Some weekends are just a deep breath. Then there’s Hood River. Tucked into the Columbia River Gorge, this small town packs more adventure, flavor, and fresh mountain air into two days than seems physically possible — but of course, we tried anyway.
Friday: Arrival & Rail Ride Adventure 
We rolled into Hood River just in time for our 3:00 PM rail ride with Hood River Railroad. Fall is peak season thanks to jaw-dropping foliage, so unless you enjoy FOMO with a side of pumpkin spice, book early.

Where to Stay (or Park Your Wheels)
Saturday: The Scenic Fruit Loop 

Fruit Loop Tips:
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Start early — freshest fruit, fewer crowds, more time to snack.
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Check hours — some stands rotate weekly or close early in hot weather.
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Be flexible — because fruit waits for no one.
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Map your must-stops — don’t try to hit everything; pick your favorites.
Sample One-Day Itinerary:
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10:00 AM – Draper Girls Country Farm (anchor stop: jams, cider, chocolate almonds, maybe a llama cameo and pumpkins)
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11:15 AM – Cathedral Ridge Winery (sip & pretend you’re in a wine ad)
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12:15 PM – Stave & Stone Winery
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1:15 PM – Mt. View Brewing (wine, beer, fruit, and killer Mt. Hood views)
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1:45–2:00 PM – Lunch at Apple Valley BBQ / Country Store
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2:30 PM onward – Revisit favorites, explore small farm stands, or wander downtown Hood River for shopping & local charm

Sunday: Hikes, Waterfalls & Scenic Farewell 

Top Hikes:
- Tamanawas Falls Trail – 3.5 miles roundtrip, waterfall you can walk behind, serene forest vibes. Perfect for short-and-sweet hikes.
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Eagle Creek to Punchbowl Falls – 40 minutes west, mossy canyon walls, iconic waterfall. Moderate challenge, major Instagram payoff.
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Mosier Plateau Trail – Quick (<3 miles), sweeping Columbia River views, wildflowers in spring.
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Dog Mountain – Only for ambitious hikers: 6.8 miles, nearly 3,000 ft elevation gain, panoramic Gorge views. Skip the Fruit Loop if you go big here — you’ll need the energy.

