Planning Huge Hiking Trip. Need Destination!!

  • I will be planning a huge hiking trip for a group of teens that I am very active with. I know what I want to do, but I do not know where in the U.S. would be most appropiate to do it. Here is what will be consisted in this trip: It will be an "INTENSE, and EXTREME" trip only for the upmost fit, and prepared. We will go from anywhere between 4-8 days of backpacking, (depending on the location). The location needs to have a difficult Whitewater rafting option at the site, or nearby. The place needs to be away from other camper's and preferrable at a unique spot. Probably about 3-4 of the days backpacking, will be us camping at a campsite that we made. Here at this campsite we will be very relaxed, and be doing a 40 hour fast, and a 40 hour rejuvination period. (there won't be any backpacking during this time, preferablly by some body of water) Thanks.


  • Willstein - - An area that has multiple hikes with whitewater rafting options nearby is the North Cascades range between Seattle and Lake Chelan. I’m going to suggest several resources for further research and one specific trip - - from the Suiattle River to Lake Chelan. The hike would start on the Forest Service road along the Suiattle River (north of Darrington, WA) and crosses Suiattle and Cloudy passes, past Lyman Lake and on to Lake Chelan. One-way the trip is 29.5 miles and includes an altitude gain of 5,000’. Once on Lake Chelan your hikers can catch a bus from Holden to Lucerne where they can catch the ‘Lady of the Lake,’ a boat which does the length of the lake several times each day to Chelan, WA: Lady of the Lake http://www.ladyofthelake.com/ From Chelan, the group could go on to Leavenworth, WA and raft the Wenatchee River, which has some challenging white water, particularly earlier in the spring. A return trip from Leavenworth to Seattle is easy on U.S. Highway 2, about 3 hours: River Riders "Schedules: Rivers and Routes" http://www.riverrider.com/schedules.html You’ll note that the ‘Lady of the Lake’ page has a reference to shorter hikes in this area. Many are the start of longer hikes. Some excellent resources for finding hikes in this area are: "100 Hikes in Washington’s North Cascades: Glacier Peak Region" Ira Spring & Harvey Manning, The Mountaineers, 1988 The suggested route is hike #13 in the 1988 version of their book. Several other hikes in their guide would also fit your criteria, including a hike around Glacier Peak itself. (Glacier Peak is one of four dormant volcanoes in the Seattle area and rises to 10.560’.) There are three other books in this Mountaineers series which you may find interesting if you want to explore alternate trips: "100 Hikes in Washington’s Alpine Lakes," hikes in the area south of U.S. Highway 2. "100 Hikes in Washington’s North Cascades National Park Region," hikes in the area around Mt. Baker "Hikes in Washington’s South Cascades and Olympics" For a look at terrain and trails, the DeLorme atlases are excellent: "Washington Atlas & Gazetteer," DeLorme Mapping Co., Freeport, ME, 1995 and more current. More detailed trail maps are available from Green Trails Maps: http://www.greentrails.com/washmap.shtml This Forest Service page has ordering capabilities for most of the material mentioned above, as well as other information: U.S. Forest Service Mt. Baker – Snoqualmie National Forest "Northwest Interpretive Association" http://www.fs.fed.us/r6/mbs/maps/nwia.shtml If you’re looking for graphically depicted options for an overview (as opposed to the detailed trail maps), I might suggest ordering the Pargeter’s Pictorial Maps. They are 2’x3’ pictorials with a 3-dimensional quality. They show roads and trails in a fashion that’s easier to understand. They’d also be excellent for showing the route to the teens and parents involved. The area covered by the Suiattle River to Lake Chelan hike described are in the Pargeter’s North Central Cascades map and the North Cascades East map. This particular route crosses the Pacific Crest Trail west of Lake Chelan: Pacific Crest Trail Association http://www.pcta.org/ I’ve done portions of the hike, particularly around Glacier Peak and Kennedy Hot Springs. I’ve also rafted several of the rivers in the Cascades, including the Nooksack and the Wenatchee. The outfitter linked (River Riders) is one that we've used (though we have no financial interest in them). The options for rafting in the Cascades are much better than around the Olympic Mountains. Google search strategy: "river rafting" + Washington "Mt. Baker" + Snoqaulmie + "national forest" . . . and an excellent library of trail resources If any part of this answer is unclear, please request a clarification before rating this question. Best regards, Omnivorous-GA Mukilteo, WA







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    6 January 2009 | cameltoepants.com | edit