First full view of Rainier west of Longmire |
The route I chose in March and was approved for by the National Park Service was:
Start at Longmire - Golden lakes Camp - Mystic Camp - Summerland Camp - Maple Creek Camp - back to Longmire. This route was 4 1/2 days with some 25 mile days.
What I ended up doing was:
Start at Longmire - 19.7 miles to North Puyallup River camp - 16.3 miles to Eagles Roost camp - 20.3 miles to Sunrise camp - 14.5 miles to Indian bar camp - 22.2 miles back to Longmire
Day 1: I got off track the first day, which threw me off my assigned campsites for the rest of the trip. I wasn't too worried about it because I talked to a few hikers that explained to me the flexibility of changing campsites when you ran into a ranger - many people add days or change their campsites based on weather, injury or are just in such a beautiful area they want to spend more time exploring. I was also assured that there were a lot of rangers on the trail. A friend of mine had decided the night before the hike that he was up for an adventure and came along, I was happy to have a companion to hike with. We arrived at North Puyallup River Camp at 6:00 pm with 5 more miles to go, all up hill, to my first assigned camp site, Golden Lakes. After hiking almost 20 miles that day we decided to stay at the group camp site instead of pressing on and finishing the hike in the dark.
first of three suspension bridges |
Tahoma Glacier |
We set up camp at Eagles Roost camp, which is off the Wonderland trail on the Spray Park Trail. Spray park trail is an alternative route that meets up with the wonderland trail, it is roughly the same distance and has a lot of elevation gain and is famous for the beautiful fields of wildflowers and waterfalls. The clouds were getting darker and the wind was picking up, when we arrived at the camp ground the rain started and then then thunder and lightening started and continued most of the night. The storm that night was the same storm that started many forest fires near Wenachee WA, Mt Adams and we learned later a small one tree fire at Paradise on Mt Rainier that was quickly put out.
view of Rainier from Eagles Roost watching the thunder storm move in |
hiking through the wildflowers in Spay Park in the clouds |
Carbon Glacier |
hiking up Fryingpan Creek up to Summerland Camp |
shelter at Summerland Camp site |
highest point of the Wonderland trail - Panhandle Gap |
looking down at Indian Bar Camp |
camp site at Indian Bar |
sunrise at Indian bar |
morning view of Rainier |
hiking in the forest near Nickel Creek camp site |
trail near Stevens Canyon |
view of Rainier from Nisqually River - 1.6 miles to Longmire |
I tried to keep it as light as reasonably possible - I am a minimalist but not an extreme ultra light hiker. My gear consisted of small, light 2 person tent, sleeping bag and light thermarest, no stove. All my food was pre-cooked. Water was treated with a water filter. I hiked in vasque low hikers, light but more support than my running shoes, no need for gators.
trail foot wear - my ten toed friend suffered a few blisters but overall was pretty happy with the gloves on his feet |
4 breakfasts - protein bar or peanut butter and jelly sandwich
5 lunches - peanut butter and jelly sandwich
4 dinners - rice and bean burritos with kale (rice and beans precooked and mixed together in a bag with salsa). The salsa started to go bad on the 4th day so I ate it for lunch and dinner and had my lunch for dinner the last night.
snacks - lots of Larabars, Clif mojo bars (favorite chocolate, almond and coconut), trader joe's bars, almonds and fruit leather
protein powder for emergency back up
RESOURCES:
The map I used was the National Geographic: Mount Rainier 217 map
Wonderland Trail
http://www.wonderlandtrailguide.com/
http://travel.nytimes.com/2009/10/04/travel/04wonderland.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0