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Mount Ellinor

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An Olympic classic-bag this peak for one of the most supreme views this side of Hood Canal. From the jagged summit peer deep into the heart of the Olympic wilderness or out across Lake Cushman and Puget Sound to the Cascades spanning the eastern horizon. All of this comes at a price, however-the trail to Ellinor is steep and tough.

Yes, there is an upper trailhead that shortens this hike by 3 miles and knocks 900 feet of elevation off. But why start there? The whole idea is to go hiking, not get to the mountain the shortest way possible. By beginning on the lower trailhead you get a chance to warm up for a very steep ascent, and you get to enjoy one of the finest old-growth groves this side of Copper Creek. Plus you get 1.5 miles of quiet hiking, avoiding the crowds flocking to the upper trailhead.

Begin by immediately entering a cool forest of old-growth hemlock and Douglas-fir. As the trail skirts the edges of old clear-cuts, teaser views promise what lies ahead. In about 0.5 mile the trail from Big Creek comes in from the left (the long, long way up Ellinor). Ascending steadily, the trail winds 1 mile up a heavily forested ridge to meet the upper trail at 3900 feet. The trail right descends 400 feet to meet the upper trailhead in 0.3 mile.

Now, hopefully warmed up and limber, prepare for some serious work. The incline gets steeper while the terrain gets rougher. At 2.5 miles (4600 feet) trees yield to meadows and views begin. But to quote the late not-so-great 1970s rock band, BTO, "B-b-baby, you ain't seen nothing yet!"

The winter climbing route veers right. Continue left, ascending open meadows and rocky gardens. Years ago, going beyond this point was a tricky scramble. But thanks to the hard work of the Mount Rose Volunteer Trail Crew a trail was carved into the steep mountain face, making the ascent much safer and more manageable.

Continue huffing and puffing, traversing a very steep slope. Now just a short distance from your objective, clamber north up a rocky ridge until finally, at 3.1 miles from and nearly two-thirds of a mile above the lower trailhead, reach Ellinor's magnificent summit. Wipe your brow, gulp some water, and prepare to be wowed. One mile directly below is Lake Cushman, rippling waters shining right back at you. Lots of saltwater twinkles below too, with Puget Sound and Hood Canal clearly visible. The Cascades fill the eastern horizon, with Rainier dominating the show. Percolating St. Helens is visible to the south.

Turn your attention north and westward to a diorama of jagged Olympic peaks. Washington, Pershing, and Stone, like a lineup of generals, flank Ellinor to the north. Lincoln, Cruiser, Gladys, and Copper guard her to the west. Gaze down into the vertigo-inducing Jefferson Creek valley and spot an inviting but isolated pond. You can sit on this summit for hours learning much about western Washington's geography.
Driving Directions:

From Shelton travel north on US 101 for 15 miles to Hoodsport. Turn left (west) onto State Route 119 and proceed 9.3 miles to a T intersection with Forest Road 24. Turn right onto graveled FR 24, proceed 1.6 miles, and turn left onto FR 2419. After 4.8 miles come to the lower trailhead. The upper trailhead can be reached by continuing on FR 2419 for 1.6 miles to a junction. Turn left on FR 2419-014 and follow it 1 mile to the upper trailhead.

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Recent Trip Reports

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There are 184 trip reports for this hike. See all trip reports for this hike.
Mount Ellinor — May 28, 2011 — schuette4
Day hike
Issues: Snow on trail | Road to trailhead inaccessible
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Road to Mt. Ellinor blocked by snow at lower trailhead. walked road for 20 minutes then cut left on...
Road to Mt. Ellinor blocked by snow at lower trailhead. walked road for 20 minutes then cut left on road, crossed creek and bushwacked up hill to upper trailhead. still 3-4 feet of snow at upper trailhead parking lot. consistent snow all the way - firmer in the woods and then soft (post holing) in the basin and up the chute. consolidated snow pack. no view - snowing lightly at 4,000 feet. nice glissading coming down - ice axe is a must.
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Mount Ellinor — May 20, 2011 — NWBT
Day hike
Issues: Snow on trail | Road to trailhead inaccessible
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Road to lower trail head blocked by snow a half mile below. Heavy, unconsolidated snow pack from 3,...
Road to lower trail head blocked by snow a half mile below. Heavy, unconsolidated snow pack from 3,000 ft. to the summit. Bring an ice axe for descent and be careful plunge stepping. Sinking into thighs on descent. The road to the upper trail head still has 3 to 4 feet of snow.
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Mount Ellinor — Apr 20, 2011 — Jim
Day hike
Issues: Snow on trail
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FS Road 2419 blocked by snow from about 3.5 miles from start of FS 2419; i.e., have to walk remainin...
FS Road 2419 blocked by snow from about 3.5 miles from start of FS 2419; i.e., have to walk remaining distance to lower or upper trailheads. Heavy snow cover from lower trailhead (shortcut) to upper trail. Might bring crampons and poles.
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Mount Ellinor — Apr 08, 2011 — Tom
Day hike
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Went up Mt. Ellinor yesterday (5/9): Update on conditions: • Road 2419 in good shape and blocked ...
Went up Mt. Ellinor yesterday (5/9): Update on conditions:
• Road 2419 in good shape and blocked by snow at about ½ mile from lower TH at about 2100ft. Took us ½ hr to hike up to the lower TH – seems like enough snow that it will take some time for this to be gone
• From Lower TH, best option is to continue up road about ½ to 1/3 mile to cut-off on left just before cross stream and road turns to the right. Look uphill and you’ll see steps – these go steeply uphill directly to the upper TH and saves about 1 mile or road walking or about one-half of the regular in-the-woods trail from the lower to the upper. Note, there is a trail there but the steps don’t – right now – follow the trail until about 350ft higher where intersect with this trail about 200ft below upper TH.
• Upper TH has about 2-3 feet of snow on it so except significant time until that is open. There is now no toilet at upper TH – it was a concrete structure so don’t know why it was taken down or status of any rebuild
• Trail – from upper in good shape, easy to follow, on the ridge in the woods a little hard-packed and slippery but traverse over to the lower chute in good shape and boot track starting to form. We took snowshoes and didn’t use – stashed on road before heading to upper TH but then used once got back down to the road to get to cars since significant corn snow by mid-afternoon.
• Chute – at bottom of chute, we were in a white-out with about 30-40ft of visibility but elected to continue up to top. There is a boot track but we had to improve it – not too hard to do. Good steps all the way up. Didn’t use crampons. Avy issues – we saw some big chunks in a couple of places – more like big snowballs but couldn’t see up to the walls of the chutes. The moisture in the snow goes pretty deep and I would think mostly consolidated but uncertain how much up on the walls still has to come down after good warming. Glissade – there is a very minimal glissade track (not like other years) from top of chute to the bottom. We elected to down-climb the top and then further to the big rock area where we glissaded and it was controllable – down to the bottom of the chute.
• Chute to summit – we were in a more significant white-out at the top of the chute so elected not to go for the summit (another 300ft gained) so can’t report but there was a good boot track heading off in that direction.
• Big Creek Campground – check entrance and gated with closed sign – no further information on when opens.
• Overall – still tons of snow there – about 3-4 feet on traverse and more in chute so it will be there for a long time and access to the lower TH should open-up soon if the weather ever gets warm but upper TH will be more delayed – probably into June I’d say. Given blockage is now about 4500 feet to top so will take more time and energy but views worth it.
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Mount Ellinor — Jan 11, 2011 — Idaho Native
Day hike
Issues: Blowdowns | Snow on trail
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The trail was free of snow for the first 1/2 mile, but then it got ugly. It was still easy to follo...
The trail was free of snow for the first 1/2 mile, but then it got ugly. It was still easy to follow because of all of the footprints, but it was complete snow from there to the summit. The snow was well-packed, and I hiked in regular boots without crampons. You'll have to take the winter route up the snow chute, and although it was short (only 1.6 miles from trail head to summit from the upper trail head) it was very steep and slow. It's fairly safe, though. Nice long runout at the bottom if you were to stumble. The summit was covered in heavy fog, but if not there would have been incredible views. There were some mountain goats hanging out on top, too. The USFS was hanging a warning sign as I started my hike about a recent "aggressive encounter" with a goat on top. Definitely worth keeping your distance, as I ran into an adult and her little one near the summit, and she was fairly aggressive.

The trip down was great. There's a nice long glissade chute to follow for about .6 miles from the summit down to the woodline. A blast! Look out for a few rocks poking out, though.

Roundtrip Time: 2 hours (90 minutes to summit; 23 minutes back to the trail head thanks to the glissade)
Roundrip Distance: 3 miles
Recommended Equipment: ice ax, trekking pole, or walking stick
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HoodCanal&Rainier.JPG
Hood Canal and Rainier. Courtesy of Christopher Cote.
Location
Mount Ellinor (#812)
Olympics -- East
Hood Canal Ranger District
Statistics
Roundtrip 6.2 miles
Elevation Gain 3200 ft
Highest Point 5944 ft
Features
Old growth
Wildflowers/Meadows
Mountain views
Summits
Wildlife
Ridges/passes
User info
Northwest Forest Pass required
Guidebooks & Maps
Day Hiking: Olympic Peninsula (Romano - Mountaineers Books)
Hiking Guide to Washington Geology (Carson & Babcock - Keokee) p.45-50
Green Trails Mt Steel No. 167 and The Brothers No. 168
Custom Correct Mount Skokomish-Lake Cushman

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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 MarkerMount Ellinor
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