Mount Rainier National Park
Hiking Trails
Burroughs Mountain Trail — strenuous
The five-mile loop trail crosses high mountain meadows and ridges. Beginning at Sunrise, walk along the subalpine meadows and watch for pika and marmots, small mammals that live above the timberline. The trail starts out easy but gets trickier with its 1,200-foot elevation gain, three hours of hiking time and a steep snowfield crossing in early season.
Skyline Trail — strenuous
Beginning near the Paradise Visitor Center, take the half-day trail leading up the west side of Alta Vista Ridge. The five-mile loop trail, with only a 1,500-foot elevation gain, offers spectacular views of Nisqually Glacier at Glacier Vista, and Mounts Adams and Saint Helens at Panorama Point.
Wonderland Trail — strenuous
Wonderland's trailheads are located throughout the park and walking all or even some of this trail's 93 miles is the comprehensive way to explore the park. The 10- to 14-day trail circles Mount Rainier, passing through subalpine meadows, glacial streams, valley forests and mountain passes. This hike has a cumulative change in altitude of 20,000 feet and reaches its highest point at Panhandle Gap, which is at 6,901 feet.
Two sections of the Wonderland Trail will be unusable this year. On the Carbon Glacier Trail, hikers will be rerouted across the Carbon River at the Lake James crossing, then south along the Northern Loop Trail to the Carbon Glacier. An earth slide in Stevens Canyon will reroute hikers along the Stevens Canyon Road for about four miles.
Mt. Rainier In Depth
- Mount Rainier National Park
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- At Your Fingertips
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News from the Parks
July 18, 2008 - 12:55pm
DENALI, Alaska, July 17, 2008 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ ----Visitors to Alaska's Denali National Park and Preserve, one of the largest protected intact ecosystems in the world, will now have the opportunity to explore the park with the aid of an environmentally friendly vehicle -- a fuel-efficient and emissions-reducing hybrid bus. IC Bus, North America's largest school bus and commercial bus manufacturer, is delivering the Park's first hybrid bus on July 17.
July 18, 2008 - 10:17am
Lee and Brian are loaded like sherpas, each hauling an end of the 700-foot-long rope and moving in lockstep as they hike down a dry creek bed through a ponderosa pine forest atop a mesa about 6,000 feet above sea level. Behind us, at the end of a wretched logging road that almost made a couple of people in our group sick, is Lee's truck, which we'll come back for the next day. Ahead of us is . . . one big drop. The creek bed ends at a sheer cliff that plunges into what looks like an enormous hole. Walking to the edge, I peer over and can't see the bottom. This is the start of Engelstead Canyon.
July 18, 2008 - 9:30am
Austin, Texas - Greta Miller, Executive Director of the Shenandoah National Park Association announced today the launch of a new interpretive tool, the GPS Ranger™, for visitors at Shenandoah National Park. Visitors to the park can experience the Blue Ridge Mountains and learn more about the park’s unique history, land, plants, and animals with the assistance of the multimedia GPS Ranger™ tour guide system. Informative and educational ranger-narrated videos automatically play as guests hike.
July 18, 2008 - 9:28am
Sixty-three year old Diane Scarbrough loves to spend time in the Smoky Mountains. "Anybody that can be out there for any length of time," she says. "It's uplifting." Diane's passion for hiking turned into a mission to hike every mile of trail in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. "We call it the 900 mile club. Actually it comes out to be 845, but I think they round that off because it takes a long time to get to a trail. We may hike 4 miles to get to the trail we are hiking on," Diane explains.
July 18, 2008 - 9:25am
The Olympic National Park's first possible case of rabies since 1977 has struck a woman who was in the Ozette campground late last week. The 55-year-old woman is getting rabies prevention treatment after a bat scratched her in the Ozette campground. Three Olympic National Park employees who responded to the incident are also receiving treatment. The bat approached the woman at her campsite. She knocked the bat to the ground and got scratched. The stunned bat remained on the ground until the next morning. Park employees removed the bat for rabies testing. The rabies virus was found in the bat. The only other known case of rabies in Olympic National Park was recorded 33 years ago in July 1975, when a child was bitten by a bat in the Elwha Valley.
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