Derek and I did a great hike this morning. Jan (aka Granny) and I stopped by Derek and Jill’s house about 7am and then Derek and I took off, each in his own car, leaving Granny to enjoy some time with the grandkids.
We both went to the Sno Point parking lot off I-90 Exit 27 and I left my car there, put my gear into Derek’s car, and we drove to the area of Rattlesnake Lake, via Exit 32.
Our plan was to traverse the entire length of the Rattlesnake Mountain trail. And it worked. We racked up about 10.75 miles altogether (including a turn I missed right at the beginning – we had to backtrack a bit) and had a terrific time.
We made it to the upper Rattlesnake Ledge in almost exactly 1 hour, a steep 2.3 miles, beating my best time by 10 minutes. We finished in about 4 hours and 15 minutes, and felt we had done a super workout.
The trail, across the entire length of the mountain is in good shape.
There are views along the way:
And there is a section that, in recent years, has been clear cut:
Ugly, but on the other hand, the missing trees open up some great views.
A great morning, excellent workout, and just plain fun.
I got out today to the west side of Rattlesnake Mountain and went up to Stan’s Overlook.
Rattlesnake is not exactly a massively tall peak and I didn’t even go as high as you can on the mountain (about 3,500 feet). But with the clouds so low today, I was able to have the fun of looking north from beneath the clouds (above) to looking north from Stan’s Overlook, which was above today’s clouds:
On the way down I noticed the sound of the Raging River and, after all, there are signs at the beginning of the trail informing you that you are entering the Raging River State Forest. And the river does rage, or at least it is loud enough:
All in all a decent workout. I saw exactly zero people on the trail today, perhaps because it was raining for the first half of the hike and that keeps most of the bikers and hikers away.
I haven’t hiked since last Thursday. It has been rainy and very windy around here. The rain doesn’t stop me but the wind does. Last Thursday the wind was just starting up and I heard a tree come crashing down not far from where I was. Really, the forest is not the safest place to be when the wind is howling.
I did my normal Section Line conditioning hike today, and there were a few large blow downs, such as the one above. In the photo it looks easy, but in fact it was a bit tough because the branches underneath it made it tough to go under, and it was large enough that I had to do a bit of climbing to get over. Naturally, I am glad I was not hiking there when it fell.
In spite of all the rain Round Lake was looking like a puddle:
This confirms for me that this little lake formed and is filled by the snow melt, not by the rain. In either case, it was nice to get out again. This weekend is supposed to be decent and as of now, Derek and I are scheduled to get out again, perhaps back to Quartz Mountain for another attempt, this time starting from the other end.
After the difficult hike on Sunday with Derek I did Little Si today, including the Boulder Garden Loop. It was about 5.4 miles and a bit less than 2K elevation gain (lots of ups and downs), a good workout and, of course, lots of fun.
I usually avoid this hike because of the crowds but I figured if I went early on a weekday it wouldn’t be so bad. I did see maybe a dozen people on the way down but, having started at headlamp time, I was ahead of the throngs. It is a nice hike because it divides naturally into distinct sections.
The first .3 miles, right out of the lot, is steep. At that point I took the Boulder Garden side trail (and this is the trail that leads to the Old Si trail) and that trail is moderately steep for about a mile; if then goes down very steeply for .5 mile. I have taken it in the opposite direction a couple of times to get the extra-steep ‘up’ mileage in but today I settled for moderately steep up and steep going down.
At the end of the Boulder Garden Loop you are back on the Little Si trail and it is not steep at all for almost a mile. But the last .4 or so is steep again until you come to the top, and the nice views, as above and like this, a view of Rattlesnake Mountain:
Just below the summit of Little Si is a view point, looking up at Mount Si:
Derek and I planned to hike to Quartz Ridge, although we were not exactly sure where it was and how we would recognize it when we got there. But we knew the direction to go and took off.
We wound up (I am pretty sure) going past Quartz Ridge, up and up and up the side of Quartz Mountain. As you can see from the rocky picture below, at a certain point we were not dealing with what anyone would call a trail, we were just heading up. Straight up. There were a few pink flagging tapes in the lower branches of trees for us to follow. We left a few ourselves, and glad we did because coming down it was very easy to stray from the path we took on the way up.
I called it for the “up” at 3,700 feet but Derek grabbed the Garmin and went up to 3,900 feet. As you can see from the track, we were heading in the direction of the East Peak of Quartz Mountain but in the field we were not quite sure where we were.
We started at the Middle Fork parking lot, crossed FR56 and headed up the CCC Road, created in the 1930’s by the Civilian Conservation Corps. We were only on that for about .5 mile and there was the unofficial trail to the site of the former Nordrum Lookout.
It was a lookout from the 1930’s to the 1950’s – it was used for spotting planes during WWII – but the trees, which had been clear cut, grew up and there is no longer a view from Nordrum Lookout. All that is left is a few strands of cable and the four corner foundation pieces.
From there we followed an older trip report and went down a gully, up the other side and ‘up’ was the direction for the entire rest of the way. I believe the fabled Quartz Ledge was a spot we hit at about 2,550 feet. It had a good view point and sort of resembled a ledge. Here is the view:
There was more or less a trail up to the ledge, but from there it was strictly bushwhacking and the occasional pink tape. But that’s OK, we loved it. This was an awesome hike, we had a super time and we might come back some day – like when the snow is gone (this place will be covered with snow soon enough) and see if we can make it all the way to the summit of Quartz Mountain. At least, we know it will be a terrific workout and fun to try. It was 5.6 miles but felt like more than a dozen.
I hiked the Rattlesnake Mountain trail from the Exit 32 trail head up to the Upper Ledge. I generally avoid this trail because it is so popular. On a summer weekend, it is literally like being in downtown Seattle, if downtown Seattle was a lot hillier (and it is hilly enough).
But the trail is really nice – upgrade during the Covid shutdown last year – and it is a very good workout. I took a chance today that if I started early (I left the car at 7:15 am) and went past the most crowded spot, Rattlesnake Ledge (the lowest of three ledges) I would luck out. And I did.
I saw one person on the way up and maybe 6 or 7 on the way down. Nice!
Great views from the ledge, looking down towards the lake and to a nearby splash of color:
Here is the track; it was about 5.2 miles, 1,7000 feet of elevation gain, a fun way to start the day.
I like this hike, it is about 6.5 miles (all the way to Debbie’s View) round-trip and maybe 2k elevation gain but it has a gate and the gate doesn’t open until about 6am. Rather late for me for the week because I like to avoid the traffic. The weekends have less traffic on the roads but more traffic on the trails but what the heck. I started up the trail this morning at 6:30. Mine was the first car in the lot. How nice! What an energetic fellow am I!
But not so much – just as I was starting up the trail I saw a headlamp of a trail runner coming down. Since there was no other car in the lot, this guy obviously started at the other end of the mountain (like on SE May Valley Road) and had gone all the way over (about 6 miles) by 6:30. Sheesh.
And a few minutes later there he was, going back the other way. So this guy’s idea of a good workout was to run 12 miles up and down a mountain. Respect.
As I suspected, the trail was crowded with people going up as I was going down.
All I did was the 6.5 miles but it was enough. The view at Debbie’s View was not so great – no sign of Rainier – as it has been a grey day.
But there is some color this time of year along the trail:
I have driven by the Fragrance Lake trailhead, which is located just off Chuckanut Drive a few miles south of Bellingham, many times. Every time, in fact, that we have driven up to the Fairhaven neighborhood of Bellingham. I always told myself I would check it out and today I did.
It turns out to be a decent, but not great hike. About 4.25 miles, including a .2 mile out-and-back viewpoint (of the Puget Sound, looking towards the southern spit of Canada):
A beautiful day, workout enough and when I was done I drove up to Fairhaven and walked around. It was by then about 9:30 on a weekday morning, the place was not at all busy and I enjoyed exploring this neighborhood. When I have gone up there with Jan, on hot summer days on the weekend, the place is as jammed as any touristy place can be. But today – not so much.
The hike today was only 4.3 miles, compared to 8 miles on Tuesday, but the hike to J’s Landing (and I hit Hall Point on the way down) is much tougher because the section from PTC Trail to Hall Point spur is very steep. It is a grind for anyone, let alone an old guy like me.
But it is a super workout with terrific views. I saw exactly one person on the trail and, on the PTC going back down, four rock climbers in two teams of two. For sure, rock climbers are completely focused on what they are doing. It is interesting to watch. I took no photos because I feared that the click of the camera might be distracting. They were all roped up but still, you can see they would really rather not fall off the rock.
This section of trail is typical of the trail I was on – the Change Creek Trail – but in the photo it looks really benign. In fact, it is a narrow trail on the edge of a very steep drop off. Not quite a cliff, but if you went over head-first, you might not get up: