Go boating, backpacking and biking on a trip to Stehekin

  • By Rich Landers The Spokesman-Review
  • Friday, May 15, 2015 1:27pm
  • Life

Stehekin is a Northwest classic backcountry destination at the end of Lake Chelan, accessible by boat and floatplane and, most deliciously, by foot.

Hikers who tough out an 18-mile trail can celebrate the effort in a quaint wilderness inholding as they mix with people who got there without so much as a bead of sweat.

But visitors who arrive the hard way have a heightened appreciation of the amenities: a National Park Service museum, shower, rental bikes to explore 13 miles of roads and waterfalls and a bakery that serves the best fresh, hot cinnamon rolls ever baked by the dozen in the heart of a wilderness.

The Chelan Lakeshore Trail is available to hikers or snowshoers most of the year, but it’s especially attractive for early-season backpacking. The route along the northcentral Washington lake is brightened by wildflowers.

Many hikers revel in the unusual twist that they must board a ferry or hire a float plane to reach the trailheads.

Lakeshore Trail 1247 usually is the first wilderness trail to open on the Wenatchee National Forest and North Cascades National Park. The route is mostly within either the Lake Chelan-Sawtooth Wilderness or the Lake Chelan National Recreation Area.

It runs along the north side of the 55-mile-long lake from Prince Creek, which is 37 miles “up lake” from the town of Chelan, to Stehekin at the very west end of the lake. Stehekin is inside the national park boundary.

The Lakeshore Trail crosses a number of small seasonal streams plus 11 significant creeks, some of which can be tricky to cross in spring flows.

Later in the summer, backpackers can tramp up from the lake into Lake Chelan basin, past alpine lakes to the Methow Valley and the Washington Pass/Rainy Pass area on Highway 20.

While those high routes are snowbound and not viable for another month or so, the Lakeshore Trail stays below the spring snowpack with a total elevation gain of only 500 feet.

Between May 1 and Oct. 15, the Lady of the Lake ferry makes “flag” stops at Prince Creek trailhead, giving hikers more options.

You can leave from Chelan at 8:30 a.m. Or you can catch the boat farther up the lake at Field’s Point Landing at 9:45 a.m. From Field’s Point, it’s a 20-mile boat ride to Prince Creek Campground. (Check ladyofthelake.com for details on schedules, fees and reservations.)

Prince Creek bar was leveled by heavy spring flooding in May 1948, eliminating use of a forest guard station and Boy Scout camp.

From the Prince Creek drainage, the trail heads northwest up the lake. Hikers tend to be grouped after mass departure from the ferry, but the ranks spread out quickly.

It’s common to see deer and black bears along Lake Chelan during spring. It’s not uncommon to see a rattlesnake or to pluck off a few ticks.

Powerhouse hikers go all the way to Stehekin in a day. Most hikers do the trek in two days to enjoy the undulating route as it leads up and down from the lake.

Hikers find variety as the trail weaves through ghost forests and newer growth in areas burned in 2001 and 2006. The trail winds through and around a few pockets of private property, but mostly it’s wild.

Designated camping areas are:

  • Meadow Creek camping area, 7 miles from Prince Creek, is steep with primitive sites along a flood-scoured ravine and the ridge above.
  • Moore Point, 11 miles from Prince Creek, is an established camp with more convenient lake access.
  • Flick Creek Campground is 4 miles uplake from Moore Point.
  • Stehekin, 2.8 miles farther uplake at the trail terminus, offers camping and more.

The village serves visitors and the small population that’s scattered on 417 acres of private land within the Lake Chelan National Recreation Area.

Many visitors have learned to take advantage of the free camping at the National Park Service sites and relish the uncommon luxuries Stehekin offers. They bring cash for the kayak and bike rentals and four quarters for the five-minute shower.

Another option is to pay $7 for the shuttle from Stehekin on the dead-end road to High Bridge Campground to rub elbows with Pacific Crest Trail hikers. Among the options from High Bridge is a 20-mile trek to gawk at 20 waterfalls in Horseshoe Basin.

Stehekin overnighters can find a site and pitch a tent, make a reservation for a restaurant dinner, visit the park museum and join an interpretive tour led by a park ranger.

Stehekin has a year-round population of about two dozen people, but the numbers ebb and flow significantly depending on the season, the holiday and the arrival and departure of the Lady of the Lake.

The morning after camping out at Stehekin, savvy visitors will be at the bike rental station at 8 a.m. so they can pedal 2 miles to the Stehekin Pastry Co. Yum. Then they can ride farther to visit the old schoolhouse and the historic orchard. Not to be missed is a stop to walk up and get drenched in the refreshing mist at Rainbow Falls.

The bakery cooks said that on a busy day, they might go through eight dozen fresh cinnamon rolls in addition to all the other scones, rolls, muffins and breakfast egg combos they sell.

“We always have some cinnamon rolls frozen and ready just in case someone comes in late,” the woman behind the counter said. “If they come this far and have their heart set on a cinnamon roll, we don’t want to disappoint them.”

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