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Cut log on the old abandoned trail
N47 27.736 W123 23.683 |
Decided to go look for the abandoned but not logged section
of the Dry Creek Trail. There is a 1
mile long section that was abandoned when it was cut off by a logging road and
that section was never logged.
Most of the Dry Creek Trail was destroyed by logging and I’ve
always wondered what route it took to get from the pass down to Camp
Comfort. Meck on NWhikers net pointed me
to a map that showed the old route. I
was very excited to know the old route and
when I looked at it I immediately realized that there was an abandoned section of the trail that was never logged, so
we set out to find it.
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Why was this cut and left to rot?
N47 27.918 W123 23.536 |
We started like I always start by brush crashing down from the
current trail head. I always knew full
well there was no way that the trail took the same route as the logging
road. I’ve been looking for where it cut
the switchbacks in the road for quite a while now. I don’t think I will ever be able to find
that part though. Even having a rough
idea of where it went did not help, since most of that section has been
logged. The section was logged but not not clear cut,
so I had hoped to find some traces, but no luck.
We came out of the woods onto the next switchback down on
the road and then headed into old growth to look for the trail below the second
road cut. It was not looking good, we
went down and down searching for any sign and could not see the trail. We did find a Hemlock tree that had been cut
and left to lay in the forest. It was a
strange sight, well away from any logged area, just one cut tree. We could not even find the stump. I suspect it was a timber cruiser. Perhaps when they saw the center was rotten they decided not to log that section?
Down we kept going looking for the trail, it did not look
like we would find it at all. Then I
looked up and saw a tell tale cut log.
Just one section was cut out of it and rolled away, it had been cut to
clear the old trail when it fell down across it. YES! I
was so excited! We found the old
trail. The trail was very clear with
lots of cut logs and we could see the
grade. Then suddenly the trail was not
clear.
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Trail tread goes through the middle, cut log near upper right in photo |
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Log cut for trail |
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Log cut for trail |
We kept going down finding the trail cut here and there and
then losing it again due to blow downs or maybe switchbacks that we missed. We want to go back and look some more but
starting lower down on the road since the angle of the old trail indicates we
left the road in the wrong spot.
I would like to see this old section of the trail re-opened,
as it is in a beautiful old growth
forest. Right now, most people cannot
reach the current “trail head” by car due to the obscene water bars dug into
the road. People have to hike one mile
up the road just to start the hike and the hike then starts on a closed logging
road. If the trail was reopened down to
where the road crosses Lebar Creek it would be a much more interesting hike and
folks would not have to wade across Lebar Creek at all.
I intend to go back and flag the entire route in hopes
that I can convince someone, maybe the
forest service, to reopen the trail.
We had a great time on this hike. We did over a mile of brush crashing looking
for the old trail, but it was fairly easy brush crashing and it was great to be
in the old growth sleuthing out a trail.
Meanwhile Shelton was celebrating with its outdated
deforestation festival. I always make a point of leaving town to hike in an old growth forest when Shelton is doing that. Our forest festival was about being in the forest, not about destroying the forest.
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Fallen old growth that hid the old trail tread |
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Lebar Creek |
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Lebar Creek near where the old trail crossed it |
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Green was our route today. Purple was a line I drew guessing where the old trail was
based on the 1953 map. Magenta is a line I want to follow next time |
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Our complete brush crashing track going down |
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Old forestry marker buried in tree |
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Old forestry marker on the ground date says
7-15-92 |
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Coffee break on Lebar Creek |
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My kind of forest festival |
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We had to pack lots of water for Sage |
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