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WTA Hiking Guide

Selection of three titles from Mountaineers Books March 2010 Update: Select content from the Mountaineers Books' six "Day Hiking" guidebooks, Snowshoe Routes Washington and Desert Hikes Washington is now incorporated into the WTA Hiking Guide. Sales of the books from this website benefit WTA and help protect and maintain our trails.

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Locate hike descriptions and trip reports for more than 2700 hikes in Washington. Use hike name or region for most comprehensive results. And please consider adding missing descriptions and hike data to the Hiking Guide to help make this the most useful online resource for hiking in Washington!

Showing 2718 hikes
 
Dusty Lake
Average rating:
2.67
(3 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Wenatchee (Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife)
Whispering stands of cottonwoods shine against the brilliantly polarized eastern Washington blue sky, while cool blue pools reflect their graceful beauty.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 6.0
  • Elev. gain: 200 ft
  • High point: 1000 ft
Lakes, Wildflowers/Meadows, Wildlife
 
Table Mountain
Average rating:
4.00
(2 votes)
South Cascades (Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area)
Tamanous (#27), PCT (#2000)
Table Mountain's dramatic south face and pyramid profile beckon the adventurous hiker ready for a strenuous climb that is good training for summer summit attempts to come. The top features one of the best panoramas of the Columbia River Gorge, as well as views of Mt. St. Helens, Rainier, Hood and Adams. Carry a guidebook with good route information as there are a couple of options to the summit and signage may be lacking.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 16.0
  • Elev. gain: 3350 ft
  • High point: 3417 ft
Mountain views, Summits
 
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Potholes Wildlife Area - Dunes Ramble
Average rating:
3.00
(1 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Potholes Region (Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife)
This is desert hiking at its best--a lovely trail (a fisher trail turned into a great hiking trail) that bobs up and down over little dunes for miles. As you walk through the sand dune environment, enjoy expansive views to the south overlooking the heart of the Potholes area--miles and miles of water surrounded by miles and miles of sand dunes.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 4.0
  • High point: 1100 ft
Lakes, Wildflowers/Meadows, Wildlife
 
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Packer Creek
Average rating:
2.00
(1 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Spokane Area (Bureau of Land Management,Spokane)
Coal-black basalt bluffs and towering colonnades stand over the Packer Creek property. An intermittent lake nestled in the base of a coulee at the east side of the tract dries out in late summer, but throughout the winter and spring it provides a good home to waterfowl.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 4.0
  • Elev. gain: 100 ft
  • High point: 1800 ft
Wildlife
 
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Twin Lakes
Average rating:
5.00
(1 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Spokane Area (Bureau of Land Management, Spokane office)
This is a prime example of a desert hiking area that offers many hours of slow wandering and contemplation of the unique environment, even though the mileage isn't as great as some other areas. You'll find exciting geological formations and history as you explore the huge canyon/coulee that holds the Twin Lakes.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 2.0
  • Elev. gain: 325 ft
  • High point: 2200 ft
Lakes, Wildflowers/Meadows
 
Yakima Skyline Ridge
Average rating:
3.25
(4 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Yakima (Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife)
The L. T. Murray State Wildlife Recreation Area offers some of the best desert hiking in the state, and this far-eastern edge of the preserve boasts the best of the best.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 8.0
  • Elev. gain: 1000 ft
Rivers, Wildflowers/Meadows, Wildlife
 
White Bluffs - North Slope
Average rating:
3.25
(4 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Tri-Cities (Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife)
This area is a natural coulee. The sandy soil allows water to drain through soil and collect in the bottom of the coulee forming the Wahluke Branch-10 (WB-10) Wasteway. The wasteway water flows westward into the White Bluffs area. The gradual slope of this coulee has allowed the water to spread out and form several small ponds and cattail marshes. Russian olive and willow trees have been spreading rapidly, taking over some of the wetlands.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 4.0
Rivers, Wildflowers/Meadows, Wildlife
 
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Washtucna Coulee - Kahlotus Railroad Grade
Average rating:
4.00
(2 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Tri-Cities (Washington State Parks and Recreation)
The broad, deep chasm of Washtucna Coulee cuts through the sagebrush flats of the Snake River plateau country, providing a wonderful expose of the power of the Great Missoula Floods that carved Washington's coulees after the last great Ice Age.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 8.0
  • Elev. gain: 30 ft
Rivers, Wildflowers/Meadows, Wildlife
 
Trail Lake Coulee
Average rating:
2.33
(3 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Wenatchee (Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife)
Waterfowl flocking to the desert? You bet--when the desert is the coulee country of eastern Washington, with its plethora of lakes nestled in the rocky basins at the bottoms of the coulees.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 5.0
  • Elev. gain: 100 ft
Lakes, Wildflowers/Meadows, Wildlife
 
Steamboat Rock
Average rating:
4.50
(6 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Inland NW (Washington State Parks and Recreation)
Steamboat Rock is a massive "island" of a rock mountain floating on the shore of Banks Lake. The durable rock was left behind through all of the Great Missoula Floods and was later nearly surrounded by the waters diverted by the Grand Coulee Dam. The top of the rock is a broad, flat plateau offering stunning views across the scablands of coulee country.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 4.0
  • Elev. gain: 650 ft
  • High point: 2250 ft
Wildflowers/Meadows, Mountain views, Wildlife
 
Snake River - Columbia Plateau Trail
Average rating:
4.00
(7 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Tri-Cities (Washington State Parks and Recreation)
The 134-mile-long Columbia Plateau Trail (also called the Pasco/Fish Lake Trail) followed the old, historic route of the Spokane--Portland--Seattle Railroad from Pasco to Spokane. The trail today is a fabulous way to experience the human and natural history of this unique landscape.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 6.0
  • Elev. gain: 150 ft
  • High point: 750 ft
Rivers, Wildflowers/Meadows, Wildlife
 
Robinson Canyon - Ainsley Canyon
Average rating:
3.25
(4 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Yakima (Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife)
This is a gem of a hike, providing you easy access to the best of the best of the rich L. T. Murray State Wildlife Recreation Area.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 10.0
  • Elev. gain: 1000 ft
Wildflowers/Meadows, Wildlife
 
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Priest Rapids Wildlife Area
Average rating:
3.00
(2 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Tri-Cities (Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife)
From this small wildlife area, you'll enjoy views of Sentinel Gap. Along the route, you may also see bald eagles hunting over the sloughs south of the trailhead near the boat launch and red-tailed and Cooper's hawks hunting over the desert prairies.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 5.0
  • Elev. gain: 50 ft
Rivers, Wildflowers/Meadows, Wildlife
 
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Odessa Craters
Average rating:
3.50
(2 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Spokane Area (Bureau of Land Management, Spokane)
This area north of Odessa is dotted with geological oddities: craters left in the aftermath of the Great Missoula Floods. The craters range in appearance from a simple deep hole in the ground to a vast depression a quarter mile around--looking almost look like a meteor might have glanced across the steppe landscape.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 2.0
  • High point: 1700 ft
Wildflowers/Meadows, Wildlife
 
Northrup Canyon
Average rating:
3.00
(3 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Wenatchee (Washington State Parks and Recreation)
Bald eagles, icons of the mossy forests and deep rivers of the Pacific Coast, flock to this desert canyon each winter, and their presence is reason to visit in winter.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 3.0
  • Elev. gain: 384 ft
  • High point: 2134 ft
Lakes, Wildflowers/Meadows, Wildlife
 
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Mouth of the Tucannon
Average rating:
2.00
(2 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Spokane Area (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers)
The Tucannon River--one of the richest trout streams in Washington--flows out of the Wenaha--Tucannon Wilderness Area in heart of the Blue Mountains and rolls out the wildlife-rich Tucannon canyon before emptying into the broad waters of the Snake River near Lyons Ferry. The mouth of the Tucannon is a wonderfully rich wildlife delta, and the highlands above the river provide stunning views of both river canyons, as well as wildlife viewing along the high sagelands.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 4.0
  • Elev. gain: 350 ft
  • High point: 1000 ft
Rivers, Wildlife
 
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McNary National Wildlife Refuge
Average rating:
2.33
(3 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Tri-Cities (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service--McNary National Wildlife Refuge)
The McNary National Wildlife Refuge is primarily a waterfowl preserve. The refuge encompasses many flooded fields, sloughs, and inlets along the Columbia River. It also sprawls across farmlands that provide winter forage for migratory birds.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 2.0
  • High point: 350 ft
Rivers, Wildlife
 
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McGee Ranch
Average rating:
2.50
(2 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Tri-Cities (Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife)
This region south of the Columbia River sits at the northwesternmost part of the Hanford Reach. Priest Rapids Dam blocks the flow of the river just to the northwest, around a gentle bend in the river.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 5.0
Rivers, Wildflowers/Meadows, Wildlife
 
Kamiak Butte
Average rating:
3.50
(4 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Palouse (Whitman County Parks)
Kamiak Butte stands like an island in the rolling wheat fields of the Palouse country--not merely a physical island of rock jutting up above the fertile soils of the Palouse hills but also an "ecosystem island."
  • Roundtrip mi.: 3.5
  • Elev. gain: 900 ft
  • High point: 3600 ft
Wildflowers/Meadows, Mountain views, Summits, Wildlife
 
John Wayne Trail - Army West
Average rating:
4.00
(3 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Yakima (Washington State Parks and Recreation)
A sign-in permit is required due to the fact that the trail passes through the highly active U.S. Army's Yakima Training Center. You must not leave the trail. The John Wayne Trail (which rolls through the heart of the linear Iron Horse Trail State Park) follows the historic route of the Milwaukee Railroad from North Bend to the Columbia River (the trail will eventually be a true cross-state trail, but the stretch from the Columbia River to Idaho is still to be developed). This far eastern section of the completed trail explores some incredibly wild, pristine land--the designation of the surrounding lands as an Army training base actually helped preserve the area's wild beauty.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 8.0
  • Elev. gain: 500 ft
Wildflowers/Meadows, Wildlife
 
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John Wayne Trail - Army East
Average rating:
3.00
(2 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Yakima (Washington State Parks and Recreation)
The desert here appears to be carpeted with flowers come spring! The most common colorful ground cover includes numerous species of phlox, adding the colors of white, pink, and creamy yellow to the hills. Both Hooker's and Carey's balsamroot add brilliant golds and greens, and microsensis adds a shiny yellow to the tapestry.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 8.0
  • Elev. gain: 500 ft
  • High point: 1500 ft
Wildflowers/Meadows
 
Horsethief Butte
Average rating:
3.50
(2 votes)
South Cascades -- Columbia Gorge (Washington State Parks and Recreation)
Despite the name of the butte, this is a peaceful preserve for recreationists to explore.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 1.0
  • Elev. gain: 150 ft
  • High point: 500 ft
Rivers, Lakes, Wildflowers/Meadows, Wildlife
 
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Fishtrap Lake - Scroggie Loop
Average rating:
2.50
(2 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Spokane Area (Bureau of Land Management, Spokane)
The BLM only recently added this land parcel to the original Fishtrap Lake public land tract on the north side of the lake. To protect adjacent private land interests, fences have been placed along the south and west sides of this parcel to prevent you from wandering off the public lands. As you wander through the desert, you'll stumble across a small pond, which hosts an array of ducks and other water-fowl.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 3.0
  • Elev. gain: 126 ft
Lakes, Wildlife
 
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Douglas Creek Canyon - South
Average rating:
3.00
(3 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Wenatchee (Bureau of Land Management, Spokane)
The drive up glorious Moses Coulee alone is worth the trip to this area, even if you never leave your vehicle. If you do decide to stretch your legs, the payoff is all the more fantastic: desert prairies, steep canyons, crashing waterfalls, fields of flowers, aerial antics of birds large and small, and more pure natural splendor than you'd expect from a desert canyon.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 5.0
  • Elev. gain: 100 ft
  • High point: 1500 ft
Rivers, Wildflowers/Meadows, Wildlife
 
Cowiche Canyon
Average rating:
3.00
(5 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Yakima (Bureau of Land Management, Spokane)
A group of dedicated volunteers with the Cowiche Canyon Conservancy worked for years to develop this trail--or, rather, to un-develop this trail--because this old railroad right-of-way is now a path through a wild wonderland.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 6.0
  • Elev. gain: 100 ft
  • High point: 1500 ft
Wildflowers/Meadows, Wildlife
 
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Columbia Hills Natural Area Preserve
Average rating:
4.50
(2 votes)
South Cascades -- Columbia Gorge (Washington State Department of Natural Resources)
This natural preserve managed by the Washington State Department of Natural Resources (DNR) is a huge 6000-acre area along the top portion of the long rolling hills and ridges known as the Columbia Hills, extending from The Dalles Mountain area westward.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 6.0
  • Elev. gain: 1870 ft
Wildflowers/Meadows, Mountain views, Summits, Wildlife
 
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Chester Butte Wildlife Area
Average rating:
3.50
(2 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Wenatchee (Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife)
This area was one of the most recent additions to the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife's inventory of protected wildlife habitat lands. It is also one of the most important pieces of protected wildlife habitat in the state.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 5.0
  • Elev. gain: 209 ft
  • High point: 2394 ft
Wildflowers/Meadows, Wildlife
 
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Billy Clapp Lake
Average rating:
2.33
(3 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Wenatchee (Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife)
Billy Clapp Lake, more than 3 miles long, is a stunning body of water behind a shallow earthen dam.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 5.0
  • Elev. gain: 300 ft
  • High point: 1500 ft
Lakes, Waterfalls, Wildflowers/Meadows, Wildlife
 
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Big Flat Habitat Management Unit
Average rating:
3.33
(3 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Tri-Cities (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers)
This area was trammeled after the construction of the Ice Harbor Dam, but since 1997 the heart of this remote wildlife area has been restored to native health. The Corps of Engineers has hosted revegetation plantings to restore the native steppe plants to improve the wildlife habitat (and therefore wildlife populations). The route through the area takes advantage of the restoration efforts, exploring the rich foliage and wildlife habitat of the area along the pretty stretch of the Snake River--a section of Lake Sacajawea, the impoundment behind the Ice Harbor Dam. The first 2 miles of hiking along the road (closed to vehicles) lead directly to the top of the bluff overlooking the area. Wonderful views!
  • Roundtrip mi.: 6.0
Rivers, Wildflowers/Meadows, Wildlife
 
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Big Burn Canyon
Average rating:
3.33
(3 votes)
Eastern Washington -- Yakima (Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife)
The sprawling public land preserve of the Oak Creek State Wildlife Area offers some of Washington's best extended desert hiking. This route allows you to enjoy a mild day hike or a gentle backpacking trip.
  • Roundtrip mi.: 16.0
  • Elev. gain: 2850 ft
  • High point: 4850 ft
Wildlife
 
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