Cedar Lake WayRecent Trip Reports
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trip reports for this hike.
Cedar Lake Way, Slab Camp Creek and Gray Wolf River
— May 22, 2010
— bennettdarren
Overnight
Features:
Wildflowers blooming
Issues:
Blowdowns | Clogged drainage | Mudholes | Washouts | Snow on trail | Avalanche danger
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Pics & Video: http://bennettdarren.phanfare.com/4686937
We got to the Slab Camp trail head just b...
Pics & Video: http://bennettdarren.phanfare.com/4686937
We got to the Slab Camp trail head just before 7AM after spending the night at Kent's place in Poulsbo. Our goal was to hike up the Graywolf River drainage to Falls Camp and hopefully make it up to Cedar Lake (@ 5200 ft). The 2.8 mile hike down from Slab Camp to the Lower Graywolf River crossing was steep in places and muddy in others. At the river crossing there is a huge bridge that has three large steel support beams... It has been written that this bridge will never get knocked down (a death sentence for any bridge in the Olympic Mountains). After crossing the bridge and going over a number of downed trees we made the connection with the Lower Graywolf Trail. Trail then goes straight up for about 800 feet through even more downed trees and passes through Slide Camp and gives you a number of great views across the river valley. There is a lot of future trail work to be done on this section. Trail crews have laid out survey tape to indicate the areas of work including a number of slide prone areas. The trail eventually drops you back down to the Graywolf Camp near the Three Forks (intersection of Upper Graywolf, Cameron and Lower Graywolf Rivers). We began the last leg up the Upper Graywolf by first having lunch along the river. We still had 5+ miles to go before arriving at Falls Camp. Again the trail had a large number of downed trees but in general was in the best shape of all the trails. At this point I was getting tired so Kent started to push forward to find camp…. He was fortunate enough to see a black bear as he crossed a large avalanche chute… Unfortunately by the time I got there the bear was gone. We did see lots of signs of bear (scat mostly) and a few cat like scat (bobcat, cougar… not sure?). We passed Camp Ellis since there was already a group there and made our way up to Falls Camp. The old Falls Shelter was burned to the ground a number of years ago, I believe as part of the Olympic National Parks effort to lower maintenance costs. I remember staying at this shelter back in 1994 so it was sad to see it as burned out pile of logs. Above about 3800 feet we started to hit a number of snow patches and at Falls Camp (4000ft) there was only a few spots without snow. I inspected the Cedar Lake trail and it just had too much snow, too many downed trees, and it was too late in the day to continue up… So we made camp, enjoyed some food, enjoyed the views and then headed off to bed as the temps dropped around freezing. Overnight we had a little rain but overall it was clearer skies in the morning. We contemplated heading up to Cedar Lake in the morning but decided adding 5 miles round trip to our already required 13+ miles was not a good idea. Sadly we said goodbye to the camp and our missed chance to see one of the best lakes in the Olympic Mountains (oh well it was most likely buried under about 8 feet of snow). The trip out was fairly easy with the exception of the two big uphill sections (Graywolf Camp to Slide Camp and Lower Graywolf up to Slab Camp). The rain started to come down over the last 8 miles but we avoided it mostly by staying in the trees…. As we drove out towards Hwy 101, all we could see was a huge rain cloud forming over the mountains and felt happy to have the heater blasting and not being stuck in the rain.
Slab Camp Creek and Gray Wolf River, Cedar Lake Way
— May 22, 2010
— bennettdarren
Overnight
Features:
Wildflowers blooming
Issues:
Blowdowns | Clogged drainage | Mudholes | Water on trail | Snow on trail | Avalanche danger
Expand report text
Hide report text
Read full report
Pics and Video: http://bennettdarren.phanfare.com/4686937
We got to the Slab Camp trail head jus...
Pics and Video: http://bennettdarren.phanfare.com/4686937
We got to the Slab Camp trail head just before 7AM after spending the night at Kent's place in Poulsbo. Our goal was to hike up the Graywolf River drainage to Falls Camp and hopefully make it up to Cedar Lake (@ 5200 ft). The 2.8 mile hike down from Slab Camp to the Lower Graywolf River crossing was steep in places and muddy in others. At the river crossing there is a huge bridge that has three large steel support beams... It has been written that this bridge will never get knocked down (a death sentence for any bridge in the Olympic Mountains). After crossing the bridge and going over a number of downed trees we made the connection with the Lower Graywolf Trail. Trail then goes straight up for about 800 feet through even more downed trees and passes through Slide Camp and gives you a number of great views across the river valley. There is a lot of future trail work to be done on this section. Trail crews have laid out survey tape to indicate the areas of work including a number of slide prone areas. The trail eventually drops you back down to the Graywolf Camp near the Three Forks (intersection of Upper Graywolf, Cameron and Lower Graywolf Rivers). We began the last leg up the Upper Graywolf by first having lunch along the river. We still had 5+ miles to go before arriving at Falls Camp. Again the trail had a large number of downed trees but in general was in the best shape of all the trails. At this point I was getting tired so Kent started to push forward to find camp…. He was fortunate enough to see a black bear as he crossed a large avalanche chute… Unfortunately by the time I got there the bear was gone. We did see lots of signs of bear (scat mostly) and a few cat like scat (bobcat, cougar… not sure?). We passed Camp Ellis since there was already a group there and made our way up to Falls Camp. The old Falls Shelter was burned to the ground a number of years ago, I believe as part of the Olympic National Parks effort to lower maintenance costs. I remember staying at this shelter back in 1994 so it was sad to see it as burned out pile of logs. Above about 3800 feet we started to hit a number of snow patches and at Falls Camp (4000ft) there was only a few spots without snow. I inspected the Cedar Lake trail and it just had too much snow, too many downed trees, and it was too late in the day to continue up… So we made camp, enjoyed some food, enjoyed the views and then headed off to bed as the temps dropped around freezing. Overnight we had a little rain but overall it was clearer skies in the morning. We contemplated heading up to Cedar Lake in the morning but decided adding 5 miles round trip to our already required 13+ miles was not a good idea. Sadly we said goodbye to the camp and our missed chance to see one of the best lakes in the Olympic Mountains (oh well it was most likely buried under about 8 feet of snow). The trip out was fairly easy with the exception of the two big uphill sections (Graywolf Camp to Slide Camp and Lower Graywolf up to Slab Camp). The rain started to come down over the last 8 miles but we avoided it mostly by staying in the trees…. As we drove out towards Hwy 101, all we could see was a huge rain cloud forming over the mountains and felt happy to have the heater blasting and not being stuck in the rain. Multi-night backpack
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Backpacked on Friday from Deer Park trailhead down the Three Forks trail to the Gray Wolf trail, the...
Backpacked on Friday from Deer Park trailhead down the Three Forks trail to the Gray Wolf trail, then up the Gray Wolf River trail to Falls Camp. Shelter there has burned down (arson?) although no brush or trees nearby have burned. It's a great little camp in an open area, bend in the river on one side, open meadow on the other. The best camp is a few yards up the (unmarked) Cedar Lake trail that branches out to the right immediately after the burned shelter. On Saturday I dayhiked up the Cedar Lake trail, past the lake, and up to the pass on the back of the bowl. Trail beyond lake is fairly nonexistant, but just head up, up, up until you get to the pass. After that as you drop down the other side you angle south, passing three lakes (still some snow at the third lake), a few but not many cairns help a bit, then just as the trail starts decending after the third lake the trail becomes more obvious and quickly connects with the main Gray Wolf Trail and heads up to GW Pass. The off trail traveling was fairly easy but I wouldn't want to do it in poor visibility. Returned to Falls Camp via the main Gray Wolf trail, camping there Saturday night, then hiked back out to the car on Sunday. I hiked the GW trail many years (15?) ago, and I must say, there sure has been a lot of earth, tree, and river movement since I was there last. There is quite an impressive avalanche area that still has snow about 10 feet deep and is covered in forest debris. I've never seen so many down trees along a trail; all along the way the forest looks like the game "Pick Up Sticks" from my childhood. This trail I'm sure is an ongoing challenge for the Gray Wolf trail crews. They've done an amazing job because all but one tree is cleared, and that tree is a step-over one. I can't even imagine the hours spent on maintaining this trail!!
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