Here’s something you can’t get to right now: the splash-pool
on the first drop at Multnomah Falls, as seen from the Benson Bridge .
A few weeks ago, rock-fall damaged the iconic bridge, and it
has been closed since. It could be Memorial Day before the bridge is repaired and
hikers can easily access the multitude of trails above the falls, which include
the popular Multnomah-to-Wahkeena Loop, the Elevator Shaft, Benson Plateau ,
and the Larch Mountain Trail. Except for the loop, these trails aren’t closed,
but access is more difficult. As a hiker, I find the lengthy repair incredibly
frustrating. As an Oregonian, I consider it an affront.
Frankly, I don’t understand why it isn't. The reason must lie in bureaucracy, and the red tape always
attached to regulations governing maintenance and repair of historic landmarks.
And while the Benson Bridge is perhaps Oregon ’s most recognizable architecture,
it’s also made from concrete and rebar. Once the red tape is cleared away, the
actual fix should be straightforward and quick. The damage is to the rail and
part of the walking surface, and the structural integrity of the bridge is
intact and undamaged.
Aside from reopening access to the area’s trails, there are other good reasons to hasten the repair. Two and a half million reasons, in fact. Multnomah Falls is
On the other side of the bridge, the trail climbs to a
viewing platform at the top of the nation’s second highest waterfall, at 620ft.
That trail and viewing platform are effectively closed, unless you hike several
miles and descend from trails above the falls.
Yet, the thing that probably irks me the most is the fact
that Simon Benson, a lumber baron and philanthropist, donated the land and the
falls to the people and state of Oregon
more than a century ago. The bridge was built in 1914. That means this is the
100th anniversary of the Benson
Bridge , and it will
likely be closed for almost half of the year.
Ella Clark, in Indian
Legends of the Pacific Northwest, relates the story of a Multnomah wedding
feast stricken by plague, and saved only through the sacrifice of the bride,
after she discovers plague marks on her lover’s face. It’s a beautiful story
befitting one of Oregon ’s
natural treasures, and it resonates all the more now because part of that treasure
is denied to us. When the maiden stood at the top of the cliff, preparing to
leap, she said to the Great Spirit, “If you will accept me as a sacrifice for
my people, let some token hang in the sky.” Just then, the moon rose, and she leapt.
There’s snow in the forecast this week, and the maiden in
white will stand again at the side of the falls. What will she think of that
silent bridge hanging broken in the sky?
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