Washington and descends to the northwest from near the summit of Mount Spickard.
- 1.5 miSWNature, Natural attraction, Natural feature
Depot Glacier, North Cascades National Park
39 min walk • Depot Glacier is in North Cascades National Park in the U.S. state of Washington, on the northeast slopes of Mount Redoubt. Depot Glacier descends from the 7,400 to 6,000 ft. Melt from the glacier feeds into Depot Creek which flows into Chilliwack Lake.