6 people found this report helpful
Left Bellingham at 8:00a and were to the trailhead by 9:40a. The last 2 miles of the forest road have quite a few pot holes, but in a sedan, you could easily make it up taking your time. Parking lot was mostly full with a few spots left (probably 20+ cars there). Bathrooms were stocked with TP and bins with extra TP in the setting of limited park ranger staff.
Trail to Park Butte Lookout is in great shape. First river crossing took a little rock hopping, but feet stayed dry and second part has a metal bridge over it. We came back down on the Scott Paul Trail, so not sure how much quicker these crossing were running later in the day.
Despite a full parking lot, the trail didn't feel busy. Passed groups here and there but not bad. No bugs. Flowers are blooming some. Once a group came down, we had the lookout to ourselves while we had some snacks.
On the way down we decided to detour and add a few miles by doing the Scott Paul Trail which is also in excellent shape and beautiful. The suspension bridge over the river is beautiful. One smaller section of a river you need to hop across.
In the end, it was 11.7 miles. We were back to the car by 1:40p and back home to Bellingham by 3:30p with a stop for snacks along the way.
28 people found this report helpful
Solo overnight at Park Butte/Railroad Grade (camped on the meadow underneath RR Grade, up from the Park Butte trail before it climbs up to the lookout). I hiked at sunset a little ways up RR Grade to get my bearings on how to access it from my campsite (some trial and error, but there is a trail!) and then again at sunrise all the way to Sandy Camp, which was pretty spectacular.
To look down on a glacier - majestic and mighty, the mountain, and for such little relative effort or expertise. RR Grade allows the casual day hiker a taste of real mountaineering. I saw a major outfit with a garage-sized tent and fuel for days set up at Sandy Camp, and 3 small tents perched on the ridge above.
Park Butte Trail: fantastic, except for the first stream crossing. Hopefully by now you've heard - the first river crossing, usually super tame, isn't! However, the current looks a lot stronger than it is - the water is frothy and brown and scary looking, but I (short, middle-aged woman) managed just fine with water up to my shins. Recommend poles for balance and poking around for solid footing. Don't bother looking for a dry place - your feet will get wet!
RR Grade trail: equally fantastic. My first time some years ago conditions were cold and windy, and I got nervous feeling like I was one slip from falling over that edge. This time conditions were mellow, and I was able to talk my brain down from thinking there's danger. It's a really solid, safe trail with only one small rock scramble until Sandy Camp.
User trails: plentiful, and most of them go somewhere. Not all, but most.
Berries. YES. Huge and plentiful and everywhere. Everywhere. So. Many. Berries.
Wildlife: in the morning, just after sunrise, the marmots were out in the rocks below RR Grade! They put on a fashion show - I took a ridiculous number of photos of them. I also disturbed several grouse.
People. Yes. Lots. This is not an undiscovered spot. Although I did have some solitude on a Sunday night (the large party of young backpackers took their singing and hallooing up to Park Butte, and there was only one other backpacker on RR Grade) and Monday morning from about 6-9am on RR Grade, on Monday coming down I passed countless day hikers and backpackers coming up.
Water - not a lot, but some. There's a still stream the trail crosses a little ways past the RRGrade cutoff, and another it crosses in the meadow. The "trail to water" from RR Grade did in fact lead to water, slightly better, colder, and clearer than the other streams. Sandy Camp has two tarns. Recommend filtration/purification for all.
This was my first time coming up after everything melted out, and I was shocked at how dry it was - and how different the landscape looks without snow. I love Park Butte under snow cover, but I also loved the berries!
Oh yeah - and the road sucks. It's worse than I remembered. Nothing my old honda sedan couldn't handle, but annoying - the kind of potholes you think you can drive around and then end up getting stuck in another. Slow and steady, and drive like someone reckless is coming around the next bend!
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Just wanted to mention that there's a new stream that popped up on this hike. Did it last year about this time and there's a part of the hike that historically has just been a boulder/rock field to cross but this year there was a stream over most of it. Easy to cross early in the day (like 9am) especially with water proof boots, but coming back it was raging. The only way to get across without having to go WAY up the rocks was to go through. We weren't the only ones struggling to find a way across while keeping your feet dry. So HIGHLY recommend poles and water proof shoes! I only took pics on the way out, forgot on the way back bc I was concentrating so hard on making it across without falling!
4 people found this report helpful
Arrived at Ridley Creek Trailhead at 8:00 am. We were the only car there, which I suspected would be the case due to previous reports of the bridge being out. A short 1/3 mile takes you down to the river, where indeed! the bridge is out. In the morning hours, we were able to ford the river upstream from the old bridge crossing where it's a bit wider.
Ridley Creek Trail is overgrown in a few places but overall in fantastic shape. Ripe blueberries were plentiful once we reached treeline. We connected to Bell Pass Trail at Mazama Camp and continued on to Park Butte Lookout.
The river crossing was higher in the afternoon with the heat of the day and we used a log to cross roughly ~1/4 mile upstream from the old bridge crossing. It would be possible to use this log and not get your feet wet if you have a higher tolerance for bushwhacking than I.