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Annette Lake

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Dense forest drapes the lower trail, keeping hikers cool on the hottest August afternoons. At trail's end, a deep lake waits to kill off the last of the summer heat--for those brave enough to dive into its icy waters. Between the thick second-growth forest stands and the high alpine lake, the trail rolls along Humpback Creek, offering tantalizing views now and again of pretty waterfalls along the tumbling creek.

The trail begins alongside the Asahel Curtis Nature Trail but continues to climb to the right when the gentle Asahel Curtis Loop goes left. You'll follow an ancient old logging road (mostly reclaimed by the fertile forest).

At about 1 mile out, you'll pass under a high-tension powerline and 0.25 mile later will cross the wide track of the Iron Horse Trail (the old railroad right-of-way). From this point, the trail gets serious. Serious about scenery, and serious about climbing.

The path switchbacks up the Humpback Creek valley for more than 1.5 miles until the last steep pitch puts you at about 3600 feet elevation. For the next mile, you'll traverse the slope above Humpback Creek, with occasional views across the valley to Humpback Mountain. The trail ends at the shores of Annette Lake, which lies in the cirque between Humpback Mountain, Abiel Peak, and Silver Peak.
Driving Directions:

From Seattle drive east on I-90 to exit 47 (Asahel Curtis/Denny Creek). Turn right from the off-ramp and continue 0.25 mile, then turn left on Forest Road 5590. You'll find the parking area in 0.3 mile.

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Recent Trip Reports

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There are 318 trip reports for this hike. See all trip reports for this hike.
Annette Lake — Feb 10, 2013 — string cheeze
Day hike
Issues: Water on trail | Snow on trail | Road to trailhead inaccessible
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Trail head still impassable for all but monster trucks. Saw a jeep and a range rover stuck up to th...
Trail head still impassable for all but monster trucks. Saw a jeep and a range rover stuck up to the axle. The hike was beautiful thanks to a break in the weather. Trail is packed and solid all the way to the lake. Traction devices help, but trekking poles will do just as well.
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Abiel Peak, Annette Lake — Jan 27, 2013 — binliu.seattle
Day hike
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Abiel Peak by Annette Lake. Safe route from west of the lake up. ~1 ft of new snow from the saddle (...
Abiel Peak by Annette Lake. Safe route from west of the lake up. ~1 ft of new snow from the saddle (4880) up. Snowing most of the day, windy at times, with brief sunshine over Silver. Moderate avalanche risk. No snowshoes needed till the lake. All in group made to the summit (5365)!

Album: http://tinyurl.com/a43mk2e
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Annette Lake — Dec 22, 2012 — LoveBackpacking
Overnight
Issues: Blowdowns | Water on trail | Snow on trail | Road to trailhead inaccessible
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Snow began before the forest road so we started snowshoeing before the trailhead. Passed a few group...
Snow began before the forest road so we started snowshoeing before the trailhead. Passed a few groups of fellow hikers/snowshoers on a well-defined snowshoe trail until we reached about 3200' where the trail was lost. We turned around as the others had before us and set up camp for the night--the snow was very deep and it would be too much work for our dog to try to continue. According to our GPS, we were about half-way to Annette Lake.
Avalanche danger risk was moderate and the weather was beautiful--no rain!
Winter navigation skills and snowshoes highly recommended.
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Annette Lake — Nov 22, 2012 — chwagoner
Day hike
Issues: Water on trail | Snow on trail
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I have never seen the Annette Lake parking lot car-free and today was no exception. There was one l...
I have never seen the Annette Lake parking lot car-free and today was no exception. There was one lonely car in the lot when I pulled in. The lot was clear of snow and the sky was overcast but the early week precipitation had passed. The first mile or so of the trail were free of snow. Slowly, the snow depth increased until it was about a foot deep crossing the chutes as the trail approaches the lake.
Here, I put on my snowshoes and tried them out for the first time. After a few tentative steps, the going was easy. It would have been passable in boots, and two sets of tracks proved the case. The chutes are not yet slide prone because the snow is anchored in the vegetation but the current surface may become a slide surface after the next few storms.

The lake is not yet frozen but it won't be long. The temperature was right around freezing in mid-afternoon. I tested the snowshoes on a steep off-trail area to the left of the lake (is there a path to Silver Peak through here somewhere?)

The wind was brisk at the late and turkey was waiting in the city so I didn't hang out long. There were a few ice pellets falling from the sky (or maybe trees) on the way down. Excellent cool weather hike!
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Annette Lake — Nov 11, 2012 — ais77
Day hike
Issues: Snow on trail
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Trail conditions are still good, some snow towards the upper third portion of the trail but I never ...
Trail conditions are still good, some snow towards the upper third portion of the trail but I never needed any traction devices. Fairly popular hike, the large parking lot was full by the the time I finished up the hike around two. Humpback Creek is flowing pretty well, makes for a great photo op. Enjoy!
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Annette Lake by Garrett.jpg
Waterfall along the Annette Lake Trail, by Garrett.
WTA worked here!
2011, 2012
Location
Annette Lake (#1019)
Snoqualmie Pass -- Snoqualmie Pass
Mt. Baker Snoqualmie National Forest, Snoqualmie Ranger District
Statistics
Roundtrip 7.5 miles
Elevation Gain 1400 ft
Highest Point 3600 ft
Features
Rivers
Lakes
Waterfalls
Old growth
Established campsites
User info
Dogs allowed on leash
Northwest Forest Pass required
Guidebooks & Maps
Day Hiking: Snoqualmie Pass (Nelson & Bauer - Mountaineers Books)
Green Trails Snoqualmie Pass No. 207
USGS Snoqualmie Pass

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Note: the description and driving directions for this Mountaineers Books entry are copyrighted and can't be changed.

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Red MarkerAnnette Lake
47.3926666667 -121.474416667
  • Trail Work 2012
  • Trail Work 2011
(47.3927, -121.4744) Open in new window
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