Kettle Falls 2 Stars Hotels

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Compare Kettle Falls 2 Star Hotels with updated room rates, reviews, and availability. Most hotels are fully refundable.

Benny's Colville Inn

2.5 star property
Colville
8.4 out of 10, Very Good, (628)
"nice place to stay"
United States
Pat
The price is NT$4,332
NT$4,744 total
includes taxes & fees
Dec 1 - Dec 2
Benny's Colville Inn

Columbia Point Resort

2.0 star property
Kettle Falls
8.4 out of 10, Very Good, (135)
"Room was clean and the place was quiet. "
United States
Jason
Columbia Point Resort

Selkirk Motel

2.0 star property
Colville
7.4 out of 10, Good, (389)
"It's a decent motel "
United States
Marko
The price is NT$3,256
NT$3,566 total
includes taxes & fees
Nov 20 - Nov 21
Selkirk Motel

Comfort Inn

2.5 star property
Colville
9.0 out of 10, Wonderful, (38)
"Great place to stay while traveling "
United States
Keith
Comfort Inn

Lake Roosevelt Suites

2.0 star property
Evans
Lake Roosevelt Suites
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Learn more about Kettle Falls

Nestled where the Columbia River once thundered through dramatic falls, this historic town offers excellent fishing and camping at Lake Roosevelt National Recreation Area. Explore the St. Paul's Mission and Heritage Center to understand local indigenous history, then grab homemade pie at the Northern Ales brewery after a day outdoors.

Back in 1980, Ryan Lake and its adjacent campgrounds and wilderness area was supposed to lie outside the predicted blast zone for the impending eruption of Mount St. Helens. The lake lies a bit more than twelve miles from the mountain, and geologists had designated only 10-mile radius as a "red zone" around the volcano.

But volcanoes don't consult with geologists before cracking open their domes.  So, on May 18th of that year, when St. Helens finally erupted, the effects of the blast were felt well beyond their predicted radius.  And Ryan Lake was not spared.

Sadly, three campers backpacking through the local complex of trails did not make it out in time.

Today, the area around Ryan Lake remains much as it was immediately after the blast.  Toppled trees are everywhere.  There is thick ash underfoot, and wherever you walk on the short six-tenths of a mile trail around the lake, you will see evidence of that day.

The grounds have been turned into a self-guided interpretative center.  There are signs along the way to inform visitors of the extent of the devastation (one sign sits by a a tree stump, which, turned over on its side, is twelve feet high).

But the signs also outline the forest's ongoing recovery, and the efforts to aid that recovery by the Forest Service, volunteers, and even the timber industry itself.

Nowhere, though, will you see mentioned the three individuals who lost their lives here some thirty-five years ago.  But when you visit, you'll be walking in their footsteps.   

It is a magnificent place, full of wild beauty and the evidence of nature's ferocious power.  And for those three people, who must have loved the wilderness as much as any of us who walk there, I can think of no more fitting memorial.
Photo by Charles Arcudi
Open Photo by Charles Arcudi

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