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We decided to see if we could get to Deer and Sand Lakes from the White Pass north trailhead. The trail was fine for the first mile and then we hit snow, and by the time we got close to Deer Lake, we were walking on nothing but snow. People had been shortcutting across a big snow covered meadow, so we had to do a bit of scouting to find Deer Lake. The lake is mostly snowcovered and so is the ground around the lake. Tired of walking/plunge stepping/slipping on snow, we headed on back to the trailhead. The snow at Deer Lake was 1 to 5 feet deep, and looks like it will be around for a while.
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I saw a short weather window, where I thought I could get in a skishoe (snow show/alpine ski touring) trip around the Chinook Pass Loop. Total trip took me 56 hours.
Started at the closed gate for Mount Rainier National Park on Hwk 123 mile post 2.6 at 6:50am, I hiked up the highway to the junction with Eastside Trail. Jumped on the trail and hiked up to about Deer Creek. Snow was about 1-2" deep and slushy on the trail, no need for traction or flotation. I made the 12 miles to Deer creek in just over 4 hours.
Just past Deer Creek Camp the snow got deep enough for me to put on my Altai Hok skis. From there I turned up toward Cayuse Pass, and things got more serious. The snow was very deep, and the trail was very difficult to follow. I've previously done this hike in the summer, and so I recognized most of the area. Navigation required GPS and basically "following the route" by feel. I finally made it to the crossing of Hwy 123 around Cayuse pass at 3:40pm... the 3 miles took me over 4.5 hours. Another 4 hours to make it to Tipsoo Lakes where I camped in for a couple hours.
I shoved off for day two around 3 am... the snow was deep and it was very slow going. It took me 6 hours to travel the 3 miles to Dewey Lakes. The PCT was a little easier to follow, but GPS and good route finding skills were still a must. After a very long day, I finally made it to the Laughingwater Creek Trail turn-off around 2am. I skied down a couple miles till I reached a lower elevation and found a good spot to bivvy for a couple hours.
Started day three at first light, the snow was still thick and deep until about a mile past Three Lakes Camp and about 4,000ft of elevation. By then the trail was only covered in slush and so I took of my skis and hiked the remainder of the trail. I made it back to my car by 3pm.
As I was packing up my car a Park Ranger came by and said he was glad to see me, since a storm was coming in and he was worried about me. I told him I had avoided the wind and snow they got at Paradise the night before, and was in good shape the entire trip.
The drive home was definitely the most harrowing part of the adventure.
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We just had the most beautiful backpacking trip -- another part of the PCT (we're sectioning sections)! We met some nice thru-hikers along our way -- all fellows from Europe -- Sweden, Germany, England and Scotland. Several of them took the time to chat a bit. We also met a number of section hikers and enjoyed their company, as well. There actually weren't that many on the trail . . . mostly today, coming up the trail from Chinook for day hiking. We were thrilled that the bugs weren't so bad, that we stayed in beautiful private campsites (it was four of us and our sweet dog), and the weather was spectacular. (Although the nights were rather chilly . . . dropped down into the 40s so have warm sleepwear!) We camped our first night at an unnamed creek, and called "Creek Camp" about 12 miles in (there's a wooden bridge over the creek), and the second night we stayed at Anderson Lake (had a sweet swim there). It was a quick hike out this morning to Chinook Pass where we had planted a car. Our friends, Fradio & Fern, and my husband Water Dog and I (Splits) had a great time hiking the trail with our golden retriever, Lily. (Shall we call her "Point" for always being in the front? or???? Happy backpacking!
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We did a 5-day section of the PCT starting at White Pass and heading north. Some of the party came out at Chinook Pass on Day 3, and the rest carried on for two more days to exit at the Norse Peak Trailhead (near Crystal Mountain), where we stationed a car.
Overview: The trail is easy to follow (well-marked), well-graded, dusty, and had a variety of scenery to keep us feeling satiated. We shared the trail with many through-hikers, and had one character spend the night in our campsite. Berries were at a peak- ripe, delicious and plentiful. Wildflowers were past their prime, but we could see the remnants of what must have been fields popping with color. Luckily bugs were also past their peak, and we only had a random mosquito or bee try to follow us along. We passed a variety of lakes, mudholes, ponds, and streams. We thoroughly enjoyed the unfolding scenery as we approached Chinook Pass. We had the Half Mile PCT app for the first 3 days, and found it very helpful for tracking mileage and finding landmarks, lakes, spur trails and campsites. Wildfires are questionable in the Norse Peak area, so check the PCT closures site and the Incident Information System for updates.
Day 1: White Pass to creek campsite (marked on the Half Mile PCT app as WACS2305 large creek, wooden bridge, several campsites) at mile 2304.8. Besides the ponds and lakes, there was no water running in the creeks up to this point (not even outflow streams from the lakes). The trail is almost completely flat for this section, going in and out of forest, passing a multitude of ponds, mudholes and lakes. The most scenic campsites were at Deer Lake, Pipe Lake and Snow Lake. Sand Lake and Buesch Lake were decent, too. Our campsite at the wooden bridge was large and flat, and the water was running brisk and cold. We stopped at Sand Lake for the eclipse! Total mileage ~12.
Day 2: Creek campsite to Two Lakes. This day starts with a gentle descent towards Bumping Creek. Water is flowing again, and the forest is luscious. The Bumping Creek was cold, but not too hard to cross with water shoes and poles (one of us braved the log, but the rest opted to ford). We met Dora the through-hiker on the other side and chatted briefly before starting the climb up Crag Mountain. The views get better as you rise above Fish, Buck and Crag Lake. The trail became quite exposed and hot in the early afternoon, so we rested for lunch in the shade before reaching a great view point just before entering the Rainier NP boundary. You get your first views of Rainier here, and we loved watching the white cap come in and out of view behind trees. Also the tip of St. Helens was barely viewable through the haze. We carried on, munching berries along the way, passed One Lake on the right, and found the signed trail for Two Lakes. It's a steep .3 mile down to the lake, with two nice waterfront campsites. The creek is dry, so we filtered from the lake, also enjoying a nice swim. Through-hikers had to go around to the campsite beyond the meadow, one coming down by headlamp around 9pm. Bats came out at dusk. ~8 miles
Day 3: Two Lakes to Chinook Pass. This day boasted the best overall views. We could see Mt Rainier, St Helens, and Mt Adams as we coasted around the slope toward American Lake. The trail was a little up, then mostly flat and down, passing by lovely Anderson Lake and eventually the most scenic Dewey Lake. This lake boasts the turquoise color we look for in alpine lakes, and had many swimmable beaches, lake-side trail, and nice campsites. We met our day-hiking friends there who brought us a restock and took our backpacking couple out from Chinook Pass. The Dewey Lake trail to Chinook Pass had blooming flowers, scenic valley views, and a lovely little un-named lake as you descend to the pass. Highway 410 was closed heading east just beyond the trailhead for fires. After the restock, the three of us remaining headed on to Sheep Lake (after seeing a bear down in the meadow below 410!). The last 1.5 miles seemed long after an already epic day. Sheep Lake was quaint, and had some nice flat (and dusty) campsites. Fog rolled in that night. From Two Lakes ~8 miles to Chinook, then another 1.5 miles to Sheep Lake.
Day 4: Sheep Lake to Basin Lake. We climbed up from Sheep Lake to Sourdough Gap. We were socked in with clouds, so couldn't see any views. We did see one marmot and 3 through-hikers! After the gap, we coasted down, and then across a slope sighting Placer Lake (and another bear down in lake basin!) and on over to Bear Gap (wind whistling and cold clouds moving through). We could see nothing through the fog, so continued on ridge-top and slope-walks, over Pickhandle Ridge and Panhandle Pass, saw a few firefighters having lunch at the Union Creek junction, and carried on (up and flat) until Scout Pass. Here you cross from western slope to east-facing slope, and the views began to clear. The terrain looks more arid along this ridge overlooking the Norse Peak Wilderness. We could barely see smoke beyond the ridge behind Basin Lake. Not having seen or heard anything about trail closures, we headed on to camp at Basin Lake. The sign for Basin Lake is laying in the scree, so we missed it the first time around and had to backtrack. The trail down to Basin is steep, dusty, and not well-graded. I swear it's longer than the signed 1/4 mile (the book says 1/2)! We saw lots of goat remnants, and were surprised to not see any actual goats (except for a few up on Norse Peak). There is an epic campsite on the far end of the lake with a wooden bench and lots of flat space. The outflow stream is a great water source right beside the campsite. That evening we heard planes and helicopters beyond the ridge managing the fire, and even had a helicopter scoop water out of Basin Lake several times right in front of us! Were we supposed to evacuate?? No way to know. The wind was blowing away and the air was clear of smoke that night, so we opted to stay. Cold winds that evening. 8-9 miles
Day 5: Basin Lake to Norse Peak trailhead. That morning we had frost on our packs. We headed out early and watched smoke roll in as we left the lake basin. When we reached the PCT, heavy smoke was pouring into the area, and we were glad to be leaving! Our Green Trails map was slightly different than the printed map from Half Mile, and we were unable to find the first junction with the Norse Peak Trail that was apparently supposed to be heading west at the Crow Lake Junction. We headed on to Barnard Saddle to find unmarked trail 1161 heading off the PCT by Goat Lake. The trail looked well-used and was the only significant trail heading west/southwest from that area. We descended, noting Castle Rock above and Goat Lake below, so knew it was the right trail. There was an area of washed-out trail on the scree that had us taking off packs and scrambling to get across. Beyond the obvious switchback at about 1.8 miles, we passed a horse camp and started heading down. Soon enough we hit the junction with Norse Peak Trail (1191) and knew we were on track! Then we headed down, down, down to the trailhead by 1:30pm. All in a day's work! ~8 miles.