You are here: Home Find a Hike Hiking Guide Miners Ridge (Suiattle)

Miners Ridge (Suiattle)

Improve or add to this guidebook entry

Recent Trip Reports

Hiked here recently? Submit a trip report!
There are 27 trip reports for this hike. See all trip reports for this hike.
Little Giant Pass, Napeequa River, High Pass, Buck Creek, Miners Ridge (Suiattle), Suiattle Pass, Spider Gap - Buck Creek Pass Loop — Sep 02, 2011 — Cascade Liberation Organization
Multi-night backpack
Features: Wildflowers blooming
Issues: Snow on trail | Bugs
Expand report text Hide report text
5 days’ freedom and perfect weather amid world-class scenery and peaking wildflowers. No need to ...
5 days’ freedom and perfect weather amid world-class scenery and peaking wildflowers. No need to carry water; abundant everywhere. High Pass is still all snow; ice ax required, crampons too if it freezes hard; Spider Gap likewise. Much more snow than usual, rendering the landscape more beautiful and varied, and the travel easier if you are skilled at alpine snow travel. Bugs more abundant than normal. I did not treat any water. I’ll post a followup if I get sick.
Future readers: 2011 is a record-snowpack year; water, snow, flower, and insect conditions described here are more like late July-early August, and bear no resemblance to ordinary Septembers (dry, no bugs, no flowers, carry water).
My guess: weekend of Sept 10, 2011 should still be amazing for flowers.

DANGER, PLEASE NOTE: I brought crampons, not strictly necessary WHEN THE SNOW WAS SOFT, but taking them was a good call: if it freezes hard –- it soon will -- they will be necessary, and ice ax too of course. On the trail south of Buck Pass east of Pt. 7276, and on High Pass itself, I saw several people equipped with nothing more than poles and light hiking shoes crossing steep snow that I considered lethally dangerous. Yes, it was soft and easy; yes, there were steps; yes, many other people had crossed safely, but these people were oblivious to the fact that they were on deadly terrain. I watched a young couple with light shoes, single poles, and a dog, crossing several steep snow tongues on the east (Buck Creek) side of the High Pass trail that I wouldn't dream of crossing without an ice ax, alert. The runouts were 100+' onto steep scree and boulders. I broke my ankle in more forgiving ground. PLEASE! Whenever you venture out onto snow, LOOK DOWN. Where are you gonna land if you slip? How fast are you gonna be going? You think you're gonna arrest yourself with a hiking pole? Forget it! My ice ax and training didn't do me any good. I only went 20'. 20' more, and I'd be dead. It happens JUSTLIKETHAT. Whenever you venture onto snow, especially hard snow, think: Mouse. Cheese. Trap! Don't make us read about you in the paper.

Expect hunters:
The Chiwawa region is a favorite of hunters ancient and modern. Bear season starts Aug. 1 (remember the Sauk Mt. tragedy). High Buck Hunt in this area is Sept 15-25 this year, if I have it right. Be aware of this. Get yourself some safety-orange gear. Good time for a hike in a national park.
http://wdfw.wa.gov/hunting/regulations/hunter_orange/
http://wdfw.wa.gov/publications/01184/wdfw01184.pdf

Little Giant Pass:
Ford is unusually deep for Sept: almost knee-deep. Bring old shoes to throw back across (weight with rocks). A wooden stick is nice. Between Chiwawa R and Little Giant Pass, a thorough trail crew has done everything but bridge the river. Nice job, thanks. Even in much drier conditions, there is water at the bottom of the high meadows.

Little Giant Pass to Napeequa:
brushy, steep, but serviceable, easy to follow; it's been the PCT detour.

Napeequa valley:
Lovely, but I'd never want to camp here in bug season. I’ve always seen bears and/or bear hunters in this general area. Unmaintained, but not enough trees for blowdown problems.
The usual route to High Pass crosses N. Fork Napeequa and ascends to the lovely hanging valley in a steep but short, moderate bushwhack. Nice camp at the outfall.

Louis Creek High Route to High Pass:
We took the Louis Creek High Route to High Pass. The ascent to the hanging valley of upper Louis Creek is very steep meadow, ice ax all the way (yes, on steep dry meadow). Amazingly, the 25 lb. dog could do it (minor help). I would not ask a dog to go down this way; descending is much harder on their backs. Start a few hundred meters left of Louis Creek. It's almost all alder-free. Night 1 at the Berge-Buck col amid larches on a pumice dome. The whole unusual landscape is blanketed in Glacier Peak pumice.

Al claims first ascent of Buck Mt. by a tricolored Pembroke Welsh corgi on a September Saturday without supplemental oxygen. It's an easy scramble. Try to do it in conditions like this, with lots of snow – if you can still ford the Chiwawa. Or try it on 6" legs.

High route from Buck Mt. across Berge col to High Pass is fairly straightforward (in good viz; see photo) and the snow cover makes it easier (ice ax required, as always). From the col south of Berge (the summit SW of marked Pt. 7948), drop SW, then W to 6800’, then traverse N as high as possible just under the rock buttress guarding the High Pass outfall. This year only, there’s so much snow that with ice ax/crampons, it looked like one could climb this steep 6840’-to-7040’ section above the High Pass outfall on snow, a straight NW–SE line from Berge col to High Pass outfall. I did not do this.

High Pass:
Night 2, solo bivvy site on sand and rock right at the top, grand view in calm weather, Napeequa and Glacier Pk right in your lap. Also a very exposed windy tent site in the notch to the south, sand, fairly low-impact. Don’t mess this place up. No trace.
I weenied on Napeequa Peak – looked too much for the dog – that’s not all I blame on my scapedog.
High Pass is all snow this year. Triad Lake is not even fully melted out yet. I used crampons here, maybe not strictly necessary if you’re good on snow – it was getting soft – but had it been hard, crampons would have been necessary.
I saw people crossing with hiking poles, almost certainly unaware of the danger. There’s a steep spot there. I crossed it last year with mountaineering boots and a bamboo pole, and it was scary, steep runout onto rocks. Although it can sometimes be almost snow-free by September, this place is an accident waiting to happen.

Mt. Cleator 7625’:
A 10-15’ walkup from the south end of High Pass. Not to be missed.

Pt. 7276:
Also a fine view. Take it easy with your feet, don’t trash it.

High Pass to Buck Pass:
Allow lots of time for this even when meadow flowers are not peaking; world-class views east and west slow you down more than blackberry thickets. This area was one of A.H. Sylvester’s favorite places, for a reason. If you go to Buck Pass, DO NOT SKIP THIS. Go south as far as you can, but don’t cross the steep snow E of Pt. 7276 unless you know you know what you’re doing.

Middle Ridge Sheep Camp:
This place gets dry in September, so I loaded 5 L of water at Small Creek, and humped it up past stream after stream after stream until I dumped it in disgust at the sheep meadow amid rushing brooks and waterfalls. There’s a 5-star campsite at the 6400’ saddle, but the higher you go, the better it gets. Follow the fence of trees to 6480’, 6700’, 6800’. The views get better, the campsites smaller.
From the sheep camp meadow, we went gingerly straight NE up lush steep meadows to the lip of the moraine at 7400’, 2-star campsite with 5-star view and nice rock furniture (just S of an obvious huge sloping flat rock). We spurned this for a 0-star climber’s bivvy on top of the 7530’ knob (oval contour on the 7.5’ topo) with a 6-star view (5-star scale) of Berge to Shuksan, Glacier Peak right in our face. No water; melted snow <kindly restrain your laughter>. Warm, dead calm, no tent, utterly clear, early moonset, dark enough to see Andromeda Galaxy with naked eye, one of the best nights ever, higher than Helmet Butte. Hunters at the 6350’ sheep meadow had a fire on a night when I scarcely zipped up the sleeping bag at 7500’. Go figure. They were shooting in the morning.
Check this out if you like high country. Just a steep walk. Lip of the moraine in a magnificent cirquelet between two nearly 8300’ towers. This is Pt. 8297, the unnamed(?) NW spur of Fortress – the stupendous thing you see from Miners’ Ridge Trail or the PCT. West of the divide, it would be a major peak. You’ll not forget this place. It faces SW, looking right up the upper Suiattle valley to Tenpeak and the Kololos. See photo.
I didn’t look closely, but there might be a way around the knife-edge cleaver to the SE at maybe 7200, possibly ascend NE to the 8200’ ridge from there. That’s for climbers.
"East of the Divide", Chester Marler; he talks about the sheep herding and lots of other neat stuff. "Tales of a Western Mountaineer", C.E. Rusk.

Miners’ Ridge Trail:
Just above the cabin ruin, find the miners’ trail that climbs rightward. This will take you to the main adit, still open, very dangerous loose mine-dump terrain. Bright blue-green-turqouise copper minerals lying about. There are also 3 filled shafts or adits due N of the cabin ruin. See the 7.5’ USGS Suiattle Pass topo. All portable artifacts already stolen, but please take no souvenirs.

Cloudy Pass:
Night 4 at the pass, 6440'. Bugs (!) at dusk, dawn, but vanished with cool breeze at night (I had no bug net; this was our lowest camp). There is water just below the pass on either side. No significant snow, trail well-maintained, some beautiful rock work. One year, I humped water up here from Lyman Lake, only to find water flowing in the dry-looking meadow SW of Cloudy Peak (campsite there).
A better choice: climb high on the SW shoulder of Cloudy Pk, as high as you can go. There is a small bivvy site up there with jawdropping views of Glacier Peak, Dome, North Cascades, Bonanza, Chiwawas. Cloudy Pk is a walkup scramble except for a Class 3-4 dog-unfriendly chimney at the top. Remember, dogs are stupid about rockfall.

Lyman Lake:
I took a photo of the trail sign at the junction, didn’t read it, and took the wrong turn. Trail to upper Lyman looks like a social trail, compared to what you’re used to at this point.
Then I did it again.

Spider Gap:
NW side, snow from about 6500’ to top. Soft snow, might be difficult if hard, but runout seemed OK and not too steep. I used crampons for traction on the ascent, not really necessary. S side, all snow to the knob camp at the Spider Glacier terminus. NOTE: the place to hang out is not Spider Gap, but the level 6960’ ridge SE of it, less than 200’ lower than the gap, like a North Cascades version of Canyonlands overlooking the huge Phelps Ck cirque.
Somebody took a sh!t on the rocks right at the best viewpoint at Spider Gap, so I got to clean it up. C'mon, you're not gonna start a forest fire if you burn your buttwipe at 7200'. If you can't burn it (SAFELY) or pack it out, stay home, I'm tired of you. At that barren elevation, it can be best to do a "desert smear" on a south-facing rock and let the sun bake it -- but don't do this at one of the most popular spots in the sate, OK?

Phelps Creek:
At the first stream below Leroy Ck, note the concrete mining ruin, maybe the foundation for a Pelton wheel powerplant? I believe there are two adits on the other side of the river. I think the Glacier Peak Mines (on Plummer Mt) and the Red Mt Mine (Trinity) are discussed in "Discovering Washington’s Historic Mines", Oso Publishing, vol. 2 – the one I don’t have yet. Recommended.

Phelps Creek TH back to Little Giant:
A 4-6 mi. road walk, stretch those tired legs, kinda nice with a moon and a dog. One might stash a bike at Phelps Creek TH.

Beats a leash walk around the neighborhood.
Read full report with photos
Suiattle River, Miners Ridge trail #785 — Jul 04, 2011 — Norm
Overnight
Features: Wildflowers blooming
Issues: Blowdowns | Bridge out | Snow on trail | Bugs | Road to trailhead inaccessible
Expand report text Hide report text
This trip hiking distance was longer than anticipated. Adding about 6 more miles as the bridge at Do...
This trip hiking distance was longer than anticipated. Adding about 6 more miles as the bridge at Downey Creek is not drivable with a wooden walking bridge allowing access beyond to the Suiattle River road-end and trail (#784). Total hiking distance covered in two days was about 32 miles. Anyone going in to this area shoud be aware of the Suiattle River Rd #26 closure 11.5 miles from the Sauk River bridge. Without gate access, riding a bicycle the 10 miles to Downey Creek, and continuing on to Sulpher Creek campground, is a good option.
Because of the heavy snow-pack this year there is plenty of water along the Suiattle River trail and up to Miners Ridge.
Snow starts about 5000' on trail #785 and the trail is easy to follow until several hundred feet below the lookout. A GPS along with animal tracks allowed us to easily find the trail nearing the ridge.
Lots of wildflowers at lower elevation and excellent mountain views from Miners Ridge. If staying overnight, traction devices would be recommended if departing early when snow is hard. Otherwise wait a few hours after sunrise to depart. Recommend good boots and mountain-axe on the very steep, final approach to Miners Ridge. We decided not to visit Image Lake because it is probably still snow-covered, but definately worth another arduous trip.
http://www.flickr.com/[…]/
Read full report with photos
Railroad Creek, Lyman Lakes, Suiattle Pass, Miners Ridge — Oct 24, 2008 — jasonracey
Multi-night backpack
Features: Fall foliage
Issues: Snow on trail
Expand report text Hide report text
This was a 2-night, 3-day backpack up the Railroad Creek valley to Lyman Lake and back, with a day h...
This was a 2-night, 3-day backpack up the Railroad Creek valley to Lyman Lake and back, with a day hike to Miner's Ridge in the middle.

Snow started at the switchbacks up to Lyman Lake. The campsites at the lake are buried under 6 inches of powder. It was bitter cold at night. A good portion of the lake froze overnight, but the outlet remained open which is good as this is the only water source until the PCT junction between Suiattle Pass and Miner's Ridge.

I followed footsteps from Lyman Lake all the way to the junction to the Canyon Lake Trail on Miner's Ridge. These missed the spur that goes directly from Cloudy Pass to Suiattle Pass and instead dropped all the way to S. Fork Agnes Creek and then took the PCT up to Suiattle Pass. Not a big detour however.

The snow on Miner's Ridge was deeper, at least a foot or powder. I saw a lot of tracks on this trip but none were bear. They are gone for the winter.

On the way back the tracks took the spur directly from Suiattle Pass to Cloudy Pass. I followed these about halfway to Cloudy Pass when I encountered the person making them. She had stopped having lost the trail in snow. Luckily I'd been here a couple of months earlier so knew where to go and led us back to Cloudy Pass. Climbing through this rocky stretch in soft snow was very sketchy. I'm glad I had my ice axe just for balance.

The second night wasn't as cold because clouds moved in. I made it back to Holden in time for breakfast at 10 am. There I saw the hiker from the previous day. She had day hiked from Holden to Image Lake and back in one day - 36 miles RT!

It's about 5 hours from Holden to Lyman Lake. About 9 hours from Lyman Lake to Miner's Ridge and back. About 4.5 hours back to Holden - icy rocks were a pain on this leg. And the snow really slows you down.

http://www.flickr.com/jasonracey
Read full report with photos
Agnes Creek #2000,Miners Ridge #785,Railroad Creek #1256 — Aug 16, 2008 — marydave
Day hike
Issues: Bugs
Expand report text Hide report text
Five hot sunny days -- what better time to be in the mountains? After a ten hour car-boat-bus journ...

Five hot sunny days -- what better time to be in the mountains?

After a ten hour car-boat-bus journey from Seattle, we hit the trail at High Bridge at 3pm, and hiked the 5.5 miles to Five Mile Camp. We encountered a few hikers, most of whom were doing segments of the PCT, and had only one other tent at camp.

The second day we decided to plow on past Hemlock Camp, taking the newer PCT route that climbs to views on the east side of the valley. There are a couple of signed campsites in this section of trail, and we camped at the more southern one, below the trail in the traverse between the two side valleys. The site has beautiful views and access to water is a short schlep back up to the trail. However, but mosquitoes are plentiful above 5000 feet in the whole area.

On day three we continued to Suiattle Pass then made the 4+ mile trip west to Image Lake. The campsite ghetto below the lake consist of three exposed sites with a lovely view but not much water nearby, then a collection of lower, viewless sites in the trees closer to the lake outlet. We opted for the former, and had only one party of three nearby.

Day four we retraced to Suiattle Pass, continued on the hiker trail to Cloudy Pass (which would be tougher with a full pack in the other direction but was OK the way we went), then down past a very buggy Lyman Lake (Cloudy Pass had plenty of biters as well but a better view) and camped at Rebel Camp, a lovely camp at the edge of the woods about a mile above Hart Lake.

And the last day it was down to Holden in time to have the $7 lunch before the 1:45 bus to Lucerne and the Lady of the Lake II.

The trails are all in good shape and snow-free. There were a couple of minor blowdowns on the PCT, which had come down after the trail crew had come through, and the Railroad Creek trail is pretty brushy for an extended stretch between Lyman Lake and Rebel Camp, but I've seen worse.

Read full report with photos
Phelps Creek #1511,Spider Meadows #1511,Miners Ridge #785,Suiattle Pass #1279,Upper Suiattle River #798,Glacier Peak,Triad Creek #792,Buck Creek #1513,Railroad Creek #1256 — Sep 01, 2007 — Lucky Charlie
Day hike
Issues: Blowdowns | Bridge out | Washouts | Overgrown
Expand report text Hide report text
The loop trip from Phelps Creek over Spider Gap, past Lyman Lakes, over Cloudy and Suiattle Passes, ...

The loop trip from Phelps Creek over Spider Gap, past Lyman Lakes, over Cloudy and Suiattle Passes, and then return via Buck Pass and the Buck Creek Trail is an outstanding, well-trodden Glacier Wilderness sampler. Our route began and ended with this itinerary, but departed for three days of spectacular old growth, river crossings, and mountain climbing, including a rarely used, elegant line on Glacier Peak, via the Chocolate and Cool glaciers. This obvious, direct approach to Glacier Peak was first climbed in 1906! Since we had tried for months to find information on this approach, to no avail, we weren't quite sure what we would find in 2007.

Leaving Seattle at 7 AM, we drove US2 20 miles beyond Stevens Pass; turned left on Hwy 207 and navigated (county road 22) to the Chiwawa River Road. Twenty-two miles up the Chiwawa River Road, we turned right on Road 6211, The Phelps Creek trailhead is two miles up the road. We spotted a car at the Buck Creek trailhead, just two miles further up Chiwawa River Road.) Total elapsed drive time with car spotting, about 4 hrs.

The Phelps Creek trail (trail 1511) meanders up to and then through Spider Meadow. At the head of the meadow, climb sharply 1,100 ft on well maintained trail. Find camps and good water with spectacular views of the valley just before reaching the remnants of the Spider Glacier, about 6 miles and 3,000 ft.

There are reputed to be views down valley of Mt. Maude and Seven Fingered Jack. Weather was moving in, so we missed the scenery. We spent the night snug in our tents, listening to the sleet pelt our rain flies.

Next morning, we bundled up against the cold and wet. Our destination was Image Lake, eleven miles, 3,500 ft, and three passes away. No break in the weather this day! We made Spider Gap in a short hour, spent the second hour negotiating around the Upper Lyman Lakes - the route is obvious, on the east side of the lakes. We joined the main trail at the downstream end of Lyman Lake (trail 1256). The trail was closed to the right (towards Holden Village) because of the Domke Lake fire. No matter, we made quick work on this showery day over Cloudy and Suiattle passes (Trail 1279), and then imagined the wonderful views of Glacier Peak as we sauntered along the side of Miner's Ridge (trail 785).

Image Lake used to be crowded, but with access from the west cut off because of the closure of the Suiattle River Road, and the Pacific Crest Trail being re-routed off of Miner's Ridge, Image Lake is once again an idyllic spot. The weather broke for us, and Glacier Peak revealed itself in all its majesty. The bears came out to devour overripe blueberries. It even warmed up enough for us to swim the next morning, though everything wet remained frozen stiff until the sun warmed up the world in mid-morning. Those who awoke before the temperature climbed above freezing could shake the ice off their rain flies, saving the one hour of drying time that was needed by those whose icy cover melted in the rising sun. We lingered long over breakfast and our swim, regrouping from the difficult conditions of the previous day.

Our destination on day 3 was the Upper Suiattle River. We planned to follow trail 785 down off of Miner's Ridge on the old PCT, cross the Upper Suiattle River, and then camp somewhere upriver, accomplishing about nine miles. The Miner's Ridge look-out is still manned, at least during July and August. The look-out warned us that we would encounter 63 downed trees between the look-out and the river. Little did the look-out know that we would look back fondly on those 63 trees as being the easiest part of the next couple of days! Torrential winter storms have deeply affected the Upper Suiattle drainage. Creeks have been blown out into sheer-walled canyons; trails have not been logged out in decades and are now buried beneath layer upon layer of old growth blowdown. You can still follow the trails, but the further you go, the more challenging become the route finding physical demands. Some might consider it a shame that former trails have deteriorated into mere routes. For others, the Upper Suiattle drainage presents exciting route finding and stamina challenges. While penetrating the Upper Suiattle requires major effort, the effort is rewarded with outstanding old growth timber, creeks and ridges at their wildest, and wonderful views and routes to and through the high country.

Descending Miner's ridge, we walked out into the washed-out river channel at the first point where there was easy access to the riverbed. After about ten minutes of walking upriver our scouting was rewarded in short order, when we found a fine, large old growth log providing an excellent footbridge across the river. This log looks sturdy enough that it might survive a flood or two. Look for it!

Now on the West bank of the Suiattle, we opted to climb to the top of the ridge rather than claw through the flood debris washed up on the outside bend of the old river channel. A steep 50 ft vertical gain led to fairly open but otherwise trackless woods. Paralleling the river we walked upstream about a mile until we found the footpath of the old trail. Once on the trail, we followed it through easy timber (and abundant yellow jackets) to Dusty Creek. We camped that night near the mouth of Dusty creek. Nine mile, seven hour day, with a loss of elevation of about 3200 feet.

Day 4 would demand much of us, as we made our way up to timberline in Rusk Basin, between the Chocolate and Cool Glaciers. This would be an eight mile, eleven hour day, with 3,000 ft of elevation gain and a wild creek crossing. The Dusty Creek crossing was trivial, on a couple of small logs just upstream from the confluence of Dusty Creek with the Suiattle. On the far side of the creek, the location of the old Upper Suiattle Trail is obvious, on the top of an esker, or ridge formed between two glaciers. There is a lot of blowdown here, but the trail is straight and relatively level so the blowdowns were easy to negotiate. After four miles, we came to the old trail junction. There is still a sign. Left takes you down 400 feet to the Upper Suiattle River, and a wild crossing to the old Triad Creek Trail; right takes you another mile through increasingly wild country to the trail end at Chocolate Creek.

Chocolate Creek lies at the base of a blown-out glacial canyon, a zone of utter devastation a tenth of a mile wide with 200' walls of loose glacial till. From the point where the old trail disappears at the canyon wall, we made our way upstream about five minutes, looking for a defile or way down to the canyon bottom. We found a steep, vegetated slope, matched by a similar steep, vegetated slope directly across the creek on the far side. Down we went. No log at the bottom, but Chocolate Creek in August is tame enough (barely) to wade across. We passed a couple of cairns marking the bottom of the trail that lead up the other side of the canyon.

We clambered up the steep slope on the far side and found ourselves in a forest of game trails. Beckey says, ""Ascend easy timbered slopes S of Chocolate Creek. The broad lower spur narrows at about 4400 ft. It is best to hike along the ridge nose, but keep S of it at about 5650 ft to regain a saddle est. 6150 ft. Camp S of the saddle at 6150 ft in Rusk Basin."" We found this to be a difficult, steep ridge ascent at the end of a long day. Due to the profusion of yellow jackets, we referred to this prominent ridge as ""Hornet Ridge."" We kept close to south edge of the Chocolate Creek Canyon so that we wouldn't lose our bearing. We found good water but rather cramped camp sites at 6,150 feet, below a permanent snowfield, and where the streamline ridge route on Glacier Peak becomes obvious.

We summited Glacier Peak on day 5. Nine hours up and back with day packs via the Streamline Ridge and the Chocolate and Cool Glaciers, about 11 miles, 4600 ft. From Rusk Basin campsite, we ascended the obvious line to the apex of two ridges (7135 ft), and followed Streamline Ridge's crest W. Donning crampons, we stepped out onto the Chocolate Glacier, then easily picked our way around several crevasses. We crossed the Upper Cool, staying just below Guardian Rock, and joined the main route from Disappointment Cleaver on the south ridge. This is a very straightforward, elegant, easy way to summit Glacier Peak. Only 6 hours from high camp to the summit versus the 8 hour estimate in Beckey - we felt pretty good after what turned out to be the easiest day of the trip.

Day 6, descending from Rusk Basin, crossing the Upper Suiattle, then ascending to Buck Pass, is a long, difficult day. It took eleven hours with full packs, estimated distances: 10 miles, -3200ft, +2000 ft. We retraced our steps back down the ridge, across Chocolate Creek to the trail junction, and then descended to the Suiattle River. We spent two hours looking for a safe crossing. The river is too deep and wild for simple wading. We found a log, not as good as the previous log, but good enough, about 200 yards upriver from where the trail debouched onto the river. We strung a fixed line above the log for safety.

We were uncertain where we would find the old Triad Creek trail, but as soon as we crossed the river, we began to see signs. We headed down river only a few hundred feet before we began to find old tread and old cuts a little above the river - enough to give us some confidence. Just beyond the first vague log cuts the way was rough with a gigantic heavy blow down of several trees. Just past that jumble we picked up the trail tread again, only to lose it after another 100 feet or so. The lower part of this trail is more blowdown than clear trail, and we had a time of it finding our way through the mess.

We paid close attention to altitude and the probable location of the trail crossing of Triad Creek, and by that time had confidence that the day would reach a successful conclusion. The higher we climbed, the smaller the trees got and the easier it became to navigate through the blowdown. The next route finding challenge came much later in the day. Near Buck Pass, the trail tread disintegrates in a series of grassy, cluttered meadows full of marmot trails. Just keep on where you think the trail goes, continuing to climb up and out of the headwaters of Triad Creek, and you will be alright! We made Buck Pass just before sundown.

When we woke on the last day, we backtracked a few minutes to the pass itself for that glorious view across the Upper Suiattle to Glacier Peak. We picked out every nuance of our route and shot panoramic pictures to etch the view in our collective memories. Leaving the blowdown behind, we walked the nine miles out to the Chiwawa River Road in four hours (trail 1513).

A highlight of the walk out was encountering a WTA work party. We had seen their signs at the trailhead when we spotted the car. What a difference a bit of trail maintenance makes! The walk out was like walking on a sidewalk compared to what we had become used to in the last three days. We urged the trail maintenance crew to go over the pass to Triad Creek where there is a lot for them to do, but they demurred. They said we could sign on and do it ourselves next year. Now, there's a thought!

Read full report with photos
Location
Miners Ridge (#785)
North Cascades -- Suiattle River

Improve or add to this guidebook entry

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
Ingalls Creek

Ingalls Creek

Central Cascades

This trail is a true springtime gem for hikers and backpackers. Walk beside a raging whitewater creek swollen with snowmelt, enjoy the blooms of wildflowers and gaze up at the Stuart range.

Get Trail News

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

What's Happening
Hike the State Jun 06, 2012 It's like speed dating, for trails. 7 Regions, 7 Experts, 7 Minutes....Go!
More »