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If there's such a thing as a wilderness superhighway, this is it.

The Snow Lake Trail is Washington's most


heavily used trail within a designated wilderness area. On any given summer weekend, you can expect
to share the area with upward of two hundred hikers. Fortunately, midweek the route is virtually
deserted, and after Labor Day the number of weekend hikers drops to more reasonable levels. Why is it
so popular? It's a combination of easy-to-access wilderness trail and a route to one of the most
picturesque lakes in the water-rich Alpine Lakes Wilderness. Snow Lake is surrounded by high granite
peaks and is visited by deer, mountain goats, and a host of small critters and birds. What's more, the
lakeshores are lined with wildflowers in early summer and juicy huckleberries later in the year. All in all,
the crowds are justified--few places that are so easy to reach offer such a stunning wilderness
experience.

Find the trail at the northeastern corner of the broad parking area (directly across from the ski lodge)
and start up the long trail as it climbs a series of crib steps. These wooden "cribs" backfilled with dirt
earn curses from some hikers, but they were necessary improvements. Volunteers added them in the
late 1990s to reverse the ravages of erosion that plagued the trail. As you walk up the steps over the
first 0.5 mile or so, take time to admire the workmanship and intensive effort that went into rescuing
this trail from destruction. The steps may not match your stride perfectly, but the alternative would be a
lost trail.

After that first 0.5 mile, the trail traverses the slope above the upper South Fork Snoqualmie River,
rolling through forest and occasional alder-filled avalanche chutes for nearly 2.5 miles to a trail junction
at that headwall of the valley. A secondary path leads off to the left, contouring around the headwall
and leading to Source Lake.

The trail to Snow Lake goes right and climbs long, steep switchbacks up the headwall to a high saddle
between Snoqualmie Mountain and Chair Peak. As you climb, you'll enjoy increasingly fine views of the
craggy peaks of the Snoqualmie Pass area. The long ridge to the southwest starts with Chair Peak at the
end of the ridge you're climbing, and south from there is Bryant Peak, The Tooth, and Denny Mountain.

At about 3.5 miles you'll crest the meadow-covered ridge (elev. 4400 ft) and start a moderately steep
descent over the last 0.5 mile to the lakeshore. You can stroll all the way around the sprawling lake on
boot-beaten trail, but please don't create new paths--or widen any of the other faint way trails that have
been kicked into the heather by hikers' boots.

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