Washingtons Okanogan National Forest : PCT/grass hopper pass

Joined
May 3, 2018
Messages
292

September 26 my wife and I got a very late start when we went out with a snow dusting in the forecast to Harts pass to hike toward Grass hopper pass on the PCT. We arrived at an empty trailhead as snow started to fall but went for it anyway. Most of these are my wife's pics as photos have been taking a back seat with me as Im one of those weirdos who likes to video tape crap.

The snow picked up and so did the wind when we got to the 2ish mile mark of the 5ish mile hike. We decided to turn around and find a flat spot we came past earlier and camp there for the night. My wife was moving fast and I was slow as I was nursing what I thought was a knee injury (which turned out it wasn't really an injury, it was some IT band thing and all I had to do was one goofy stretch to fix it). Anyways, with her quick movement she made a wife decision and just walked past the spot we talked about and went back to the empty TH. There was lots of tree cover at the TH where we set up, drank then slept. The snow stopped around dark and I tried to get a fire going at one of the designated camp spot fire pits by the TH but everything was too wet and I was cold so I just said screw it and went back into my warm sleeping bag and kept drinking. The next morning the sun went to work quick melting the snow and we were off with day packs this time. Found out if we pushed forward at our turn around point another .25 or so miles we would have found a perfect shelter spot for camp. Oh well. WE got to the pass the larches were almost golden, the peaks dusted and it was awesome. Hiking out kind of sucked as my IT band was acted up bad and I was getting nervous that my knee was shot and my only hobby was in jeopardy. My wife works for a bone and joint surgery place so I went there later in the week and got my knees scanned. According to the doctor my knees look "very strong and healthy" then gave me some weird IT band stretches to do which I'd never think of doing, ever. Well one of the stretches worked immediately and I was back at it. Frustrating the stress the damn thing put me through up until that point! I also found out my camera batteries really don't like the cold.

tyMAEYu.jpg

Me and my snow hiking beer for motivation.
pCGHVst.jpg

Turn around point.

The next day
I9gENPf.jpg

You can see the trail cutting through the mountain side and the larches starting to turn. (They typically peak in WA anywhere from Oct 1 - Oct 14) for alpine larches and mid-late October for western larch depending on the region
aksTb7e.jpg

DJPRYwv.jpg

Cold mountain!
LpDCzt9.jpg
849qyeQ.jpg
2QqFMa5.jpg

The needles as we get near Grasshopper Pass
8pbdTyh.jpg

grass hopper pass center camera
ruyNG9c.jpg
 
Nice quick trip! IT band issues can be pretty difficult to deal with for sure. I'm curious as to what stretch worked for you?
 
What a difference a day makes. Beautiful area, thanks for the TR!

I have been working my way around IT band issues for 36 years. Copying @hikeer 's question, what stretches worked for you?
 
Great report. I love the color of the larches.

I was going to mention the foam roller to you. I have two and use one often. It is painful to roll your IT band at first, but eventually it softens up over time.

IMG_1041.JPG

I bought the shorter one originally, but as I got older I found it was harder to keep the side of my leg on it as I rolled, so I purchased the longer one two years ago and not even my fading coordination can keep me from rolling off of it. :) Good luck with that pesky problem.
 
Last edited:
Great report. I love the color of the larches.

I was going to mention the foam roller to you. I have two and use one often. It is painful to roll your IT band at first, but eventually it softens up over time.


I bought the shorter one originally, but as I got older I found if was harder to keep the side of my leg on it as I rolled, so I purchased the longer one two years ago and not even my fading coordination can keep me from rolling off of it. :) Good luck with that pesky problem.
totally agree about the softening over time. I am about as pliable as iron, but there's some strange masochistically good feeling about rolling out, especially the IT band. My recovery time from longer mileage days is also much shorter. I found it also helps with the osteoarthritis (there's also scraping of cartilage). I do a trip with a college roommate who is a PT every year or so, and I get a free consultation each trip... even if I don't ask... but sounds like with the wife you have a great hookup.

(My daughter made fun of me rolling out or doing stretches while watching tv, until one day the foam went missing. It was in her room.)

---
I am just going and watching a few of your videos now from the past month. Love the overcast moodiness and the moisture to go with the larches, pika and marmots. I know there was misery with the cold and wet, but good stuff. Real beautiful.
 

Don't like ads? Become a BCP Supporting Member and kiss them all goodbye. Click here for more info.

Back
Top