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Mine Road Trail, Neiderprum Trail — Jun. 1, 2018

North Cascades > Mountain Loop Highway
4 photos
Lucy
WTA Member
200
Beware of: trail conditions

10 people found this report helpful

 

The Mine Road trail outside Darrington is a 4 mile lovely, green and mossy trail. After walking on a level 2 mile path you reach the expected mine that intrigues the mind of times past. Going pass this mine you walk along a creek and views of the mountains open up. In the summer it might be fun to see how far you can explore along the creek when the water level is low. After taking a brief rest, my hiking buddy and I walked back to the junction on the trail that heads up to Neiderprum. We took the steep trail hoping to walk as far as we could, at least to the snow level. That didn't happen. We went approximately 1.5 miles up the trail. The way was steep. Ferns covered most of the forest grounds. There were several large downed trees that we had to cross over or under to continue along the trail. There was one precarious spot that involved a red rocky slide area that was extremely slippery. I slipped on a loose rock on the way up and my friend slipped on the way down. It would be extremely helpful to have a secured rope placed in this spot to avoid dangerous slips. Past this area, views opened up to the valley and the nearby mountain peaks. We forged ahead. The trail got narrow, rocky and bushy. Not dangerous but slow going. There were a few ribbons on trees pointing us in the right direction toward Whitehorse. After about another 0.5 miles the hike become tedious and we decided to turn back. Clouds had set in and any further views were unlikely. We were curious as to how close we were to reaching the snow. While it was difficult to stop, we felt good to at least go as far as we did. We saw new sights and we had a good strenuous hike along the way. 

We saw no one on the trail until we reached our car on the way out. A lot of solitude on this weekday hike.

Neiderprum Trail — Dec. 10, 2017

North Cascades > Mountain Loop Highway
1 photo
djk11
WTA Member
Beware of: trail conditions

3 people found this report helpful

 

Two of us headed up this trail today. Late start, about 11am. The road has plenty of potholes, but my small car made it no problem. A very short drive from 530. Only one other car.

The first bit of the trail is quickly getting eroded into the creek. You can skirt around it so far. The walk on the old road to get to the trail was no problem. Almost missed the trail turnoff, there's a small wooden sign. The trail register hasn't seen any use for 2 weeks.

The trail is steep as advertised. There is one crumbly but passable washout before reaching the large slide area. We stopped at the slide and ate lunch, looking at Darrington and up at Whitehorse through the strange December Los Angeles smoke. We called it quits here as the slide was the first part of the trail we found with any snow on it, and, like the rest of it, it's quite steep.

Neiderprum Trail — Jul. 28, 2017

North Cascades > Mountain Loop Highway
Beware of: bugs, trail conditions
  • Ripe berries
  • Hiked with a dog

1 person found this report helpful

 

Hiked neiderprum trail with my dog yesterday overall not a bad hike, when i go i always look for some peace and quite and there was much to be found. Trail was overgrown so I had to do some bushwhacking in places. Didnt make it to the destination as once you get to the clearing at the top viewing over darlington the trail gets completely overgrown. I didnt tell anyone I was hiking today so thought it best to turn around. 

Neiderprum Trail — Jul. 11, 2017

North Cascades > Mountain Loop Highway
Beware of: bugs, trail conditions

1 person found this report helpful

 
Came back out here today with my friend Jaime. We fell about 1/4 - 1/3 of a mile short of the "flat" part we read about that would make a good place to stop and rest before heading back down. It wasn't the fact that the trail narrowed excessively, it was the nettles that were along it. We accomplished what we set out to do. We were at the top, we could see Whitehorse and the valley below. There was only one sketchy slide area. It was doable, but proceed with caution. There were downed trees across the trail that were easy to get over. Once we were back under the canopy of the trees the bugs tapered off.

Whitehorse Mountain, Neiderprum Trail — Jun. 16, 2017

North Cascades > Mountain Loop Highway
4 photos + video
Beware of: snow, trail conditions

27 people found this report helpful

 

Two day hike/climb of Whitehorse. One of the iconic peaks of the Mountain Loop region. It is impossible to miss Whitehorse from Hwy 530 as it stands high above the town of Darrington.

The trail starts out easily enough on an old closed gravel road bed that is slowly being eroded by a stream. Narrow in places because of overgrown bushes it is easy to follow and leads you a mile or so to the actual start of the trail at a reader board and trail register.

The start of the trail is the start of the switchbacks. Still easy to follow but overgrown and with plenty of blown down trees. The elevation gain is steady and unrelenting with somewhere around 26-30 switchbacks. The switchbacks and the discernible trail come to end but there is still plenty of overgrown forest to climb through. From here you just head up the slope. Devils club provides tempting if immediately regrettable handholds. Occasional pieces of colored tape help reassure you that you're on the right track but there is no marked trail. We went fairly long intervals without seeing pieces of tape but just keep heading up. It is steep and you'll probably be using your hands in places.

Eventually you'll progress up to a more thinly forested area, this is where the  snow started for us and would continue for the rest of the trip. We circled right around the first rock face we came to, get above it and begin the traverse towards Lone Tree Pass. Upon reaching the pass follow the ridge for a bit before descending the far side. We probably got off the correct"trail" here because we descended about 500 feet, most of the way to the frozen over pond. This was another steep forested section both coming and going. On our way towards the mountain we broke out the rope and rappelled a short section.

From the pond we started gaining back ground as you traverse and ascend south east towards high pass. We climbed into the clouds as we reached high pass and set up camp.

We woke up to the shining sun in the morning and some awesome views. With the cloud layer thousands of feet below us we had clear views to surrounding peaks and the summit of Whitehorse. Taking our packs with just water, snacks and climbing gear we traversed and climbed the obvious route up to the summit block. This late in the year there was no chance of staying on snow up to the summit itself with a very large moat all the way around the rock. I know there is supposed to be a class 3 scramble route up the rock but we were unable to see anything resembling that. We chose the easiest looking crack system and roped up.

My friend, a more experienced rock climber than I, led the pitch. We had not planned on a climb like this so had brought only a couple ice screws (useless) and 1 set of nuts for protection. We climbed while wearing our mountaineering boots. He got one small nut in about halfway up but was unprotected for most of the climb. A few large cams would have been best to protect the pitch. I followed up the approximately 25m pitch and stepped onto the summit ridge. A short scramble to the highest point and we stood on top in the sun with the clouds still well below us. I found and marked the summit register. We had clear views of all of the high peaks stretching from Baker down to Rainier. The lookout on top of Three fingers was just barely visible to my naked eye across the valley.

(If you're planning on going up the mountain could you take a few 4x6 notebook sheets to add to the register, the sheets there are full. Thanks) 

After a rest and some photos we rappelled down to our packs and began the trip back to our tent. We followed our approach route for the most part with small deviations for what looked like slightly less steep terrain. The descent from the top of the forest down to the highest switchback was pretty miserable.

The slopes we crossed were mostly 35-40 degrees with the slope right below the summit being the steepest at 45-50. There is no trail for most of the route so be comfortable navigating. We both had compasses, I had a map and GPS and my friend had screen shots of other peoples trail descriptions. The GPS was useful for seeing fine contour lines and picking out the path of least resistance. I think we spent approximately 7.5 hours moving to reach the summit and about 4.5 on the descent. Total distance was about 15.7 miles with 7400 feet climbed to reach the summit, we lost and had to regain about 500 after Lone Tree Pass.