bignslow
Active member
Edit 8/9/15 - Adding some mid-trip answers to my own question
Hi Everyone,
Planning a trip to Glacier in a few weeks and I have a few questions:
1) Is there anything that is a "must see" that is a little off the beaten path? We currently have the following hikes scheduled:
* Siyeh Pass
* Garden Wall
* Iceburg Lake
* Grinnell Glacier
* Ptarmigan Tunnel
* Swiftcurrent Mountain
We ended up doing the following (in my order of preference):
* Ptarmigan Tunnel and Iceberg Lake (~16 miles & 2500') - Be sure to hike beyond the tunnel to get some spectacular views
* Avalanche Lake (~10 miles, 500') - added a herd path hike into the cirque above the lake
* Highline, Garden Wall, Swiftcurrent Mountain, Grinnell overlook (~22 miles, ?? gain) - Unfortunately we did this on a day with a smoke warning so our views were cut short, but it was still fun. Note that while there is a hut, they don't provide water.
* Grinnell Glacier - Took the boats on the way in (for the tourist effect), got rained on, so it dampened views
* Kintla Lake - This was nice to get away from the crowds, stay low, and go off the beaten path (though I personally preferred the above treeline stuff)
* Apgar Lookout - I would not recommend this hike, it spends most of its time in former burn areas, and there are much better views (and bang for your buck). Additionally the lookout tower at the top is boarded up and is used for a communications tower
Our backcountry permit got denied, but if there are any areas in the backcountry which you recommend, we are conditioned for longer hikes (GRT, pressies, pemi, etc...) and would be happy to do an epic if it got us away from the crowds and to somewhere unique (all of our other hikes are fairly close to the road).
The ranger at the backcountry permit station recommended we "day hike our butts off" over trying to deal with the logistics for the first come first serve backcountry sites, so that's what we did
2) Distances and gain - Most of the hikes (above) have very little gain (< 3k feet), is this because our guidebook is only giving us the delta between the high/low points, or is there really that little change between the various points on the trail? In general, how do the trails compare with those in the Adirondacks/Whites? From what I've seen in pictures, the exposure is higher, but the trail bed is much nicer/easier/faster.
This is a tough one. The trails are certainly nicer, but they're also very different. I would say that the gains do not account for much of the PUD along the trails. Additionally, I found that our legs were built for doing (adirondack/new england) stair-stepper style trails while the glacier trails are more like a steeply inclined treadmill. This meant that we were using different muscles.
The biggest impact to our speed/pace was the amount of time needed to take pictures!
3) Campgrounds - From what I've read about these campgrounds, they're pretty much chaos when it comes to finding a first come first served site (with a bootleg "black market" of people showing up the night before to "reserve" sites for the next day). Does anyone have any success stories or recommendations?
The fire in the park helped a little as the campsites were filling considerably later than their fill times from previous years. That being said, we only used two sites (Apgar and Many Glacier) and both days we were at the campground by ~6 AM to ensure we got a spot (and we were not the first ones there by any means). The campground hosts did seem to be doing a good job of curbing "pre-reserving" of the sites.
Many Glacier was fairly primitive and had more of a backcounry feel, while Apgar was a bit more commercial (you had the village 1/4 mile away)
4) Canada - I have seen recommendations about going to Waterton, is it worth it beyond what is already in glacier (especially with the drive)?
We did not go to Canada
We have two books and the national geo map, but I am open to other recommendations.
I was unimpressed with many of the Glacier resources (spoiled by ADK/AMC?). The best map was the hike734 map (which you can also find within the park). The falcon guide wasn't great, but one of the rangers showed us the old version of the book and it was much better (you want the one with the white cover, not the yellow cover).
Any other pointers/tips/tricks/recommendations would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Mike
Hi Everyone,
Planning a trip to Glacier in a few weeks and I have a few questions:
1) Is there anything that is a "must see" that is a little off the beaten path? We currently have the following hikes scheduled:
* Siyeh Pass
* Garden Wall
* Iceburg Lake
* Grinnell Glacier
* Ptarmigan Tunnel
* Swiftcurrent Mountain
We ended up doing the following (in my order of preference):
* Ptarmigan Tunnel and Iceberg Lake (~16 miles & 2500') - Be sure to hike beyond the tunnel to get some spectacular views
* Avalanche Lake (~10 miles, 500') - added a herd path hike into the cirque above the lake
* Highline, Garden Wall, Swiftcurrent Mountain, Grinnell overlook (~22 miles, ?? gain) - Unfortunately we did this on a day with a smoke warning so our views were cut short, but it was still fun. Note that while there is a hut, they don't provide water.
* Grinnell Glacier - Took the boats on the way in (for the tourist effect), got rained on, so it dampened views
* Kintla Lake - This was nice to get away from the crowds, stay low, and go off the beaten path (though I personally preferred the above treeline stuff)
* Apgar Lookout - I would not recommend this hike, it spends most of its time in former burn areas, and there are much better views (and bang for your buck). Additionally the lookout tower at the top is boarded up and is used for a communications tower
Our backcountry permit got denied, but if there are any areas in the backcountry which you recommend, we are conditioned for longer hikes (GRT, pressies, pemi, etc...) and would be happy to do an epic if it got us away from the crowds and to somewhere unique (all of our other hikes are fairly close to the road).
The ranger at the backcountry permit station recommended we "day hike our butts off" over trying to deal with the logistics for the first come first serve backcountry sites, so that's what we did
2) Distances and gain - Most of the hikes (above) have very little gain (< 3k feet), is this because our guidebook is only giving us the delta between the high/low points, or is there really that little change between the various points on the trail? In general, how do the trails compare with those in the Adirondacks/Whites? From what I've seen in pictures, the exposure is higher, but the trail bed is much nicer/easier/faster.
This is a tough one. The trails are certainly nicer, but they're also very different. I would say that the gains do not account for much of the PUD along the trails. Additionally, I found that our legs were built for doing (adirondack/new england) stair-stepper style trails while the glacier trails are more like a steeply inclined treadmill. This meant that we were using different muscles.
The biggest impact to our speed/pace was the amount of time needed to take pictures!
3) Campgrounds - From what I've read about these campgrounds, they're pretty much chaos when it comes to finding a first come first served site (with a bootleg "black market" of people showing up the night before to "reserve" sites for the next day). Does anyone have any success stories or recommendations?
The fire in the park helped a little as the campsites were filling considerably later than their fill times from previous years. That being said, we only used two sites (Apgar and Many Glacier) and both days we were at the campground by ~6 AM to ensure we got a spot (and we were not the first ones there by any means). The campground hosts did seem to be doing a good job of curbing "pre-reserving" of the sites.
Many Glacier was fairly primitive and had more of a backcounry feel, while Apgar was a bit more commercial (you had the village 1/4 mile away)
4) Canada - I have seen recommendations about going to Waterton, is it worth it beyond what is already in glacier (especially with the drive)?
We did not go to Canada
We have two books and the national geo map, but I am open to other recommendations.
I was unimpressed with many of the Glacier resources (spoiled by ADK/AMC?). The best map was the hike734 map (which you can also find within the park). The falcon guide wasn't great, but one of the rangers showed us the old version of the book and it was much better (you want the one with the white cover, not the yellow cover).
Any other pointers/tips/tricks/recommendations would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Mike
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