50

Sloan Peak, Bedal Basin — Jun. 17, 2017

North Cascades > Mountain Loop Highway
2 photos
Beware of: road, snow & trail conditions
  • Wildflowers blooming

3 people found this report helpful

 
Summitted Sloan Peak via Bedal Creek trail! We ascended around the south side of Sloan as described in SummitPost and then connected into the Corkscrew route. GPX tracks are linked below. 16 hours total. The south side ramp connecting to the Corkscrew route is TECHNICAL (that's what ate up the time). Very steep slopes with a cliff close at the bottom, so had to protect with pickets and belay across. After on corkscrew route isn't too bad but there's still one slope you'll want to use pickets on. I'll update this with more detailed info sometime in the future.

Bedal Basin — Jul. 6, 2016

North Cascades > Mountain Loop Highway
4 photos
zaranth
Outstanding Trip Reporter
300
Beware of: road, trail conditions
  • Wildflowers blooming
  • Ripe berries

5 people found this report helpful

 
Day hike to Bedal Basin! Road pretty rough, but my Explorer handled it just great : ) I wish I could say the same for the tires; one blew, but I had a full sized spare, so no worries! Nothing like starting out with a bang! Drove to the end of the road, where the road is blocked by a berm of dirt and parked there. The trail head is back down the road by ~30ft. It is marked by a pole with a "no fireworks" sign, but that's all. Started hiking at 2pm. The actual trail was in better shape than I'd expected (I'd brought my machete just in case) but never needed it. There were 17 minor blow downs up to the basin and 6 somewhat overgrown avalanche swaths. The alternation between forest and brush made that hike quite enjoyable! Plus the Salmon Berries were going crazy and tasted in credible : ) After crossing two semi-major creeks, the trail emerges from the trees in an open river bed/boulder field that led up and to the left straight toward the rock wall of Sloan Peak-very impressive! We tied some pink tape to a stick and propped in upright to mark the trail back into the woods better, could be easy to miss! It probably won't last that long term, but really helped on the return trip. The rocks in the river bed were quite shifty and could cause a twisted ankle etc if not careful. . . .walked/climbed straight up the river bed with the water at time, very fun, had a couple challenging moments. Then follows the cairns to the right back into the trees to follow the trail UP into the basin itself. Beautiful view of Bedal Peak and Sloan Peak, and very pretty meadow with glacier erratic boulders everywhere : ) After a snack, we continued to follow the obvious stream bed up and to the left (don't get bogged down in the trees!) and up to the ridge just under Sloan Peak! I think the ridge is at ~5,600ft and the snow was just melting out enough that we could stay on the heather and old grass that was emerging from under the snow fields. Pretty Steep go on the last pitch below the ridge. We were thinking of trying for Sloan Peak, but decided to try a different day with a better start time (had to relieve the babysitter!). Beautiful day! Nice views, and a fun varied hike!

Bedal Basin — Aug. 27, 2015

North Cascades > Mountain Loop Highway
2 photos
Beware of: road conditions

1 person found this report helpful

 
Nice hike with trailhead not to far from Barlow pass on the Mountain Loop Hwy. Oh, and how underrated it is! This may be a bit of a tough one, but it is so worth it. On the first mile or two of trail, there are a few long stretches of brush that you have to push through, since the trail is a bit overgrown in some places, but one way to the basin is not actually that far. I arrived at the basin at around 10:00am, when the striking Slate Peak wall is looking gorgeous bathed in morning light. If you want to go on further, as I did, its well worth it. Up from the basin there isn't a real trail, just a faint climbers path, but the general direction is straight up, so that's where I went. After reaching a small saddle, you can continue around slate peak, along a steep boulder field decorated with heather. Across the boulders, there's a little more up, and then you are on the pass. From there, but also on the boulder field, there are great views of the surrounding mountains.

Bedal Creek #705, Sloan Peak — Jun. 15, 2015

North Cascades > Mountain Loop Highway
1 photo
Beware of: road, trail conditions
  • Wildflowers blooming

2 people found this report helpful

 
Did a day hike up Sloan Peak via the Bedal Creek trail. No recent trip reports for this trail, so here it is. Road 4096 is in fairly good shape, and doesn't seem to get too much use, but there is a lot of loose rock kicked around by 2WD cars on the steeper stretches. There are one or two trees down blocking bits of the road, but they are easy to get around. No clearance issues. Mountain Loop Hwy from Barlow Pass to here has some very bad stretches of potholes. The Bedal Creek trail starts from the parking area at the end of the road, NOT down the closed portion of the road. There is a signpost, but no sign, at the actual trail start. This trail has gotten VERY little use, but the footbed is mostly in very good shape. There are quite a few logs down across the trail (10-15) in the first mile or so, none were major problems. I have an old (2002 revision) Green Trails map which shows the trail crossing to the SW side of the creek, as does the USGS topo; but the trail stays on the NE side the whole way. The trail is quite overgrown going through several avalanche chutes. Shoulder high salmonberries, ferns, one patch of nettles (ouch), etc. It's mostly obvious where the trail goes (I lost it very briefly once), but you can't see the footbed through all the vegetation, so it's slow going as you feel your way along. Long pants and sleeves are helpful. All in all, the trail is in surprisingly good shape considering how much use it seems to get. The trail ends at the toe of a rock slide / debris flow right where the thick forest ends. There is another signless signpost there. Perhaps it used to say "end of unmaintained trail"? You continue steeply up this debris flow and stream, or just to the right of it, until just past a 15' bedrock waterfall at around 4500'. There the trail heads to the right through some forest again, before emerging in some parkland. You continue generally up the obvious streambed there, and work up the left of two steep basins to the major ridge running west from the southern part of Sloan. These basins are steep and can be fairly slippery with vegetation. I ended up "skiing" down much of it on my boots, squatting, as it was too slippery to get decent footing while going down. Once on that ridge you can follow a bit of a path up the ridge, until it drops down slightly on the south side through a bit of small trees before opening up. Then it's traversing and climbing steep scree, talus and heather around the open SW facing basin up to the south ridge of Sloan at ~6500'. The first snow on this hike was a few patches starting around 6000', but you could use these or not, depending on preference. Crossing the snow in the SE basin was no problem, but there was an unpleasant 2' overhanging moat separating a 45 degree snow slope from 45 degree smooth granite slope at the bottom of the "lower shelf". This is EXACTLY the same problem that stopped a climb on Aug 1 of 2008. Which it appears I never sent a trip report in for, surprisingly. But the moat was smaller this time, and I did find a spot to get across where some snow had collapsed. Then crept up the bare rock, then up the "lower shelf" on heather and rock, not having to get on the snow at all. The gully connecting to the "upper shelf" had VERY steep snow, so that was not an option. After wandering around quite a while, I realized you could continue around the lower shelf, right around the south end of the mountain, to the west face. And spending a while poking around there, finally found the route up to the summit, which heads up, and north, from the "notch". So from the lower shelf you have to go around, then up to the notch, THEN head north. It's not at all obvious which of many options on the west face actually gets you somewhere. From the notch the route is easy and obvious and well used to the summit. Fantastic views from the summit, of course, this being the highest peak around other than Glacier and its subsidiaries. But I left my pack below, so no pictures. It was a bit of an intimidating climb, with the nasty moat crossing, and a lot of fairly steep, crumbly, very exposed climbing above that. The snow coverage was nearly identical to the time I was up there on August 1, which I guess I kind of expect given the snowpack this winter. There is water along the whole route right now, but it's pretty dry up there, and above 4500' there won't be any soon. Didn't see much wildlife at all; some goat fur and prints, some pika noises, some various birds. No people prints, except some faint old tracks visible on the snow slope, and some bootprints up near the summit (presumably coming from the "true" corkscrew route on the upper shelf). Some flowers blooming, penstemons, columbine, bunchberry, Columbia lily, Pedicularis, shooting stars, a little bit of heather, etc. Nothing profuse or spectacular. The picture shows my route across the snow (more or less level across the snow and rocks to the finger of snow on the right edge that leads up onto the shelf), then up the lower shelf (some snow visible here, more present but not visible). On this picture the lower shelf disappears behind the south ridge before it gets to the "gully", or wraps around the south side.

Bedal Basin — Mar. 8, 2015

North Cascades > Mountain Loop Highway
4 photos
Beware of: road, trail conditions
 
The road getting to Bedal Basin, FR 4096, was horrible. We had to abandon one of the cars because it wasn't tall enough to make it up the road, but that was just the beginning. We encountered 49 downed trees that impeded our progress from the start to the point where we lost the trail due to snow. The trail was hard to find in some spots, but until we encountered the consistent snow we always managed to find it. We were guided by some cairns through a rocky area that was comparable to a minefield; the rocks were shifting and collapsing with every other step and it was dangerous to stand in on spot for too long. We pushed on, following the cairns, and they led us to a gully that was too treacherous to pass through due to the snow. We couldn't get to the basin, we barely got up the road, this was easily one of the worst hikes I've ever been on. I wouldn't even attempt it until some of the snow melts and the trail at the end can be found. Also, a note to WTA, a work party with lots of saws needs to get up here to fix up the trail.