3 people found this report helpful
A quick 3 day, 2 night jaunt with a friend was a great get away for the 4th of July. Day one from the visitors center out the flat 11 miles to Lewis Meadow was a beautiful start. Hammocks up and a sweet sleep in the meadow, then a day hike that took us to the High Ho bridge. My friend was fighting a cold and headed back while I went on a bit intending to get to Martin Creek. A few downed trees and a wash out, along with a recurring ankle injury, sent me back but not without a great climb and serene day. 15 miles total for day 2 was another sweet celebration. Day 3 we hiked out rather early as the hordes of hikers flew into the meadow the evening before. They were not at all quite or even aware of their impact on the folks close by. Before our zen was zapped, we planned our escape. Adventures on any holiday bring more social interaction and are fine when expectations are adjusted. 37+ miles in 3 days enveloped in the rainforest by a beautiful river...that's my version of exercising and celebrating independence!
4 people found this report helpful
We did this hike over 3 days, staying for 2 nights at Olympus Guard Station campground, 9 miles from the trailhead. The trail is virtually flat and runs along the Hoh River through a very impressive and beautiful Pacific rainforest. The first part is especially impressive, with huge old-growth cedars and hemlocks covered with verdant moss strands that can be up to 2 ft long and ferns almost as high as human height. The campground was lovely, with some sites in the forest by a stream and others on the riverbank. There was a bear wire, so we didn't carry a bear canister.
The second day was a day-hike with light packs, a very long one at 19 miles. The trail is flat until 12.4-Mile campsite, and then it starts to gain elevation, becoming steeper after Elk Lake campsite. It runs through the forest all the way to the Glacier Meadows campsite, so there isn't much variety. One sort of "fun" part is the washout just before Glacier Meadows where hikers have to descent with the aid of rope and ladder. Thankfully we only had day packs; it would've been much harder to do with a large backpack on!
After Glacier Meadows, you come to a fork with a sigh that says "Lateral Moraine", pointing left, and Terminal Moraine, pointing right. I recommend to take the left trail since it leads to an massively awesome viewpoint of the entire glacier, while the right trail takes you to the tongue of the glacier. The sight of the Blue Glacieris worth all the trouble of getting there; it is truly maginficent.
3 people found this report helpful
Had a great 3 night backpacking trek. I would definitely recommend doing a bear can instead of counting on a bear wire since almost half of them at the camp sites have fallen halfway down the trees and cannot be counted on. Beautiful, worth it, and also probably closer to 20 miles one way, not 17.5 miles. ENJOY!
26 people found this report helpful
3-day climb via Blue Glacier on 6/15-17 with a group of 8.
https://www.gaiagps.com/datasummary/track/ca94f534ce3fa4ea64878e44a5c2da55/
https://photos.app.goo.gl/p1KmAm41tuCMG6fFA
Approach
Glacier meadows camp
Ascent
Descent
https://www.summitpost.org/mount-olympus/150427
https://www.mountaineers.org/activities/routes-places/mount-olympus-blue-glacier
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RT distance: 44mi
Elevation gain: 7,400ft
High point: 7,965ft (West summit)
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Hoh river TH (578')
Five mile island (800', 5mi from TH)
Happy Four Camp (800', 5.7mi from TH)
Guard Station (948', 9mi from TH)
Lewis Meadows (10mi from TH)
Hoh river bridge (1,400', 13.2mi from TH)
Elk lake (2,500', 15mi from TH)
Glacier Meadows (4,200', 17.5mi from TH)
(Group of 8)
2 stoves, 4 8oz Isopro fuel cans, 3 squeeze filters, a light rock rack, 60m * 9mm single rope, 30m * 8mm twin rope, 1 shovel.
We had 5 people on 60m rope and 3 on 30m in the glacier.
Packing suggestion: make sure water filters are quickly accessible as you'll stop a few times to refill.
Crevasse rescue (z-pulley), rock belay & rappel, glacier climb, camping, approach shoes/trail runner, bug spray & hat.
Day 1
TH-camp (+3,622’, 17.5mi, 10.5hrs)
0730 Hoh river TH
0945 Happy four camp
1115 Guard station
1500 Elk lake
1800 Glacier meadows
Day 2
Camp-summit-camp (+/-3,765’, 8-10mi, 9.5hrs camp-summit, 16.5hrs camp2camp)
0345 Left camp
0430 Lateral moraine (before downclimbing)
0530 Blue glacier, roped up
0830 Snow dome
1130 Saddle between false and true summit
1200 Base of rock pitch
1330 Summitted!
1400 Rappelled off summit
1430 Base of rock pitch
1630 Snow dome
1840 Blue glacier (before climbing up moraine, unroped)
1940 Lateral moraine
2020 Glacier meadows
Day 3
Camp-TH (-3,622’, 17.5mi, 9hrs)
0730 Left camp
1215 Guard station
1630 Hoh river TH
1630 Hoh river TH
https://www.nps.gov/olym/planyourvisit/wilderness-reservations.htm
http://forecast.weather.gov/MapClick.php?lat=47.860515557&lon=-123.934820294
17 people found this report helpful
Some snow fields to cross on the trail between Glacier Meadows campsites and the Lateral Moraine viewing point. Many Avalanche Lillies in bloom above tree line. Entire trail is in good condition, except there are some downed trees on trail between Elk Lake and Glacier Meadows. Just a few bugs encountered during the entire 5 day hike. The most noticeable wildlife are the birds, singing their songs from sunup to sundown. Lots of hikers until 5 mile camp, then hardly saw anyone. You won't see Mt Olympus until the last few steps up to the top of the lateral moraine - pretty exciting! A beautiful hike!