If you are a Pacific Northwest trail runner you always hear about running around the local volcanoes (Wonderland Trail around Mt. Rainier or the Loowit Trail around Mt. St. Helens). The Wonderland Trail is almost 100 miles and ultra runners attempt it in 1 push or break it up into 3 parts (hikers try in 10-14 days). The Wonderland is a very good trail, in good condition, and is maintained as it is in a National Park. The Loowit Trails in much shorter (about 30 miles) and ultra runners do the 1 day version. Mt. St. Helens is a National Monument (part of the forestry service) and it appears that it gets hardly any funding for trail maintenance*.
Why run around Mt. St. Helens?
Everyone says - "the views"! On a clear day you can see Mt. Hood, Mt. Adams and Mt Rainier as well as mountain ranges as far as the eye can see. It's a 50K - how hard can it be**?
What do you think it means to run around a mountain?
I had never gone to St. Helens so I had no idea where the trail went. You can easily think a circle around the mountain. Okay, maybe the trail goes up and down a bit but you get on the trail and go around the mountain. Well, maybe that can happen, but not on St. Helens!
As we all know Mt. St. Helens blew her top in 1980. What does that mean for trail running around her? Lots of unstable mountainside to traverse and cross. The whole mountain changed when the blast occurred. Drainage valleys changed, rivers changed, everything changed. All this change is but an infant in geological time. It is as unstable as a baby who goes from crying to laughing to crying in an instant (note - there was no crying on our adventure!)
Our Adventure:
June Lake Trail start to the Loowit (~3.5 miles out and back)
Clockwise on the Loowit Trail (~27 miles)
6am start on July 7
Time estimate to complete: 12-14 hours
Michael explains why he likes this approach and start. Basically, get through the "hard stuff" while fresh and save the runnable part for the end. Hmmm...
Seattle has had a harsh year. Our winter was mild, but spring has been super wet and cloudy. July 5 came and finally we had summer. This was the time to head to St. Helens for the views. The air was still beautifully clear from all the washing it had been getting all spring and the skies would be a perfect blue.
We drove down the night before and stayed in a Freeway-side motel in Woodland. Michael booked for 2 nights as we don't like to drive after big adventures - tired runners = tired drivers. Much cheaper to pay for a hotel room than an emergency room visit. 4:15am came quickly the next morning. Off to the local Starbucks (they open at 4:30am for all us early adventure getters) for coffee and some breakfast. Then a drive through Cougar, WA to the June Lake trailhead.
The trail has several distinct parts - heading West you hit a large lava field (very rocky). The trail is marked with wood poles (rock cairns would be invisible in this lava field). As we headed up this field we got into some forest where we saw our first elk (we would see many elk throughout our day). Then we hit snow.
Lava fields...click to enlarge any image
Slow going over the lava fields.
Views: Mt. Adams
Mt. Adams in the background
Snow crossingMt. St. Helens in view too!
Some kind group or person (WTA? Forest Service? Hiker?) marked parts of the Loowit with blue and orange tape. We would see these markers around trees, stumps, and even rocks. In the snow the trail that still exists disappeared so without these kind markings we would have been working much harder with our navigation in the beginning. At one point we did go a bit too high but once we hit the climbers trail (Ptarmigan Trail - 216A) we were able to correct course back onto the Loowit.
Enlarge this photo and spot the orange/blue tape we were sighting
We had snow off and on while on the south and southwest side of the mountain. While the snow slowed us down, it was also a blessing. It slowed us down as we had to cut steps to cross (the snow was in excellent condition, not too soft that we post-holed and not too hard that we could get a grip in running/trail shoes). It was a blessing as it filled many of the drainage ditches we would have to cross in our journey.
Heading down into the Toutle drainage was pretty nice. We ran through a splendid forest with decent trail, though a bit overgrown in spots. I think the elk are the major users of the Loowit these days and they aren't too concerned about the overgrowth. We could start to hear the river as we got further down towards the drainage valley.
Spot the 10' orange marker at the top of the slope for scale!
where the track is now completely filled in
Where is Mt. Rainier? Haven't we come very far? Mt. Rainier is north of St. Helens. It takes a while to finally see this magnificent snow-covered peak. Mt. Rainier doesn't really come into view until you are beyond the Restricted Zone.
Water - after the Toutle the water got a bit dirty. I don't think I have ever seen flowing water that was complete mud. You would choke a filter trying to clean this water. Fortunately this didn't last too far outside the blast zone and we had crystal clear water again for filling.
And now we have to make it over Windy Pass. Usually this is another slog up a scree slope. Fortunately for us it was snow filled.
Mt. Rainier sneaking out in the background.
At the top of Windy Pass there was a sign: "Stay on Trail". As we started heading down there was no obvious trail. Trails fade away but the signs remain. With time the sign will erode too.
Down the scree slope to the Plains of Abraham. These trails were in good condition as they are used by mountain bikers and hikers. We were able to motor through this section well.
Views: We could see Mt. Adams again ... this was a huge psychological lift... seeing one of the peaks we saw at the beginning really made me feel like we were getting the job done.
We got back to our truck at 10:55PM. 16 hours 50 minutes since we started our journey. It was a true adventure. Michael mentioned that it is easier to summit Mt. Rainier for the views.
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Gear:
I ran with an Ultimate Directions running pack with 1 liter water bottle. I carried sunscreen, gels, food, hats, gloves, and occasionally the camera. My pack weighed in around 5 lbs.
We both used trekking poles. One of Michael's poles was a Black Diamond Whippet (self-arrest device).
Michael did the trip in trail running shoes and light gaiters. I forgot my running shoes but fortunately was wearing 5.10 approach shoes - all leather with sticky rubber (no gaiters).
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*Loowit Trail makes Endangered List (WTA article)
I want to thank the WTA work party that was camped at June Lake. They have been working on the Loowit heading East from the June Lake trail intersection. Hopefully they will be able to improve more of the trail, but as mentioned above, St. Helens has not settled down yet.
** The Loowit Trail #216 is a rugged and challenging trail for experienced hikers.

6 comments:
Do you not carry a GPS? It can be very useful for avoiding an epic. e.g. finding a critical intersection in the dark.
I already had GPS tracks from 20 months back (http://www.scatterlings.us/2008/10/st-helens-loowit-trail.html) but didn't bother carrying the device this time. There really wasn't much chance of getting lost. The bigger risk with darkness was bad footing in rough terrain. Our timing turned out pretty good.
Sounds like a great time. Maybe with fewer picture stops you could have made it back before dark. =^P
Ha ha. It was a more pedestrian day than my previous time on purpose. ;-)
Thanks for the great write up and the trip report you posted at WTA.org I worked on the grant that is funding the Washington Trails Association crews on the Loowit Trail this year. I haven't been out there yet, but am glad to live vicariously from your photos!! -Ryan Ojerio, SW Washington Regional Coordinator
Michael & Tamara - great pictures, sounds like a great day. Maybe I'll get out there next year, I've wanted to do this for a long time, ever since I climbed most of St Helens before it got shorter.
-Glen
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