You are here: Home » Find a Hike » Hiking Guide » Necklace Valley

Necklace Valley

Last modified Oct 23, 2009 12:45 PM
Contributors: Cascade Liberation Organization, austineats
Beautiful Jade Lake in the Necklace Valley, Alpine Lakes Wilderness. Photo by Shahid Durrani.

A demanding hike, to be sure. Necklace Valley makes a wonderful 2-3 night backpack trip for hearty hikers, and rewards with a string of cool alpine lakes named for precious gems that you can swim or fish in, or just camp beside.

The trail begins gently along the East Fork Foss River, traversing through a beautiful, naturally-regenerated forest that had been railroad logged in the 1930s. The first five miles gain only 600 feet. Lowland forest wildflowers will keep your senses busy - look for Canadian dogwood, wild ginger, and trillium. This pleasant stroll abruptly ends when you come to the crossing of the East Fork Foss River. There is an established campsite here, and this is a good turn-around for a day hike of the East Fork Foss.

Depending on the condition of the footlog and the amount of snowmelt in the river below, the crossing can be a little scary. Hold on to the handwire [all handrails in good condition 9/2008 and the log appears flood-resistant]. After the crossing, the hike changes considerably as it becomes a steep, grueling climb, gaining 2400 feet in just 3 miles until you reach the first of the gems, Jade Lake. It's nice and peaceful, and there are established campsites here, but you will be amply rewarded if you push on to Emerald or Locket Lake. Be prepared for insects.

Enjoy a few days exploring up here, scrambling over granite, breathing in the fragrant mountain heather, and relaxing in the shade of forest. No campfires are allowed, so be sure and pack your backcountry stove.

From the cabin, a trail climbs, then drops west to Al Lake. There is a maze of social trails in this area.

The upper end of this hanging valley accesses La Bohn Lakes and the standard route on Mt. Hinman. This is most pleasant as a snow ascent in early season, but the snow chute to the gap requires an ice axe. Once the snow is gone, Hinman is very rocky. In late season, follow the left edge of the talus as high as possible, then work left on a discernible scramble track that generally follows the right side of the La Bohn Lakes' outfall.

Necklace Valley also accesses the Tank/Foehn Lakes areas. Ascend the very rocky, cairned medial moraine up this huge, recently glaciated cirque. Might be easiest in early season on snow. Please treat the fragile high country very carefully.

For an adventurous hike one may continue from Tank Lakes in a generally south-westerly direction towards Iron Cap Mountain. Fred Beckey shows this route as the Alpine Lakes High Route (see Cascade Alpine Guide, #1, second edition, page 188). One may circumvent ICM to the north or go over it (both routes have their pros and cons and neither are simple). At ones discretion, descend to either Otter Lake or Big Heart Lake on fisherman's trails. From either one may gain the West Fork of the Foss River. This trail will join Road #68 just one mile south of where your car is parked at the east fork trailhead! Note that your mileage will increase to 22-26 miles with ~6500 in elevation gain.

Improve or add to this guidebook entry

Recent Trip Reports

Hiked here recently? Submit a trip report!
There are 88 trip reports for this hike. See all trip reports for this hike.
Necklace Valley — Jun 02, 2009 — thefredricksons
Day hike
Features: Wildflowers blooming
Issues: Blowdowns | Mudholes | Washouts | Snow on trail | Bugs
Expand report text Hide report text
Wendy and I hiked in about 4 1/2 miles. Lots of trees down requiring to climb over or under. Some...
Wendy and I hiked in about 4 1/2 miles. Lots of trees down requiring to climb over or under. Some snow on the trail about 2/3 the way in. About a mile from the camp site on the river before the climb to Jade Lake, there is a serious slide with rock, snow, tree, etc, which takes out about 40 yards of the the trail. We found it and went on for about a half hour, then decided to turn back. We only ran into one other person and that was a few miles from the trail head as we were headed back.
Lots of some flying insects, no bears..lots of fun for an 8 miler round trip.
Ill try to down load pictures but I think they are too big.
Read full report
West Fork Foss River, Necklace Valley, Alpine LAkes High Route — Sep 13, 2008 — Cascade Liberation Organization
Multi-night backpack
Issues: Bridge out | Mudholes | Washouts | Bugs
Expand report text Hide report text
West Fork Foss R #1064 Foss Lakes High Route Necklace Valley #1062 9/13-15/08 perfect weather, salm, sunny, brisk...
West Fork Foss R #1064
Foss Lakes High Route
Necklace Valley #1062
9/13-15/08
perfect weather, salm, sunny, brisk east wind at night

You can do this loop in 2 days, but more fun in 3. If the weather is clear, you won’t want to hurry in the high country. I parked at Necklace Valley and hiked the road to the West Fork. You want the 7.5’ Big Snow Quad; a 15’ map is inadequate in poor visibility.

West Fork Foss R #1064
==========
Note: early season posters, please include detailed info on the river crossing, as this is the crux of this route and that’s what your readers will need to know. The Alpine (Foss) Lakes High Route is more pleasant when it’s under snow, but I avoided it earlier this year because I was unsure of the river crossing and postings were not very informative. Until the river is bridged, people need to know if this can be crossed at high water.

The first part of this trail is the worst: 1/4 mile or more of rocky overflow channel, a big washout and a river crossing that would be difficult (impossible?) at high water. Don’t let this stop you. It gets much better.

I was able to clear a lot of blowdown by simply moving it out of the way – stuff people had been clambering over for years, apparently. Duh. If you shove a big log or rock off the trail, make sure there’s no switchback with people below. A collapsible hand saw works wonders. It’s better now.

In the Copper-Big Heart section, a lot of recent, beautiful rockwork, puncheon and turnpike speed the trail. Nice work, thanks! Much effort has been put into this trail.


Foss Lakes High Route Sept. 2008
==========
Unseasonally hot weather after recent rain plus this year’s heavy snowpack meant unseasonally abundant bugs. Mosquitoes were vicious at Chetwoot Lk. outlet and bothersome on a hot Sunday at Tank Lakes, where I hung my food to keep it away from the insects. They must’ve been murderous in Necklace Valley! I had no tent or DEET and was saved by high camping and nighttime east(!) winds.

From Chetwoot, go high, straight east up the talus, then traverse left under cliffs. One could camp on the first rib (N of Pt 6077), flat with a stagnant but filterable pond. Much more snow than last year at this time. If it’s very dry and you must use the Iron Cap Lake water, bring a silt filter and water bag. Remarkably, there were snow patches high on the N. ridge of Iron Cap (utterly dry 9/2007). I bivvied there near 6200’ in clear warm weather with a full moon. Weather permitting, carry water up high and enjoy the view.

The traverse to Iron Cap Gap is straightforward… in good visibility. Last year, in poor visibility and rain, it wasn’t. West-to-east, climb up to about 5850’, then drop down to a flattish spot about 5500’, then traverse SSE. The route is cairned, perhaps over-enthusiastically.


Necklace Valley #1062
==========
For the first several miles, this trail is a cruise. Past the river crossing, it is not, climbing steeply into the hanging valley. The bad news: one of my favorite trails is admittedly rocky, rooty, muddy, and steep. Needs a lot of work. The good news: it’s had some. Thanks! No blowdown (except 1 monster), and some of the worst spots have been fixed. Brand-new handrail at the upper log crossing, yay! Some beautiful rockwork. Moist, the upper valley is notorious for insects. The cabin has a plaque with a punctuation error charmingly cast in bronze. The upper cirque has immense solid granite walls – there were huge glaciers here.

A year ago, the huckleberries were a serious impediment to travel. This year: none. The poor bears must be starving.

Ascent to either La Bohn Lakes or Tank Lakes would be more pleasant in early season on snow (the chute up to La Bohn Lakes requires an ice axe; I’m not sure about the Tank Lakes route). Late season, very rocky: if you like rock-hopping, you’ll love the ascent to Tank Lakes, which follows the medial moraine, and this rockpile doesn’t look like it’s been inactive for long. It’s a huge, barren, desolate, magnificent cirque. If you can get up to Tank or La Bohn Lakes in one day, do so and avoid the bugs down below, but you’ll need an early start and save energy for that last long push. It is worth it. Ascent of Hinman best in early season as a snow climb with ice axe (only really needed to get to La Bohn Lakes); late season, it's a rockpile.

Tank Lakes is a beautiful topographic oddity: granite (granodiorite, quartz diorite, whatever) in layered terraces with vertical jointing planes. Climbing up from below, where you can’t see the water, it’s oddly reminiscent of the SE Utah desert, but greys instead of reds, granite instead of sandstone, slickrock sculpted by glaciers instead of wind and water, subalpine fir instead of juniper, stunted by altitude instead of aridity. Ascend to the highest terrace, where you’d least expect it, and poof! a perfectly clear, shallow lake (nobody told it that lakes belong in the bottom of basins). Weird.

Please don’t even think of coming up here if you’re going to do stupid stuff like build fires, make toy cairns, camp (or walk) on vegetation, or move rocks around. If you move a rock from where Nature left it, that sticks out like a sore thumb. This is very delicate country. Please don’t even leave footprints.


Day 1
6:55 AM Leave Necklace Valley trailhead
7:45 AM Leave W Fk Foss trailhead, 11 cars
8:30 AM Crossed river (very low water, easy)
12:15 PM Leave Copper Lake after break
3:00 PM Leave Big Heart Lake
5:00 PM Chetwoot Lake (bugs fierce). Go east, high up on talus.
             Bivvy high on ledges, N ridge of Iron Cap Mtn.

Day 2 (a leisurely play day)
11:30 AM Leave ridge bivvy after long loitering on Iron Cap summit
 1:30 PM Leave Iron Cap Gap after break
2:30 PM Tank Lakes area. Playtime.

Day 3
11:00 AM Ready to leave Tank Lakes area in Amble Mode
noon Leave Dutch Miller Gap overlook
1:30 PM Leave Tank Lakes area
1:45 PM Really leave Tank Lakes area
2:10 PM Leave Tank Lakes divide (you get the idea)
3:20 PM upper Necklace Valley basin/cirque
4:45 PM Leave Jade Lake
8:20 PM Necklace Valley trailhead

Read full report with photos
Necklace Valley, Tank Lakes — Sep 10, 2008 — wolfwoman
Multi-night backpack
Issues: Mudholes | Water on trail | Bugs
Expand report text Hide report text
Accompanying me on this trip were Yoyo and Phlemy. The trail to Necklace Valley is pretty much as reported previously,...
Accompanying me on this trip were Yoyo and Phlemy. The trail to Necklace Valley is pretty much as reported previously, but maybe not as horrendous as some think. There are muddy, rooty, and rocky sections in the last three miles, but there is lots of good trail too. However, it is steep most of the way. The stream crossings are all good with stable logs and handrails. Pretty posh in my opinion! However, we were plagued by clouds of mosquitos! God, will they ever leave this year? The trailhead had many cars and we saw tons of people coming in and only a few going out. Still, we didn't see hardly any camps in the valley. There must be lots of cubby holes to put your tent in. Next day, we moved camp to Tank Lakes. This is an exceptional area. Very scenic and not overused yet. I'll not give any info on how to find it as I'd like to keep it that way. Those who are willing to find the way and trudge up the way trail will no doubt respect it and treat it well. This area is very much like the Enchantments, but without the crowds and fantastic views of Chimney Rock, Overcoat, and Summit Chief, along with lots of other peaks. Phlemy and Yoyo took off to scramble Otter Point and the next day, Hinman, but I had to languish in camp nursing my persistent foot problems. Oh well, I can't think of a better spot to spend the day with the lakes all to myself except for a very curious Pine Marten to keep me company. The report from my buddies was that La Bohn Gap is very tough and somewhat risky to descend. Hinman was a pleasant rock scramble until the summit ridge when it turned into a mess of shifting rock plates. Both were exhausted when they returned, but we managed to stay up late that night looking at the huge sky full of stars while listening to Phlemy play her violin while Yoyo did some contra dancing on the smooth granite slabs. Very nice.
Read full report
Jack Creek #1558,Klonaqua Lake #1563,Meadow Creek #1559,French Creek #1595,Necklace Valley #1062,La Bohn Gap,Dutch Miller Gap #1030,Dutch Miller Gap #1362,Pacific Crest (Alpine Lakes) #2000,Robin Lakes #1376.1,Snowall Cradle Lake #1560,Williams — Sep 08, 2008 — DickandDoug
Day hike
Expand report text Hide report text
West to East Crossing of Alpine Lakes Wilderness August 28 to Sept. 5 8/28 Necklace Valley/East Fork Foss River. Two of us...

West to East Crossing of Alpine Lakes Wilderness

August 28 to Sept. 5

8/28 Necklace Valley/East Fork Foss River. Two of us entered in light drizzle via Necklace Valley trail, camping at Jade Lake. Buggy when no breeze or rain. Wet brush overhanging trail at thigh level.

8/29 LaBohn Lakes. Continued up to head of valley and up way trail to LaBohn Lakes. Well cairned. Take talus slide upward along left edge to near its top. Cairns mark start of trail through trees to left and up. Camped at lower lake. Rain in evening, then clearing and ice on tent fly in morning. Decent cairns up and south to LaBohn Gap.

8/30 LaBohn Gap, Williams Lake, Dutch Miller Gap, Waptus River. Passed through LaBohn Gap and down to Chain Lakes, and on down below. Cairns less frequent, several variations marked, some snow remaining in bottom of valley, hard and thick. Found top of way trail down to Williams Lake at head of gully opening into talus slope below. Trail veers off to left of gully into trees and does not descend talus. Quite a bit of blowdown on this way trail, with fresh work arounds, careful trail spotting. Many bugs at Williams Lake. Good trail down to junction with Middle Fork Snoqualmie and up to Dutch Miller Gap. Trail down to Ivanhoe Lake is good. Bridge crushed below Ivanhoe, badly slanted, unsuitable for horses or easy walking, but passable. Further down, trail is a bit brushy, very noticable when wet. One creek crossing before intersection with PCT needed poles to avoid fording.

8/31 PCT from Waptus River to Cathedral Pass. Good trail, many people, blueberries ripe in a couple places, and no where else on the entire trip.

9/1 Cathedral Pass to Robin Lakes Creek crossings on PCT are fine.

Trial up to Tuck and Robin Lakes clearly marked, well cairned up to Robin Lakes, but need to pay attention or its easy to lose. Bugs not too bad at Robin Lakes. Frost and freezing overnight, but still bugs in morning. Three mountain goats visited our camp in morning.

9/2 Cross country up to ridge of Granite Peak, and south along eastern side of ridge. Descended to unnamed round lake halfway down to Klonaqua Lakes, mostly on heather slopes and talus, connecting ledges to avoid seriously cliffy gullies. Check 7.5 minute Mt Daniels topo for best looking terrain. From unnamed lake, at lower edge and right of outlet, we found a cairn and faint fisherman's trail leading down a ways and then left into a rock slot weakness through first band of cliffs below lake. The route through the second band of cliffs much lower was right of the main stream (facing down)and well right of the initial slot descent. Eventually reached the upper lake shore at its head in a grassy area. Faint fishermans trail (mostly bushwack)leads clockwise around northern shore to campsite on isthmus between the two lakes. Summary of day: Difficult cross country routefinding through potentially hazardous terrain. No ropes or ice ax needed but care and experience. May be other better routes down. About 7 hours from Lower Robin Lake including much map reading, looking, exploring several sections without packs, and enjoying the views.

9/3 Klonaqua Lakes/French Ck/Snowall Ck Followed fishermans trail (good though) from isthmus to Bob Lake, and along outlet of Bob Lake down and left to join official Klonaqua Lakes trail left of outlet creek. Trail has a number of trees across it and is brushy lower down. Crossing of Klonaqua Ck at junction with French Ck trail easy on rocks without ford now. Descended French Ck trail to junction with Snowall Crk trail. Ford of French Ck not difficult at this time, but hiker ford doesn't lead to trail on the other side which is well south of where Snowall Ck joins French Ck. The obvious shallow ford is north of Snowall Ck. Signage, etc could be better. Bushwacked to find trail.

Snowall Ck trail is good turning to brushy further up. Camped in meadow west of Cradle Pass. Not too buggy. Trail easy to lose in some meadows, with horse and elk variations, mud and overgrowth.



9/4 Cradle Lake, Meadow Ck, Jack Ck. Trail up over Cradle Pass and down to Cradle Lk is generally good. Beautiful area with great views of Stuart Pass, Mt Stuart from NW and north side of Ingall's Peak. Unfortunately, 5-6 small forest fires were burning in upper Jack Ck basin, above where Meadow Ck joins Jack Ck. These obstructed our planned exit over Stuart Pass to N Fork of Teanaway. Trail down to Meadow Ck was good, as was Meadow Ck trail from Snowall/Cradle Lake trail junction to junction with Jack Ck trail. Temporary sign at Jack Ck announced closure of Jack Cr Trail and Van Epps Pass Trail south of Meadow Ck. due to fires. (Caused by lightning several weeks earlier we later discovered.) So we descended Jack Ck. to Icicle River Road. Trail generally good. No cars, no people at trailhead or campgrounds at Rock Island or Chatter Ck. Camped at Chatter Ck Campground, not understanding why all was so deserted.

9/5 Icicle River Road Got up early, and began hiking down road to east. After a mile, the river began running over the road and we understood why there were no cars or people. A one lane fairly new dirt road workaround led about half a mile around the washout. It was closed to traffic and had lots of boot prints. At the new road end, two empty cars, two portapotties, and a good view of the river running off the road for the last time. ( We later learned a June 8, 2008 landslide provoked by rain/snow melt came down the northern facing slope into the river, diverting it onto the road on the northern side of the old river bed.) We very luckily picked up a ride almost immediately from a newly arrived car and had a real breakfast in Leavenworth. We were prepared to take the bus home, leaving Leavenworth at 1:10pm for Seattle, arriving 4:30pm, but an anxious family member came to get us instead.

This is a classic crossing of the Alpine Lakes Wilderness, linking a number of very scenic lakes, passes and lightly used trails. Except along the PCT over Labor Day Weekend, we saw a total of 8 people, all but two day hikers. Unsettled weather and the Icicle Ck Road washout may have helped us here. We went 48 hours west of PCT seeing no one, and 72 hours east of PCT seeing no one. The difficult cross country section above Klonaqua Lakes could be avoided by descending into the Cle Elum River from Cathedral Pass and ascending over Paddy-Go-Easy Pass to French Ck and Meadow Ck Pass. This has the disadvantage of touching a road, missing Tuck and Robin Lakes, Klonaqua Lakes and Cradle Lake. The exit over Stuart Pass would be most ideal, and we intend to go back to finish our trip properly.

Read full report
Necklace Valley #1062,La Bohn Gap — Aug 30, 2008 — GaliWalker
Day hike
Issues: Mudholes | Water on trail
Expand report text Hide report text
Aug 30, 2008: La Bohn Gap The past few weeks I have been working my way westwards in the Mount...

Aug 30, 2008: La Bohn Gap

The past few weeks I have been working my way westwards in the Mount Daniel-Mount Hinman region: Pea Soup Lake, then the West Foss River valley to Iron Cap Lake...now, La Bohn Lakes completes the trilogy. It is an amazing area and La Bohn Gap is a spectacular setting: craggy cliff faces, beautiful lakes and tarns, waterfalls and heather slopes dotting pristine white granite.

Last year, I had looked over at La Bohn Gap as I climbed up to Tank Lakes across the valley. Clouds had been boiling through the gap and spilling over into Necklace Valley. The setting had looked spectacular, so I had vowed to return. I began the hike from the Necklace Valley trailhead at 4:00am, hiking for the first hour and a half by headlamp. The brush was laden with fat droplets of water, just begging to be released at the slightest touch. As the light brightened my spirits quailed as I saw heavy mist hanging in the narrowing valley: “Oh no! Not another rainy hike.” Well, rainy it was going to be...and then some.

The first 5mi through quite pretty lush-green forest (which I enjoyed on the way back, when I could see it) were easy. Then, as I crossed the East Fork Foss River, it was a difficult next 3mi; wet roots, slick rocks and copious amounts of mud on a steep grade were all over me like a cheap suit. Finally, at the 8mi mark I reached peaceful Jade Lake, the first of the Necklace Valley lakes.

I decompressed for a bit and then headed up to the beautiful basin at the head of the valley. Looming high above me was La Bohn Gap and, just like the previous time, clouds hung in the saddle. Streams and talus fields cut through the basin meadow. I picked my way through the meadow and then began to ascend steeply up the talus strewn slopes. Necklace Valley, still sleeping peacefully under dark and angry skies was soon arrayed below me with Lake Ilswoot, far off in the distance, a brilliant splash of blue. Across the valley the Tank Lakes region rekindled some fond memories though these were soon forgotten as I gawked at La Bohn Gap and the crags of La Bohn Peak.

Lots more work and finally I was in the heavenly La Bohn Lakes basin. The rain abated for a bit and even a few fleeting (very fleeting) patches of blue skies appeared - it seemed that God was with me and all was right with the world. I spent 2 hours wandering around the lakes, before heading over towards Chain Lakes. Unfortunately, around this time it started to snow (quite heavily at times, though it wasn’t sticking) so that was that. I turned around, picked my way carefully down the steep descent back into Necklace Valley, and then even more carefully along the muddy and completely saturated trail back to the car.

Additional Photos: http://www.flickr.com/photos/shahiddurrani/sets/72157607047254400

Cumulative stats:

- Distance: ~22mi

- Elevation gain: 5,500ft

- Hiking time: 14hrs

- Total trip time: 17.5hrs

Trail conditions:

- Extremely muddy conditions; slick rocks and roots made for slow going.

- No bugs.

- Snowing, though not sticking, at La Bohn Gap; Yup, this is summer in the Northwest.

- Rained for most of the hike; brush alongside the trail was completely wet, so I never took my rain-gear off.

Read full report with photos
Location
Necklace Valley (#1062)
Central Cascades -- Stevens Pass - East
Mount Baker Snoqualmie National Forest, Skykomish Ranger District
3.14 out of 5
Based on 7 votes
Roundtrip 18.0 miles
Elevation Gain 3400 ft
Highest Point 5000 ft
Features
Rivers
Lakes
Old growth
Wildflowers/Meadows
Mountain views
Established campsites
Guidebooks & Maps
55 Hikes around Stevens Pass, Rick McGuire and Ira Spring, Mountaineers Books
Green Trails Map # 175 Skykomish and #176 Stevens Pass
USGS 7.5' Big Snow Mtn.

Improve or add to this guidebook entry

Driving Directions
(47.6586, -121.2920) Open in new window
Red Marker Necklace Valley
47.6586239125 -121.291980743
Take Highway 2 about 1.8 miles east of the town of Snohomish. Turn south onto the Foss River Road 68. The clearly marked parking lot and trailhead will be on your left at 4.2 miles.
Document Actions
  • Email this page
  • Print this
  • Share
Email Newsletter
Monthly trail news, hiking trips and advocacy.
Log in


Forgot your login name or password?
New user?

 

What's Happening
Volunteer Appreciation - Vancouver Nov 22, 2009 WTA would like to thank our southernmost volunteers for another great year!
Volunteer Appreciation - Olympic Peninsula Dec 05, 2009 WTA's annual Volunteer Appreciation event for our Olympic Peninsula volunteers!
Volunteer Appreciation - Spokane Dec 12, 2009 WTA would like to thank our easternmost volunteers for a great year of trail work!
Upcoming events…
 
powered by Plone | site by Groundwire and served with clean energy