Название: One Night Wilderness: Portland
Автор: Becky Ohlsen
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Книги о Путешествиях
Серия: One Night Wilderness
isbn: 9780899978956
isbn:
This gorgeous lake, which sits in the basin between Mount Lena to the north and Mount Bretherton to the south, is rimmed with forests of mountain hemlock and Alaska yellow cedar and open areas featuring an abundance of pink heather. Fires are not allowed at the lake, and hikers are required to camp in designated sites on the lake’s northwest, southeast, east, and southwest shores. Composting toilets (with excellent views!) and bear wires for hanging food are provided for your convenience.
The lake is ideal for setting up camp and doing some exploring. A top goal is the rough boot path that goes west over a low pass before continuing to Scout Lake (no camping allowed) and the tiny but dramatically scenic Stone Ponds. You can also follow a scramble route to the top of Mount Lena or go south into the narrow basin containing Milk Lake.
Mount Bretherton provides a beautiful backdrop for Upper Lena Lake in Olympic National Park.
photo by Douglas Lorain
This alpine meadow sits just below Cispus Point (Trip 8) in the Goat Rocks Wilderness.
Southern Mount Rainier and the Goat Rocks
The undisputed king of the Cascade Mountains, Mount Rainier rises 14,410 feet into the Pacific Northwest sky and is visible for hundreds of miles in every direction. The national park that surrounds the mountain is much beloved, not only by locals but also by admiring tourists from around the world. Only the southern part of the mountain is close enough for a reasonable weekend trip from Portland, but that includes some of the park’s best scenery, including amazingly abundant wildflowers, enormous glaciers, stunning mountain views, plenty of wildlife, dozens of waterfalls—the list of wonders is almost endless.
Not far southeast of Mount Rainier is a less famous but just as mind-blowing mountain treasure: the Goat Rocks, the ruggedly scenic remains of an eroded volcano. The trails in both areas are justifiably popular, but with reservations in the national park and careful planning in the Goat Rocks Wilderness, it is possible to enjoy a welcome degree of solitude in your backcountry adventures. But even if you have to share it, the outstanding mountain scenery in both areas will delight you and keep you coming back time and again.
4 | Goat Lake and Gobblers Knob |
RATINGS | Scenery 8 Difficulty 6 Solitude 6 | |
ROUND-TRIP DISTANCE | 6.8 miles to Goat Lake; 9 miles to Gobblers Knob | |
ELEVATION GAIN | 1,650' to Goat Lake; 2,850' to Gobblers Knob | |
OPTIONAL MAP | Green Trails Mount Rainier West (No. 269) | |
USUALLY OPEN | Mid-July–October | |
BEST TIME | Mid-July–October | |
AGENCY | Cowlitz Valley Ranger District (Gifford Pinchot National Forest), 360- 497-1103, fs.usda.gov/ recarea/giffordpinchot/recarea/ ?recid=31180; Mount Rainier National Park, nps.gov/mora | |
PERMIT | Wilderness permits required for all overnight camping within Mount Rainier National Park (but not at the recommended site at Goat Lake, which is outside the park); reserve permits online starting March 15. Reservation applications are $20 per party per trip (nonrefundable). |
Highlights
The tiny Glacier View Wilderness, which borders the west side of Mount Rainier National Park, includes similar scenery to the park but avoids that more famous preserve’s traffic jams and crowds. Long-distance hiking is limited by the small size of the wilderness, so most people who come here are day hikers. The area is large enough, however, for a wonderful one-night outing to quiet Goat Lake with access to a spectacular view of Mount Rainier from Gobblers Knob.
Getting There
From I-5, 67 miles north of Vancouver, Washington, take Exit 68 and travel 31 miles east on US 12 to a junction at the town of Morton. Turn left on WA 7 and drive 17 miles to a junction with WA 706. Turn right (east), proceed 11.1 miles to an unsigned junction near milepost 11, and turn left on gravel Forest Service Road 59. After climbing 4.3 miles, turn sharply right on Road 5920 and slowly drive 1.6 miles on this rough and rocky road to the road-end Mount Beljica/Lake Christine Trailhead.
GPS COORDINATES N46° 46.396' W121° 56.910'
Hiking It
The Lake Christine Trail starts in an ancient clear-cut now populated with 45-foot-tall Douglas and Pacific silver firs growing above a tangled mix of thimbleberry bushes, Sitka alders, fireweed, pearly everlasting, and various other shrubs, wildflowers, and grasses. The rocky path climbs very steeply 0.1 mile and then becomes more moderate when it enters uncut forest. In one switchback the intermittently steep path ascends through forest and then across a hillside choked with elderberries, bluebells, salmonberries, cow parsnip, devil’s club, stinging nettle, and various other moisture-loving flowers and shrubs. At the top of the ascent, 0.8 mile from the trailhead, you arrive at the forested bowl holding tiny and rather shallow Lake Christine. Backed by a rugged, unnamed ridge to the east, this pretty little lake has nice views and features plenty of heather and other colorful wildflowers around its shore.
The trail circles to the right around the lake’s south and east shores before reaching a pair of campsites just after a log bridge over the tiny inlet creek. From here the path pulls away from the lake and slowly climbs a meadowy ravine that is alive with midsummer wildflowers such as bistort, aster, wild carrot, Sitka valerian, arnica, groundsel, and pink heather. At 1.2 miles is a signed junction with a spur trail to the viewpoint atop Mount Beljica. This makes a good side trip, although better views will come later in the hike.
Go right at the junction, pass through a forested saddle, and then make a winding descent to a junction with Puyallup Trail at 1.8 miles. Turn right on this gently rolling trail as it rounds the north end of a ridge and then gradually descends to a campsite at the northern tip of Goat Lake at 3 miles. Although not spectacularly scenic, this long and narrow lake is lovely, surrounded by stately forest with a narrow strip of grasses and flowers along the shore. The only views are of the long ridge of Mount Wow rising to the southeast. For a larger and better campsite, continue on the trail that goes east and a bit uphill from Goat Lake 0.1 mile, and then turn right on an obvious path that goes downhill about 150 yards to an attractive camp on the east shore of Goat Lake.
In spring Lake Christine is surrounded by colorful wildflowers.
photo by Douglas Lorain
So far the scenery on this hike has been pleasant, but not particularly dramatic. For a big scenic payoff, set up camp at Goat Lake and spend the afternoon on a side trip to the top of Gobblers СКАЧАТЬ