Doug Lorain

One Best Hike: Mount Rainier's Wonderland Trail


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world, plenty of wildlife, dozens of small lakes, idyllic mountain meadows, rushing glacial torrents spanned by frightening swinging bridges, meandering clear brooks crossed by quaint logs, and countless opportunities for side trips to little-known glories high on the slopes of the mountain. It is hardly surprising, then, that virtually every list of the greatest hikes in North America places the Wonderland Trail near the top.

      For any avid backpacker the Wonderland Trail is a hike on his or her life list that should be taken at least once before the body decides that the heavy backpack has to be put away for good. For more than a few locals, the trail is not a one-time thing but an annual adventure, with the ever-changing scenery drawing them back year after year to this mountain pilgrimage. The fact that you are reading this book probably means that you would like to join this cadre of satisfied hikers, adding the Wonderland Trail to your own list of lifetime best hikes. With the help of this book, you are cordially invited to do just that. In addition to being a complete trail guide that fully describes the main trail, several excellent alternate routes, and dozens of the best side trips, this book guides you through the often complex planning and logistics required by this daunting hike. The goal is to make your trip not only more enjoyable but also easier to complete and to ensure that once you take those final steps back to your car at (probably) Longmire, you won’t be disappointed.

      Today’s hikers are far from the first to appreciate the value and wonders of Mount Rainier. Although the archaeological evidence is sketchy, based on studies in other parts of the Cascade Range, human beings have probably been visiting the area now occupied by Mount Rainier National Park for as long as 8,000 years. Most of the park has not been thoroughly surveyed, but several dozen known sites indicate that Native Americans used the area for hunting, tool stone procurement, and the gathering of berries and other foods. In historic times, five Native American tribes used the area: the Nisqually, Puyallup, Muckleshoot, Yakama, and Taidnapam. Some of these people continued to visit the park for hunting and berry collection into the early 20th century. Different tribes undoubtedly had different names for the peak, but the generally accepted name in use at the time that Europeans arrived was Tacoma or Tahoma. The word is believed to be from the Lushootseed language spoken by the Puyallups and meant either “mother of waters,” “snowcapped peak,” or, somewhat less poetically, “larger than Koma,” which was the name for another area volcano, the somewhat smaller Mount Baker.

      A CONTRARIAN’S VIEW

      Partly because the authors can hardly be described as unbiased observers, hiking guidebooks rarely present a dissenting view about the beauty and virtues of the trails described in their pages. Because I feel absolutely confident that any rational person will loudly extol the virtues of the Wonderland Trail once he or she hikes its 92 (or so) spectacular miles, I am going to break with tradition and pass along the thoughts of a person who apparently wasn’t so enthralled. The managing editor of a prominent hiking magazine (a man who really should know better) once wrote the following about the Wonderland Trail: “Hike around a mountain, suffering all the ups and downs of its ridges and valleys, slogging through constant wet, not getting more than one or two excellent views a day, and not then also climb the damn thing? That’s like getting a Blowpop and only consuming the stick.”

      Not that I want to pick a fight or anything, but with all due respect to this man, he is a blind idiot who doesn’t belong on any trail without adult supervision. First of all, he must have lost track while trying to count them on his fingers, but the Wonderland Trail offers hundreds of great viewpoints, and they come along far more frequently than once or twice a day. Second, while it is certainly true that hiking the Wonderland Trail is a strenuous endeavor that requires plenty of climbing over ridges and dropping into valleys, that is all part of hiking. If this man wants to see great scenery without having to work for it, he should stay home on the couch and watch the National Geographic Channel. Finally, if he wants to climb Mount Rainier in addition to hiking the Wonderland Trail, then go right ahead. There are climbing services that do just that, and you can get a permit at any of the wilderness information centers in the park (as of 2012 there is a $43 fee for an annual climbing pass, plus $20 for an advance reservation—strongly advised, because this is very popular). It is an amazing experience, and I encourage every reader of this book to learn basic mountain-climbing skills and take a guided sojourn to the summit. But the two experiences—climbing the peak and hiking around it—have nothing to do with one another. My wife and I recently visited the big island of Hawaii. We swam with green sea turtles, hiked across a recently active volcanic crater, visited a spectacular tropical botanical garden, saw lots of interesting birds, and relaxed on idyllic sandy beaches, but I did not have time to climb to the top of Mauna Loa. Does that omission mean that the rest of our trip was somehow bad or a waste of time? I would strongly suggest that this magazine editor have both his eyesight checked and his attitude adjusted.

      The first Europeans to see Mount Rainier were members of a British exploring expedition under the command of Captain George Vancouver. They sighted the mountain in May 1792, and their captain named the peak after a friend of his, Rear Admiral Peter Rainier of the British Navy. In 1806 members of the Meriwether Lewis and William Clark expedition became the first known American explorers to see the mountain, though they never got closer than the Columbia River, some 80 miles away.

      Many of the names of glaciers, peaks, and other geographic features in the park date back to the early explorers who visited the mountain. In 1833, for example, William Tolmie, the physician at the Hudson’s Bay Company’s Fort Nisqually, became the first known white man to visit the area now occupied by the park when he hired five native guides and came into what is now the northwest corner of the park in search of medicinal plants. Then in 1857 August Valentine Kautz, an Army lieutenant stationed at Fort Steilacoom, made the first documented attempt to climb the mountain. He and some companions hired a Nisqually as a guide and took six days to travel through the nearly impenetrable lower-elevation forests before they finally reached open terrain and began their attempt on the summit. Two days and much hard work later, Kautz made it the farthest of the group, probably topping out at close to 14,000 feet near the ironically titled Point Success (just a little more than 400 feet from the top), but he did not achieve his goal.

      In 1859 James Longmire, an ambitious settler to the Washington Territory from Indiana, established the rugged Packwood Trail, which allowed people to travel from the Puget Sound coastline to the lower reaches of Mount Rainier. Fully 11 years later, three of those visitors, guided by Longmire and a Native American named Sluiskin, set out to reach the top. On August 17, 1870, two of those men, Hazard Stevens and Philemon B. Van Trump (Don’t you just love those old names? When was the last time you met anybody with a name like Hazard or Philemon?) became the first people to make it to the summit. In 1883, at the for-his-time relatively advanced age of 63, the ever-enterprising Longmire made his first climb to the top of the mountain and, on his way back from that trip, discovered a meadow with some interesting soda and mineral springs. He built a rough-log hotel there and set about convincing people (with considerable success) that soaking in the spring water was a medicinal cure. The meadow, springs, and development he started still carry Longmire’s name and today are the most popular starting point for those doing the Wonderland Trail.

      One other historical visitor of note was the great conservationist John Muir. Upon seeing the mountain during a visit to Puget Sound in 1888, the excited Muir decided to alter his original travel plans and climb the alluring peak. He succeeded in reaching the summit, although, expressing the same opinion as countless Wonderland Trail visitors since, Muir decided that the peak was best appreciated and more impressive from below than from the top. His writings, along with the images taken by his companion, photographer Arthur C. Warner, helped to bring broader attention to the mountain and its beauty.

      On March 2, 1899, following promotion and preservation efforts that began as early as 1883, President William McKinley signed the law creating Mount Rainier as our nation’s fifth national park.

      At the time of the park’s creation, there were already many miles of trails in the area. Most of these were old Native American paths, miner’s routes, and trails to favored hunting and food-gathering sites. In addition, Longmire, after establishing his hotel and health spa, had built several trails in the park’s southwest corner. There was not, however,