You are here: Home Find a Hike Hiking Guide Kendall Peak Lakes Snowshoe

Kendall Peak Lakes Snowshoe

» REI » Amazon

A portion of all book sales from the links above benefits WTA and helps protect and maintain our trails.

The roar of the highway is unmistakable when starting up this track, but soon the beauty of the winter wilderness surrounding the trail makes everything else fade into the background. The dark green firs and hemlocks lining the ridge, the open, quilted meadows of snow, and the wide avenue of the trail make this a perfect destination for snowshoers.
The trail leads to a pair of small alpine ponds nestled in a deep cirque on the flank of towering Kendall Peak (5,675 feet). The mountain dominates the skyline from the lake's basin, as well as along the last mile of the trail leading into the basin. But Kendall isn't the only peak on the horizon. To the east is Alta Mountain and the long line of Rampart Ridge. To the south is the peak used as the Snoqualmie Summit Ski Area--a low broad peak lined with the wide white slashes of alpine ski runs. Below the lakes, the broad meadows along the bottom of the Gold Creek valley glimmer a brilliant white in the afternoon sun. Although the trail ascends nearly 2000 feet, the climbing is gradual and the trail is easy to follow. Because of that, first-time ‘shoers and young kids will enjoy this outing as much as experienced snowshoe enthusiasts. Of course, all of those features coupled with the trail's close proximity to the Seattle metropolitan area means a lot of snowshoers and skiers on any winter weekend. Strap on the snowshoes midweek, though, and the trail will be virtually deserted.

Snowshoe up the Gold Creek valley, staying close to the left (west) side of the valley, and in a few hundred yards, find an old logging road climbing left into the trees and up the valley wall. This road is steep for 0.25 mile, and then the ascent moderates considerably. The road enters an old clearcut just past the 0.5-mile mark and twists and turns its way up the slope. You can either stay with the moderate pitch of the road or take a steeper, more direct, northerly approach straight up the slope, cutting off the switchback corners. Pause often to rest. Use the excuse of stopping to admire the increasingly pretty views south over the Gold Creek basin, Hyak Ski Area, and Mount Catherine if you are the competitive sort who doesn't like to admit to fatigue!

At 1.7 miles, the route hooks through a sharp hairpin turn to the right. A wide spur road heads off to the left, leading to a nice overlook of the lower Coal Creek basin and the ski areas at Snoqualmie Pass. Stay right if you are bound for the lakes. The road traverses east toward the snout of a narrow ridge and, at that leading edge of the ridge, turns north and climbs steeply through forest and meadow. The track stays on the west side of the ridge crest, banking right at 2.6 miles, and at 3.5 miles hooking sharply south in a switchback turn.

Stay north, snowshoeing off the road near the apex of the hairpin corner, climbing through mostly open slopes to the ridge crest leading to Kendall Lakes. The trail nears Coal Creek at 4.2 miles and follows it the remainder of the way to the lakes' basin, rolling over two small knolls before reaching the lower of the twin Kendall Lakes. Avoid the upper lake because the tight, avalanche-prone walls of the cirque are not a safe way to approach it.

Author’s Rating: Most Difficult
Hikers should have good experience and familiarity with snowshoes. This route features sections that will need to be evaluated for avalanche safety every time. Trails climb considerably and may include climbing to ridge tops. Traverses across forested or open slopes may be required. An ability to self-arrest with an ice axe or trekking pole recommended.
Driving Directions:

To get there, from Seattle drive east on Interstate 90 over Snoqualmie Pass to exit 54, 2 miles east of the pass's summit. Exit I-90, turn left, and cross under the freeway to reach the Gold Creek Sno-Park just a few hundred feet north of the highway interchange.

Improve or add to this guidebook entry

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

Recent Trip Reports

Hiked here recently? Submit a trip report!
There are 54 trip reports for this hike. See all trip reports for this hike.
Kendall Peak Lakes Snowshoe — Feb 10, 2013 — HikerGirl85
Snowshoe/XC Ski
Expand report text Hide report text
We started fairly early Sunday morning, about 9:30 and headed straight up. It’s a steady grind the...
We started fairly early Sunday morning, about 9:30 and headed straight up. It’s a steady grind the entire 4.5 miles but well worth it! You hit several breakouts along the trail which show off some stunning views, and its well worth every mile! The trail is wide and has plenty of room for snowshoeing and skiing. On the way up we ran into a few groups of people, but not many. It was quiet and peaceful the whole way up. I won’t lie, you can hear I-90 for most of the hike but I was able to tune it out and focus on the awesome views around me.

You climb for a while up long switchbacks, when you get to the top you hit the meadow. We had two options at this point, left or right…two hikers happened to be coming down from the right stating the view was amazing. We headed up another little grind and popped out right above Keechelus and Gold Creek Pond. The view was stunning! Well worth the climb.

Don’t let the mileage fool you, it is a steady grind but totally doable. We took several mini breaks on the way up, but there were several hikers that stopped to have lunch and enjoy the views. I wouldn't suggest bringing small children or dogs without shoes. We made it round trip in a little over 4 hours.

Have fun!
Read full report
Kendall Peak Lakes Snowshoe — Feb 02, 2013 — NWOutdoorGirl
Snowshoe/XC Ski
Issues: Snow on trail
Expand report text Hide report text
Busy trail. Started this hike later than anticipated. Plenty of people and dogs on the this road and...
Busy trail. Started this hike later than anticipated. Plenty of people and dogs on the this road and some families and with young children within the first mile as there are a few place to sled.

Trail is wide and well traveled and about half way up becomes a little more narrow in the snowshoe tracks. Earlier in the week there was a lot of new snow but the beautiful sunny days including the day of the hike created a crusty terrain with lots of sinkholes. Our large dog who loves the snow had a little bit of trouble as he was sinking a bit without the weight disbursement of snowshoes. The sunshine made it plenty warm out, could've hiked in just baselayers with gaitors. The trail in some areas was a bit too narrow for snowshoes but would've been much more difficult to get out of the "trench" and sink through the crust.

We stayed on the trail on the entire hike up until the last set of switchbacks where we traversed a pretty steep climb that took us to the lookout facing the ski area. After lunch we ended up bypassing the short trail to the lakes to check out the view from the ridge. Spectacular crystal clear view, you can see Keechelus Lake. The only downside to this was the view does include I-90 and you can hear the road noise from the lower third of the hike.

On the way down the trail had become a bit slushy. We only wandered off the path once near the end where we encountered some steep areas we couldn't walk down but were able to slide, a little unexpected but fun. This is a great hike, I would reccommend it conditions permitting, would've been better had therer been fresh snow.
Read full report with photos
Kendall Peak Lakes Snowshoe — Jan 19, 2013 — chuck
Day hike
Issues: Snow on trail
Expand report text Hide report text
Nothing but blue skies and a warm sun made this trip truly enjoyable. When you are up high enough yo...
Nothing but blue skies and a warm sun made this trip truly enjoyable. When you are up high enough you get the view of Mt. Rainier over the ski resorts. It has been cold but no snow lately so the trail is firm and crunchy. The lake was frozen over but still had no plan on ever walking out on it. A beautiful day.
Read full report with photos
Kendall Peak Lakes Snowshoe — Dec 30, 2012 — codywater
Snowshoe/XC Ski
Expand report text Hide report text
Party of two today, one skinning and one snowshoeing. Started early-ish to avoid the crowds, left th...
Party of two today, one skinning and one snowshoeing. Started early-ish to avoid the crowds, left the parking lot around 9. The first mile is very hard packed with ruts worn in by sledders. Traction devices would suffice (yak-trax or otherwise). Once the switchbacks start, trail becomes a two-lane snowshoe track that continues up about 1/3 way to the top that gradually softens, then narrows to a single-lane snowshoe track. Continues to the lake as a well-packed snowshoe track. We headed off the road to the left near the hairpin turn that heads toward Coal Creek, and broke trail up the mountain side, eventually meeting up with the trail again at the top meadow. Decided to divert to the overlook instead of going to the lake, and took in a most-excellent view with a wonderfully blue sky and loads of sun. The ski down was superb, filled with powdery turns as we cut between switchbacks. Trail was very busy toward the bottom with loads of kids, sleds and folks out for a walk.

Overall, a great day! Once off the trail, the snow is excellent. The snowshoe track is essentially hardback and made for easy trekking, while the bottom portion of the trail is in need of more snow due to all of the sledding making for a crusty, rutted trail.
Read full report with photos
Kendall Peak Lakes Snowshoe — Dec 25, 2012 — onehikeaweek
Day hike
Issues: Snow on trail | No water source
Expand report text Hide report text
Flickr: http://bit.ly/road-2235 It was rather windy when we got to the trailhead around 10 AM and...
Flickr: http://bit.ly/road-2235

It was rather windy when we got to the trailhead around 10 AM and was not the Christmas weather I had hoped for. Only three cars including mine were when we left the parking lot.

We spent most of our time on the service road. The weather wasn't getting any better, in fact, it started to snow and got windier the higher up we went. I had forgotten my GPS at home so I wasn't exactly sure where the scramble turn-off to the lakes would have been. With no views and awful weather, I decided we'd stop at the ridge and call it a day.

There was an insane amount of people not far from the parking lot, mostly families with kids.
Read full report with photos
kendall peak mountaineer extraordinaire.JPG
Kendall Peak. Photo by mountaineer extraordinaire.
Location
Snoqualmie Pass -- Snoqualmie Pass
Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest, Mount Baker Ranger District
Statistics
Roundtrip 9.0 miles
Elevation Gain 1700 ft
Highest Point 4400 ft
Features
Lakes
Mountain views
Guidebooks & Maps
Green Trails: Snoqualmie Pass No. 207

Improve or add to this guidebook entry

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

Map it
Red MarkerKendall Peak Lakes Snowshoe
47.3978263108 -121.395235062
(47.3978, -121.3952) Open in new window
Document Actions
  • Email this page
  • Print this
  • Share
Get the Guidebooks

Mountaineers three booksSelect content from The Mountaineers Books' guidebooks is featured in this Hiking Guide. Sales of the books from this website help protect and maintain trails.

> Shop Now

More hikes » Hike of the Week
Dog Mountain (May 23)

Dog Mountain

South Cascades

Head to Dog Mountain for Columbia River Gorge views and an explosion of wildflowers. Eager to get in shape for summer? Head straight up the mountain on the northern side. Take the slow and steady eastern flank trail to stop and smell the flowers. (See if you can spot recent work by WTA trail crews.)

Get Trail News

Subscribe to our free email newsletter for hiking news, events, gear reviews and more.

link