Chief Mountain |
Yesterday was day 1 of my summer term of school. As I sat there through my only class this
week I could only think of getting in a nice hike before my other two classes
start next week. After class got out I
sat there on the light rail and convinced myself that tomorrow would be a good
time to get out since I’m only in one class right now. I sent Brian a text to see if he wanted to
get out and soon enough our plans developed.
Since I needed to be back for class in the early evening we decided on
the Chief Trifecta; which includes Chief Mountain, Papoose Mountain and Squaw
Mountain. Another 7am meet-up time for
the T-Rex lot was in the books.
On my drive to meet up with Brian I couldn’t help but notice
how shitty the weather was today. The
rain was in more of a monsoon down pour and I was thinking this was really
going to suck. Lucky for us as we headed
up I-70 and made the Evergreen exit we were now above the downpour and saw
spots of blue sky here and there. Now
back in January I had done a hike of only Chief Mountain, so the good news is I
knew where the TH was. Since we planned
on doing the loop, Brian parked his car where the Squaw Mountain road comes out
onto the highway. This way we could do
our 100yrds along the road at the beginning rather than the end of the
day. If you’re planning to hike just
Chief Mountain there is a pull-out on the right side of the road just up the
road from where the Squaw road connects with the main roadway.
Chief Mountain and Papoose Mountain |
We took the unconventional approach, staying on the ridge
line and bushwhacking through the trees.
The snow was soft in spots, so for now I would recommend just following
the trail down back to the saddle then heading up the short vertical section to
Papoose. This is an odd summit, because
you don’t know you’re on it unless you stop and take a minute to realize
it. The summit is surrounded by trees so
it doesn’t stick out at all, so don’t blink!
That marks two down, one more to go, so off we went for Squaw.
Evans Group |
The fire lookout was impressive and it alone is worth the
short hike to see the cool stone work.
There are massive amounts of metamorphic rock, mostly Gneiss along the
road and near Squaws summit that add an extra bonus to those Geologist nuts out
there. The walk back to the car was
quick since we were on a nice hard packed road.
We didn’t see any wildlife other than about 15 elk crossing the road on
our drive back, so that was disappointing.
One note is the road is under some heavy construction right now, so don’t
expect to zip right up to the TH as fast as you normally can. It was another nice hike, one I’d like to do
in the summer with all the snow gone, so I will probably be back to this trip
again and again.
Starting Elevation: 10,646ft
Chief Mountain Summit: 11,699ft
Papoose Mountain Summit:
11,178ft
Squaw Mountain Summit:
11,476ft
Total Gained Elevation: 1,784ft
Distance: 6.09 miles
Time: 2:45 moving, 0:35 stopped
Partners: Brian