Eagle Cap Wilderness - Lakes

Lakes

Name Elevation
Aneroid Lake 7,500 ft (2,300 m)
Bear Lake 7,905 ft (2,409 m)
Billy Jones Lake 8,400 ft (2,600 m)
Blue Lake 7,703 ft (2,348 m)
Bonny Lakes 7,840 ft (2,390 m)
Catched Two Lake 7,980 ft (2,430 m)
Cheval Lake 7,801 ft (2,378 m)
Chimney Lake 7,604 ft (2,318 m)
Crescent Lake 7,371 ft (2,247 m)
Dollar Lake 8,300 ft (2,500 m)
Douglas Lake 7,326 ft (2,233 m)
Echo Lake 8,372 ft (2,552 m)
Echo Lake 7,020 ft (2,140 m)
Frances Lake 7,705 ft (2,348 m)
Frazier lake 7,127 ft (2,172 m)
Glacier Lake 8,166 ft (2,489 m)
Green Lake 6,699 ft (2,042 m)
Horseshoe Lake 7,133 ft (2,174 m)
Ice Lake 7,849 ft (2,392 m)
Jewett Lake 8,240 ft (2,510 m)
John Henry Lake 7,168 ft (2,185 m)
Laverty Lake 7,500 ft (2,300 m)
Lee Lake 7,145 ft (2,178 m)
Legore Lake 8,950 ft (2,730 m)
Little Storm Lake 7,580 ft (2,310 m)
Maxwell Lake 7,729 ft (2,356 m)
Minam Lake 7,373 ft (2,247 m)
Mirror Lake 7,595 ft (2,315 m)
Moccasin Lake 7,473 ft (2,278 m)
Prospect Lake 8,328 ft (2,538 m)
Pocket Lake 8,225 ft (2,507 m)
Razz Lake 8,103 ft (2,470 m)
Roger Lake 7,360 ft (2,240 m)
Steamboat Lake 7,363 ft (2,244 m)
Swamp Lake 7,837 ft (2,389 m)
Tombstone Lake 7,421 ft (2,262 m)
Traverse Lake 7,723 ft (2,354 m)
Unit Lake 7,007 ft (2,136 m)
Wallowa Lake 4,372 ft (1,333 m)
Wood Lake 7,338 ft (2,237 m)

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Famous quotes containing the word lakes:

    White Pond and Walden are great crystals on the surface of the earth, Lakes of Light.... They are too pure to have a market value; they contain no muck. How much more beautiful than our lives, how much more transparent than our characters are they! We never learned meanness of them.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    The Indian navigator naturally distinguishes by a name those parts of a stream where he has encountered quick water and forks, and again, the lakes and smooth water where he can rest his weary arms, since those are the most interesting and more arable parts to him.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    It was inspiriting to hear the regular dip of the paddles, as if they were our fins or flippers, and to realize that we were at length fairly embarked. We who had felt strangely as stage-passengers and tavern-lodgers were suddenly naturalized there and presented with the freedom of the lakes and woods.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)