The terrain around Glacier Peak is some of the most isolated, rugged, breathtakingly beautiful and tough of the entire trail. Unfortunately, in 2003 and 2007 there were terrible storms, which rendered part of the trail impassable. While some work has been done, it’s still rough going.
Regardless, you shouldn’t believe any of the hype about it being impassable or unsafe. It’s totally hikable, it’s just slow going sometimes. The detour is tough going too, and nowhere near as scenic. The obstacles and isolation make this section that much more rewarding.
Many of the bridges were wiped out, including those over Milk Creek and the Suiattle River. The trail has been rerouted a mile down Milk Creek to another bridge, but we decided to bushwhack down to the original crossing, boulderhop the creek and climb back up the embankment. I would have been pissed if we had hiked all the way down to the bridge, only to hike back up to where we just were.
There’s still no bridge over the Suiattle River, which makes it impassable for stock and trail crews with heavy equipment like saws and shovels. The Suiattle is scary. It’s wide, deep, milky-white from glacial silt, fast-moving and full of shifting boulders so, unlike Sierran streams, it can’t be forded. Instead we crossed over downed log. I straddled the log and scooched across, getting splinters in the sensitive skin on my inner thighs, while ABear, always braver than I, just walked across.
Even worse were the blowdowns. On steep slopes with a northern exposure many of the trees were already weakened by some sort of blight and hundreds of trees were blown down. Many of the trees were old growth, five to fifteen feet in diameter and hundreds of feet long, forcing us to scramble over them again and again as we switchbacked down. Each tree knocked others down with it, so they were like gigantic pick-up-sticks littering the hillsides. In some areas we could only go one to two miles an hour, as opposed to our usual three, which was super frustrating, tiring and taxing. Still, it was well worth it for the scenery.
My camera battery gave out in this section so photo credits go to Craig Stanton, class of 2007.