Duckabush River
May 28, 2012
by
Nutmeg
—
last modified
Jun 13, 2012 03:35 PM
- Type of Outing
- Multi-night backpack
- Read More in our Hiking Guide
- Hike: Duckabush River
- Region: Olympics -- East
- Agency: Olympic Nation Forest, Hood Canal Ranger District, 360-765-2200
- Trails: Duckabush River (#803)
- Avg Rating: 3.31
- Why You Should Go Now
- Wildflowers blooming
- Be Aware Of
- Blowdowns
- Clogged drainage
- Overgrown
- Mud/Rockslide
- Washouts
- Water on trail
- Bugs
Ken hikes the section of trail between the two sets of switchbacks going up Big Hump. USFS crew cleared this.
The Duckabush trail is closed for very good reason. The burn area starts just past 2-Mile (River) Camp. Charred snags and huge fir and cedar supported only by burned roots with the soil gone from underneath present significant danger. Loose rock and branches were coming down with no wind at times. Our WTA crew wore hardhats at all times. The problem is, things seem just fine until they aren't, and one loose rock or canopy wind can take out a tottering snag. I'm not generally a doom and gloom kind of gal, but unless you are with an approved work crew, please stay off this trail! I hope my pics at: http://www.flickr.com/[…]/ are enough to quell your curiosity until this wonderful trail re-opens.
If personal safety is inadequate motivation, the Forest Service is tracking scofflaws who choose to hike this trail despite the warnings, so prepare for a ticket if you're reckless enough to disregard the trail closure. And please, please, if you choose to have a fire backcountry, put it out COLD! The river was only a few feet away from the human fire that burned nearly 1,300 acres of beautiful forest. Despite the burn, sedum, trillium, paintbrush, monkey flower, false Solomon's seal, strawberry, rhodies (first part of trail only) and salmonberry were blooming in protected damp spots.
If personal safety is inadequate motivation, the Forest Service is tracking scofflaws who choose to hike this trail despite the warnings, so prepare for a ticket if you're reckless enough to disregard the trail closure. And please, please, if you choose to have a fire backcountry, put it out COLD! The river was only a few feet away from the human fire that burned nearly 1,300 acres of beautiful forest. Despite the burn, sedum, trillium, paintbrush, monkey flower, false Solomon's seal, strawberry, rhodies (first part of trail only) and salmonberry were blooming in protected damp spots.
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