Mount
![mount & blade with fire and sword mount & blade with fire and sword](https://indiefaq.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/1583407074_mount-and-blade-with-fire-and-sword-1.jpg)
One block later, turn right on 166th Terrace. Walk out to Cynthia Street, and make a left. To connect to Summercrest Park, this next section of the hike takes you on neighborhood streets. Walk past the shelter and play area to enter a plot of Douglas-fir forest and come out at 167th Place. At a junction, make a sharp right to reach a parking circle and recross Timberland Drive to reach Tallac Terrace Park. Oaks, madrones, and Douglas-firs form the canopy. The narrow, thicketed corridor you now enter is the Thornbrook Woods Natural Area. This trail rises to cross Timberland Drive, giving a view southwest to Cooper Mountain. Keep dropping to arrive at a paved path, where you’ll go left. This narrower tread heads up under mossy bowers of hazel, and then begins a traverse that passes through a lovely grove of madrones. A couple of oaks add to the ambience here, but there are no views to be had, so return to the junction below the cell tower, and make a left.
![mount & blade with fire and sword mount & blade with fire and sword](https://www.dualshockers.com/static/uploads/2011/05/MountBlade_WithFireandSword_mb111.jpg)
Pass below a cell phone tower and continue up to a grassy expanse near the summit of the hill. Williams Trail breaks off to the right, instead go left. At the next junction, where the new section of the Mt. This tread traverses up through an understory of Oregon grape, sword fern, trailing blackberry, and young madrones. The wide gravel trail crosses the powerline corridor to meet another junction. Then you’ll begin a looping descent that enters the woods and comes to a junction above Davis Road. You’ll get views to the Tualatin Hils and Forest Park straight ahead. On the east shoulder of Mount Williams a mature forest of Douglas-fir, western hemlock, and Pacific madrone forms a wall to the right. The trail snakes up the south slope of Mount Williams through thickets of hawthorn and blackberry, passing a gravel path to the left. Pass an old apple tree, and cross Burntwood Way. Individual hawthorn trees dot the lawns here, and you’ll cross a small brook before winding up through a planting of pines above a play area. It’s two lane and bikes come fast, so stay on the right side. The paved Westside Regional Trail leads up into the powerline corridor about 30 yards above the intersection with Hart Road. To extend this walk, take neighborhood streets down to South Johnson Creek and find the Summercrest Park trail that runs along the creek’s riparian corridor.
#MOUNT & BLADE WITH FIRE AND SWORD SERIES#
From the paved trail, you can divert to the summit of Mount Williams and then continue on an even newer soft surface trail that connects to a series of natural corridors. In 2013, the Tualatin Hills Park & Recreation District completed a missing 1 ½ mile section of the paved Westside Regional Trail over 470-foot high Mount Williams.