Saturday morning was an early one after hosting a surf and
turf dinner for Leigh’s friend Becky.
Great dinner, conversation, early to bed, then up just after 5am
Saturday morning. Packs had been packed
and re-packed and Leigh was ready to go.
Driving out the Middle Fork road took about 40 minutes. The
Middle Fork of the Snoqualmie, once was pristine with old growth forests. In the mid 1800's it was logged and mined, and once those two activities played out, it became an area of lawlessness. When I moved out to North Bend in the early
90’s, we’d occasionally hear automatic
gun fire from that direction. The Middle
Fork Road was a gravel, rutted mess strewn with abandoned cars, appliances, and
the occasional derelict trailer used as a Meth lab. Police would only go down there only with two separate patrol cars. Then a few
things happened. A Texas couple, having
only arrived in the Valley 4 years previously had lunch on an abandoned washing
machine after a hike in the early 90’s.
Rather than saying “someone oughtta do something”, Wade Holden started
to clean out the abandoned stuff. Some
60 cars, countless appliances, and a non-profit later, ‘Friends of the Trail’
has removed over 2,000 tons of debris from the Middle Fork and surrounding
areas. Other non-profits joined forces
to create a long range plan for the area and after years of logging, mining,
dumping, and neglect, the area is well on its way to be a county treasure.
It’s beautiful now back in the valley and the road, under
construction for many years, should be completed this year. It’s a wonderful road that punches deep into
the Cascades. Towards the end there’s a
nice campground and at the end there’s parking for the hikers and car
campers. The end of the road is still a
bit of a zoo, but everyone is having a good time and no one is shooting
anymore.
Our packs were hoisted onto our backs and off we went. Leigh’s
book said there were good camp sites just beyond Otter Falls, roughly 5.5 to 6 miles in.
Early on, the trail resembles a road. Which it once was.
One of the dozens of streams cascading down
The navigator. Leigh always hikes with maps. So do I, but she pays more attention to them.
Ferns were all over. Bracken, Sword, but lots and lots of deer ferns.
Just beyond Big Creek, we started to look for campsites. We found one -- just off the trial, but no other campsites were around. We didn't see another soul from around 4pm on Saturday to mid morning Sunday. Perfect.
This was about as the middle of the Cascades as you could get. Roughly equal distance between highway 2 and highway 90. With a whole lot of nothing -- and a whole lot of everything -- in between.
view from my nap |
Split boulder of granite.
Otter falls from the lake below
A visitor on my hat
Leigh cooling off. Her singular regret from the hike was not diving into the water.
A hound intent upon breaking the stick into itty bitty pieces.
Unbeknownst to Leigh, I had squirreled away a box of wine for happy hour. In our camp chairs with no one around, we had our little happy hour.
Leigh showing off her Kevlar bear sack Andy had given her.
Breakfast -- oatmeal with all the trimmings.
We hiked about a half mile deeper into the valley and started the climb to Snoqualmie Lake.
Moss!
Snoqualmie Lake view
Trilliums
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