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Trip Report

Loowit Trail, Windy Ridge and Plains of Abraham, June Lake, Plains of Abraham - Windy Pass Loop & Windy Trail — Friday, Aug. 9, 2013

South Cascades > Mount St. Helens
Getting onto the Loowit.

My girlfriend Dani and I headed up to Windy Ridge Friday morning from Vancouver, WA. planning on heading West through the blast zone (counterclockwise) around the Loowit. I have previously done trail work all around Mt. St. Helens and am very familiar with the blast zone but very intrigued to complete the entire around the mountain trail. Day 1 Leaving Windy @ roughly 10:30 a.m. we headed through the blast zone taking lots of pictures. Sharing many stories and some history about the 1980 blast with my girlfriend. We are placing our footsteps onto once was the Largest Landslide in the history of human record. We have both seen the rich and old growth forest of the south, once again the destruction of Loowit reminds you how fragile life can be on any Cascade volcano. We were very lucky with the weather, party cloudy skies and low 70ies with a light breeze kept us cool in the rather dry blast zone. The trail is mostly level until you reach the Plains of Abraham but it is long with a few creek crossings. Early season a handful of these may be more challenging but this late in August we skipped over most of them, Dani did take off her boots once! Pushing a couple different herds of Elk as we neared the Toutle kept our moral high as the day came to an end. Once down to the beginning of the river we traversed the ravine with the provided rope. Dani decided to go down first and have me lower her pack down to her and I put the rope in my hip-belt and lowered down slowly. Ran into two other groups coming from June Lake who camped down off the Toutle heading clockwise talking about their prior day. Sounds like we are in for a tough next 24 hours considering the forecast the NOAA website said we were expecting thunderstorms that night. Noticed the ceiling drop around 8:30 p.m. the sky also changed significantly to make me put my rainfly on and move our gear to the farthest most point to our tent. Shut our phones off and lightening started around 9 on the Northeast side then slowly circled around the mountain over us (on the ridge above the Toutle right off the Loowit trail.) Rain started and I counted some strikes of lightening and thunder around 1 second of separation and thunder I've never encountered before. Slept around midnight. Snoozed until 7, then after breakfast and filling up all 5 liters of water a person at the Toutle I packed up my wet rainfly and tackled what would be our most challenging part of our circumnavigation of the Loowit trail. Ravines and reroutes with a brushy yet huckleberry filled hike up to Butte Camp Dome intersection. I still wonder if taking the Sheep Canyon trail would of been beneficial considering all the obstacles we encountered. The trail sign after that says it's 2 1/2 miles to Climbers Bivouac, this whole section I am unfamiliar with and it blows us away on how exhausted we are once we reach the intersection with the Ptarmigan trail. Another few miles until June Lake going past the Winter climbing route which is poorly marked and I could see how it could be easy to walk right past the Loowit trail. Reach June Lake which has lots of people and kids, eat a ton of food and take care of our tired feet with a full night rest, we received a small amount of dew and precipitation overnight. Light mist in the A.M. we were up bright and early on Sunday to finish our lightest and last day of our circumnavigation. Slept a lot, woke up refreshed after a delicious cup of coffee from my barista girlfriend and we were off on the longest hike of our weekend. Great day, ran into all the other groups hiking around the mountain. Thoroughly enjoyed this section over Muddy River and Ape Canyon through the Plains of Abraham which I've heard about from my friends and co-workers while in the Washington State Conservation Corps. "This looks like West Texas, but more green." -Dani Immediately I thought of one of my best friends whose family are from West Texas. This 13 mile stretch we completed our last day was fantastic and the most enjoyable to me mostly because I was the most unfamiliar with this section and the elevation gain/loss one of the most manageable during our hike around Mount Saint Helens. Arrived back to Windy Ridge via the Plains of Abraham trail at 4:25 p.m. on Sunday. Special thanks to those who have worked so hard and dedicated their lives to maintaining the trail system around one of the most Historic Mountains in the world.

About to descend into the Toutle.
Fir Broom Rust fungus growing on an Alpine Fir. I had to research what this could be.
Good Spirits.
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