My friend and I will have about 2-3 days for backpacking the park during the second week of June. Not sure about route selection, considering the likelyhood of snow still at the higher elevations. I was looking at leaving from the Bear Lake Trailhead, crossing over the divide and ending up somewhere around the Onahu Trailhead. It seems like a pretty popular route, I'm just not sure if it will be too early in the season to hike. If anybody has any suggestions or experience it would be greatly appreciated. My friend and I can handle moderate to difficult hikes without much problem.
Spring Hike suggestions?
Started by scubadud, Mar 11 2010 01:11 PM
4 replies to this topic
#1
Posted 11 March 2010 - 01:11 PM
#2
Posted 11 March 2010 - 02:31 PM
You could hike to Sourdough the first day (that's a campsite) and spend the evening exploring around Lake Helene. Second day you could hike over the Divide and camp at Haynach Lake. Third day hike out. You might need snowshoes but I'm not sure.
#3
Posted 11 March 2010 - 09:13 PM
scubadud, on 11 March 2010 - 01:11 PM, said:
My friend and I will have about 2-3 days for backpacking the park during the second week of June. Not sure about route selection, considering the likelyhood of snow still at the higher elevations. I was looking at leaving from the Bear Lake Trailhead, crossing over the divide and ending up somewhere around the Onahu Trailhead. It seems like a pretty popular route, I'm just not sure if it will be too early in the season to hike. If anybody has any suggestions or experience it would be greatly appreciated. My friend and I can handle moderate to difficult hikes without much problem.
bring your yack tracks
#4
Posted 11 March 2010 - 11:31 PM
There will be snow but it'll be hard in the middle of the drifts and soft around the edges. You'll post hole through some but even snowshoes would fall through that stuff. Most of the trail will be bare once you leave the woods except the big snowfields and drifts.
Going down the North Inlet trail could be hazardous in the cliff/switchback area if it's steep snow. It will probably be broke/walked on by that time however, the rangers should know better than I.
It has been years since I've been on the Tonahutu Trail but I believe it is a bit safer in snow conditions.
Good boots are a must when walking in wet snow. Gortex lined hikers still get wet on the outside which ends up with cold feet at night. That's unless you have favorable weather and they dry before nightfall.
Going down the North Inlet trail could be hazardous in the cliff/switchback area if it's steep snow. It will probably be broke/walked on by that time however, the rangers should know better than I.
It has been years since I've been on the Tonahutu Trail but I believe it is a bit safer in snow conditions.
Good boots are a must when walking in wet snow. Gortex lined hikers still get wet on the outside which ends up with cold feet at night. That's unless you have favorable weather and they dry before nightfall.
#5
Posted 13 March 2010 - 01:47 PM
Igloo Ed, on 11 March 2010 - 11:31 PM, said:
There will be snow but it'll be hard in the middle of the drifts and soft around the edges. You'll post hole through some but even snowshoes would fall through that stuff. Most of the trail will be bare once you leave the woods except the big snowfields and drifts.
Going down the North Inlet trail could be hazardous in the cliff/switchback area if it's steep snow. It will probably be broke/walked on by that time however, the rangers should know better than I.
It has been years since I've been on the Tonahutu Trail but I believe it is a bit safer in snow conditions.
Good boots are a must when walking in wet snow. Gortex lined hikers still get wet on the outside which ends up with cold feet at night. That's unless you have favorable weather and they dry before nightfall.
Going down the North Inlet trail could be hazardous in the cliff/switchback area if it's steep snow. It will probably be broke/walked on by that time however, the rangers should know better than I.
It has been years since I've been on the Tonahutu Trail but I believe it is a bit safer in snow conditions.
Good boots are a must when walking in wet snow. Gortex lined hikers still get wet on the outside which ends up with cold feet at night. That's unless you have favorable weather and they dry before nightfall.
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