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Green Mountain

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The meadows alone make the trek to the top of 6500-foot Green Mountain worth the sweat and energy expended. Acres upon acres of emerald slopes burst with a dazzling display of wildflowers. But it's hard to stay focused on Green Mountain's brilliant floral arrangements when its jaw-dropping scenic sideshow is dominated by the gargantuan snow cone of Glacier Peak. Green Mountain offers one of the finest views in the North Cascades, and did I fail to mention the historical fire lookout to boot?

The route to the summit is fairly straightforward and occasionally straight up. Beginning in forest interrupted by teaser views, work your way up a southern shoulder of the peak. After 1.5 miles or so, enter the Glacier Peak Wilderness. Subalpine forest punctuated by meadows and berry patches that warrant a return in September leads to a small ridge, after which you drop 100 feet to a pair of small ponds (elev. 5200 ft).

Not long afterward, lose the trees for good and enter a big, verdant (after all, this is "Green"Mountain) basin. Steeply traversing the basin at first, the trail then heads for a ridge crest above the emerald slopes. Be sure not to veer off the trail. The Forest Service is working hard trying to restore these loved-to-death meadows. Views expand exponentially as you march toward the summit. Be sure to take time to smell the myriad of flowers along the way. You may even spot a playful marmot or two.

At 4 well-deserved miles, Green's attractive 1933 fire lookout signals that you've reached the top. Wipe the sweat from your brow and gaze out over a sea of green forest capped by waves of white summits. The Suiattle River valley, a deep U-shaped gorge, spreads out below you. Trace the wild waterway from its icy origins on Glacier Peak all the way to its confluence with the Sauk River.

Driving Directions:

From Darrington travel north on State Route 530 for 7.5 miles, turning right immediately after the Sauk River bridge onto Forest Road 26 (Suiattle River Road). (From Rockport drive south on SR 530 for 11 miles to FR 26.) Follow FR 26 first on pavement, then on gravel for 19 miles, turning left onto FR 2680. Continue 6 miles to the trailhead, near the road end (elev. 3500 ft).

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Recent Trip Reports

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There are 132 trip reports for this hike. See all trip reports for this hike.
Green Mountain — Jun 27, 2009 — Kim Brown
Overnight
Features: Wildflowers blooming
Issues: Blowdowns | Overgrown | Road to trailhead inaccessible
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I'm fascinated by abandoned trails, and I love the Suiattle area of Mt Baker-Snoqualmie National For...
I'm fascinated by abandoned trails, and I love the Suiattle area of Mt Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest, and I love Green Mountain. Combine all of these, and that's what we did this weekend.

My freinds Jim (HikerJim), Randy and I biked the Suiattle River Road on Friday evening and camped at Downey Creek. Saturday morning we set out on the old original trail (elev 1495') to get to the summit of Green Mtn (6500'). What the Green Mtn Road does in 6 miles, the old trail does in 2 - but it never seems steep - it's a nice steady grade.

It was thrilling to see the old tread and walk on it. Abandoned over 50 years ago when the Green Mountain road was built, this wonderful old trail is in very good condition underneath all those downed logs. I suspect it's used by hunters in the fall, but not enough to keep the salal and moss from growing in the tread. We lost the trail here and there, but overall were extremely happy with our progress. We found a couple of old ceramic telephone insulators and wire, one set still attached to a tree (that had fallen). It was as if that when they closed the trail, they simply walked away - this was like taking a walk through time.

Once we were out of the salal zone, through the bare forest floor poked candystick, coralroot and pinedrop. We then entered a lush mossy zone - the trail was covered in moss. So very, very pretty.

The old trail pops out unceremoniously onto the Green Mtn road about 1/4 mile down from the current trailhead.

WE continued on the current trail to the tarns at 5300' where we set up camp. The massive meadows are lush and - well, green. Though just beginning it's bloom, the flower show here is sublime - simply amazing, as many of you remember. We hit snow when the trail curves around the slope and heads NE. The basin is still covered in about 4-5 feet of snow.

We set up camp, relaxed in the warm sunshine and listened to the pikas, thrushes and marmots. After and early dinner we grabbed our ice axes, cameras and puffy coats and headed up the snowy slope to the summit ridge, then followed the summer trail a few hundred linear feet to the summit where we spent an hour relaxing and being happy.

Spectacular views around - Glacier Peak, Dome and Whitechuck being prominent - the Ptarmigan Ptraverse, Sulphur Mtn, Bonanza, blah, blah, blah. You name it, we saw it.

The next morning we reluctantly left this gorgeous mountain and pounded back to Downey Creek. Route finding on the old trail was more difficult on the way down, and we lost the trail more often, and for longer periods of time, but were still on our bikes by 3 PM and headed back to milepost 12 where the rigs were parked.

The Suiattle River Road is slated for repair next summer. Let's hope this beautiful mountain can be visted again in 2011.

If anyone is interested in this old trail, or if you know about it and wish to share something with me, please feel free to email me at brownk3@myuw.net.

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Green Mountain #782 — Oct 10, 2006 — terry b
Day hike
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I'm a couple of days late in posting this - got busy with life in the lowlands. It was a spectacular...

I'm a couple of days late in posting this - got busy with life in the lowlands. It was a spectacular day for Green Mountain. Great views, not many bugs (just a few at the summit- which shows how calm the winds were). Fall colors, a few blueberries. The trail was very dry. On the way back down, I found the plastic cover to something like the battery compartment of a digital camera. It now resides in the Lost & Found at the Darrington Ranger Station.

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Green Mountain #782 — Oct 01, 2006 — Kim Brown
Day hike
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Trail is in excellent condition. I kept waiting for the hard part - last time I was there I remember...

Trail is in excellent condition. I kept waiting for the hard part - last time I was there I remember sucking wind.

Fall color is at it's height; will probably be nice another week before declining. Blueberries still in abundance at the tarns.

Biting cold on the summit; marmots are gathering grasses for nesting.

The washout at the Huckleberry Mountain trailhead has been repaired; the Downey Creek bridge construction has begun.

The road is quite wash-boardy, more than usual. But so what, it's a beautiful place.

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Green Mountain #782 — Sep 30, 2006 — Bruce Watson
Day hike
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Green Mountain was fabulous!! Dome Peak, Glacier Peak, Sloan, Mt. Pugh, and the Ptarmigan Traverse P...

Green Mountain was fabulous!! Dome Peak, Glacier Peak, Sloan, Mt. Pugh, and the Ptarmigan Traverse Peaks in splendid view. And the colors! It should be called ""RED"" Mountain in September and October. The 5 of us have never seen such flaming crimson in the meadows. Spectacular.

The trail was a strenuous one for us 50somethings, but the tread was in fantastic condition, and well worth the screaming quads the day after.



A mile and a half in forest, then breaking out into southfacing meadows. Sidehilling for a mile, Then dropping down into a wonderful little bowl with two large ponds. Reds, crimsons, yellows and golds, like a painting. Still feasting on Blueberries in the upper meadows. What a treat. The summit is a flat slab 10 ft. by 40 ft, perfect for a sitdown lunch with friends.

The best fall hike in 20 years! Don't miss it

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Green Mountain #782 — Sep 16, 2006 — Rickzman
Day hike
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The weather forecast stated that there would be afternoon clearing, so Bill and Helmut and I decided...

The weather forecast stated that there would be afternoon clearing, so Bill and Helmut and I decided to enjoy the beautiful views from the top of Green Mountain. NOT. It never cleared up. It even rained and snowed. Some hunters on the trail told us that there was 3 inches of snow above 5000 ft the night before. There was just a light dusting on everything from about 5500 ft and up when we were there.

Other that the lack of view, it was a good hike. The trail was clear, damp but not muddy. The best part is that there were no bugs.

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view from Green Mt by Edmondo Lalario.jpg
View from Green Mountain By Edmondo Lalario (2004)
Location
Green Mountain (#782)
North Cascades -- West Slope
Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest, Darrington Ranger District
Statistics
Roundtrip 8.0 miles
Elevation Gain 3100 ft
Highest Point 6500 ft
Features
Wildflowers/Meadows
Mountain views
Summits
Ridges/passes
Guidebooks & Maps
Day Hiking: North Cascades (Romano - Mountaineers Books)
Green Trails Cascade Pass No. 80

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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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