KV
Member
Heading west in a few weeks. Staying near the west entrance to Glacier. Any suggestions, recommendations, must-see sights? We are frequent hikers, not climbers. TIA
Heading west in a few weeks. Staying near the west entrance to Glacier. Any suggestions, recommendations, must-see sights? We are frequent hikers, not climbers. TIA
Thanks for the link. I will def check it out.I highly recommend http://www.glacier.nationalparkschat.com for Glacier-related hikes and other info.
Assuming Going to the Sun is open to Logan pass, the Highline Trail along the Garden Wall is a fantastic hike. It's 14-ish miles as an out-and-back from Logan Pass (get there early) depending on how far you go. We made use of the shuttles - parked at Logan, hiked the Highline Trail to Granite Park Chalet, down Granite PArk Trail to the Sun Road, and took the shuttle back up to Logan. About 11 miles. Awesome scenery. The last mile or so of Granite Park took us through an old burn-out, and it was fascinating to see how the ecosystem was recovering.
A fairly quick hike near the park entrance if you're short on time one day is Apgar Lookout, great views of Lake MacDonald and the mountains behind. Grinnell Glacier from Many Glaciers lodge is a spectacular hike with lots of variety. It may have too much snow when you're there, unfortunately. We did a nice loop in the to Upper, Middle, and Lower Quartz lakes from Bowman Lake. It's a bit of a drive but great for solitude. Stop at the Merc for the Bearclaws! Finally we hiked to Siyeh Pass from the east side of Logan Pass. If the shuttles are running and you have time, doing the full hike back down to the road past the pass would be worth it.
Hey folks. I've another question. How do the trails compare to NH's 4Ks? Are they comparable to hiking in Yosemite and Tahoe areas? TIA
... I found the trails in Glacier MUCH easier than those in the Whites. The grades are more moderate (they do these whacky "switchback" things rather than take you straight up and incline) and the trails themselves have better footing. Far less picking your way around/over rocks and roots.
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