The crowds in Waterton's Red Rocks Canyon |
The alpine Swiftcurrent Trail beyond Devil's Elbow |
If there was a symbol of the trip, it was Ted's selfie stick |
Heaven's Peak was the main view to the west from Granite Park |
The Swiftcurrent Mountain Lookout |
You can see the chalet complex behind and below Katie on Swiftcurrent Peak |
Katie and Joanna in front of the chalet |
It was a tight fit for the four of us in our chalet room |
At the beginning of our hike |
On this wonderful trip we included Katie's brother, Ted and his wife, Joanna.
They added a lot of our enjoyment of a tour of both pieces of the Glacier-Waterton International Peace Park in Montana and Alberta. I would crown them the champions of the "self stick" for all the photos they took of themselves with the Glacier-Waterton backdrops. It was hilarious!
We had been to all the venues of this trip before, but that did not make it any less enjoyable.
We took our Napa Valley, CA guests on an exclusively east side of the park tour, starting with East Glacier Park and Two Medicine, up and over Looking Glass Pass and onto St. Mary and Going to the Sun Road with an overnight stay at the West Motel of St. Mary's Lodge. At Goose Island we talked down to St. Mary Lake and Joanna submerged herself going after Ted's I-Phone he had dropped into the water. We ferried a car to Many Glacier, where we planned to end our Swiftcurrent hike. We saw two young grizzlies above the Sherburne Dam and two moose at Fishercap Lake before returning to St. Mary for the night.
The following day we set out from Logan Pass to Granite Park Chalet, an 8+miles hike on the thrilling Hi-Line Trail.
In the morning of the second day we parked our other car in the St. Mary Visitors' Center parking lot and took the first shuttle bus up to Logan Pass where we began our 8+ miles hike along the thrilling High Line Trail to chalet. Our only wildlife were several bighorn sheet grazing below Haystack Butte. The weather was somewhat smoky from the Canadian and Montana fires. We were surprised by the number of runners on this crowded trail, many of whom carried no water or bear spray and were even shirtless.
On the third day we climbed to the lookout on top of Swiftcurrent Mountain after breakfast, arriving back at the chalet ahead of a drenching rain, and at 4:30 p.m., set out for the Grinnell Glacier Overlook, about a mile from the chalet. We hurried because of the time and because a rain-threatening sky. After a brief stop we headed down and Katie was waiting and warning me of a grizzly on the trail below us that had alarmed hikers near the chalet.
Our fourth day was consumed by the 8 mile hike out across Swiftcurrent Pass on a steep alpine trail that viewed the Swiftcurrent Glacier and numerous waterfalls spilling from it on a massive wall of rock. When we got to Red Rocks Lake the rain started to pound us even as we hiked to the falls, and it continued to rain heavily for the next couple of hours. We were simply aghast at the number of hikers who had brought no rain gear and were soaked and cold. Our treat at the end of this wet trip was a warm shower in our rooms at the legendary Many Glacier Lodge, now crowded with wet folks all looking for a meal at the same time as us.
On day five it was off to Canada and Waterton Park via the Chief Mountain border crossing, open on the American side for the first time since COVID. Before heading to Canada, Katie and I hiked to and around Josephine Lake beneath Mounts Gould and Allen while Ted and Joanna took the boat ridge, then a walk to Grinnell Lake and back to the Lodge. Then we immediately
went for a drive along the Red Rocks parkway and a hike to Blakiston Falls, and then got Ted and Joanna checked into the magnificent Prince of Wales Hotel.
Katie and I stayed with Laura and Barry Webster, cattle ranchers in Mountain View a dozen miles east of the park.
On day six, exhaustion overwhelmed me from the non-stop travel and hiking and we did some shopping in downtown Waterton and a walk along Waterton Lake. That was it. I was so tired that it scared me. I knew my trip was over.
On day seven, we drove the 225 miles home along the Rocky Mountain Front and were glad to be greeted by our cats.
Some quick takeaways from our trip:
- Glacier Park was overbooked and a madhouse of people and cars
- In contrast, Waterton had a calmer, less frenzied and more relaxing feel
- The runners on trails in Glacier are an unpleasant distraction while hiking. Many of them play loud music while running and don't carry bear spray or rain gear. Their presence is a rudeness
- Granite Park is a delightful experience and staying an extra day allowed us to do the Swiftcurrent Lookout and Grinnell Glacier Overlook day hikes leisurely. I would have liked to have hiked to Ahern Pass as well
- I had forgotten how steep and thrilling the descent from Devil's Elbow is on the Swiftcurrent Trail
- There needs to be some numbers regulation on the High Line Trail. It is overcrowded
- There aren't enough private restaurants in the St. Mary and Many Glacier areas. The food situation in both places is unpleasant
- We were amazed at the number of license plates from southern U.S. states in Glacier. They're streaming in from Florida, Texas, and Georgia in particular
- Hikers in Glacier are simply unprepared with hiking gear for weather changes
- I think the permit system needs to be re-thought. Opening up the park after 3 p.m. is creating traffic jams of cars in anticipation of park entry
- I'm convinced the best way to see Logan Pass and the hikes along the Going to the Sun Highway is to park, without a permit, at the Visitors' Center, and take the shuttle bus
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