The Wonderland Trail: The Best Miles

If you want to sample a smaller section of the Wonderland Trail, park your vehicle at the Sunrise Road Trailhead and hike 16.2 miles to the trailhead at the Box Canyon Picnic Area. These were my favorite miles.
Mount Adams
Summerland
Summerland
Summerland
Sarvent Glaciers
Ohanapecosh Park
People Sliding Down the Mountain
Summerland
Panhandle Gap
Wauhaukaupauken Falls Near Indian Bar
Summerland
Summerland
Cowlitz Park
Cowlitz Park
Stevens Canyon Waterfall

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A Backpacker's Life List by Ryan Grayson is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.   

The Wonderland Trail: Mornings

You ever have a dream where you roll out of bed and go through all of the repetitive minutia of getting ready to go to work, then your alarm shrieks and you realize, "Ahh man, I have to do that all over again?" You stumble back into the shower and rinse off that wonderful sleep warmth that still clings to your tired body. Never in life do I feel more cheated.

After months of backpacking, I still have those dreams, but at least now when I wake up, rather than working, I start another day of hiking in a beautiful place.

I had one of those dreams on my last morning in Rainier, only this time in my dream I got up and went through the process of taking down camp. I guess my subconscious finally forgot what it feels like to go to work. And, as evident in my dream, my subconscious also thinks part of my new morning routine involves cleaning an excessive amount of birdseed out of my tent and backpack. It shouldn't have surprised me that it was a dream. I mean, come on, nobody packs that much birdseed.

When my alarm woke me from the dream, and by alarm I mean the sun slowly lighting up my tent, peacefully and quietly, I realized I'd have to take down my camp again. I really didn't mind, though. Firstly, the birdseed was gone, which saved me so much time, but most importantly, and contrary to my old life, I enjoyed waking up in the morning.
  
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A Backpacker's Life List by Ryan Grayson is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.   

The Wonderland Trail: One of the Greats

As I ventured to the north side of the Wonderland loop, it seemed more and more like I hopped into the pages of a children’s illustrated book of fairy tales. A land created by artists, not natural processes. Wildflowers bloomed everywhere and lush green plants and moss grew everywhere else.

At Mystic Lake, my view of Rainier was as close as ever. I got a better feel for how massive it is. I could now see light blue cliffs of ice, several stories high, that formed where immense glaciers cracked and tumbled down the mountain. Eventually, I was close enough to see the thin meandering trails left by mountaineers climbing to its peak.

After setting up camp in a thick pine forest, I leaned against a log, ate dinner, and read a book. Through the trees, I could hear pops, bangs, and cracks coming from Rainier. I wondered if it was the glaciers melting and breaking up or the sound of huge boulders being tossed downstream like billiard balls, by one of the creeks, which were swelled from the melting snow and ice.

Soon, the crack of lightning joined the percussive sounds coming from Rainier. The sky above me still had a lot of blue behind nonthreatening white clouds, but Mount Rainier is so big, it has its own weather.

It is definitely one of Earth’s great mountains.

"You ever think of hiking to the peak?" I asked an older man the next morning, after we shared a few moments of silence staring at Rainier.

He looked at the mountain reverently and contemplated it for a bit, and then simply said, "No."

"I think I do," I said. I'm beginning to feel like I want to go beyond backpacking on well-maintained trails and do something that requires more technical skill.

I'm crossing the Wonderland Trail from my life list, but adding "Climb to the Top of Mount Rainier." Will this list ever get any shorter? If I don't stop adding to my list of things to do before I die, I don't think I'll ever get around to dying.
  
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A Backpacker's Life List by Ryan Grayson is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.   

The Wonderland Trail: Textbook Evil

Saint Andrews Lake
On the first day, the mosquitoes were almost unbearable. When I parked my car to get my gear together, I saw another backpacker doing the same a few spots over.

After hiking six miles, I saw him stumbling back down the trail toward the parking lot, swatting at the air around his head, complaining about the mosquitoes and his lack of a tent or bug spray.

Even when I wanted to stop for a break or to take a picture, I kept moving instead. The motionless get swarmed. The problem is sometimes I need to take a photo. Sometimes I need to stare at a gorgeous view. And sometimes I need to, you know, go to the bathroom.

“Come on mosquitoes! Let a man piss!” I yelled into the cloud of them forming around me, and to every hiker in earshot. 

At Saint Andrews Lake, it was too beautiful not to stop. I threw off my pack and grabbed my new bottle of bug spray that was already a quarter empty. Deciding against conserving it, so it would last the entire trip, I covered my entire body in a fine mist. I closed my eyelids and lips tight to keep the poison on the outside of my body.

My eyes opened to take in the view. A mosquito flew toward my skin, got a whiff, then buzzed off. A deep satisfying breath entered and exited my lungs. And then, after a tranquil three seconds, a mosquito flew into my right eye. "Ahh," I bellowed, as another flew into my mouth. The only two places left unsprayed.

A friendlier insect
He even waved at me
They are relentless. They are evil. They are mosquitoes.

I met some hikers later that day going in the opposite direction on the Wonderland loop, who said they had no problems with mosquitoes in the other sections of the park. My trip and my sanity were saved.

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A Backpacker's Life List by Ryan Grayson is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.   

The Wonderland Trail

When I went into the outfitter to look for a new cook pot, I didn't know my next stop would be to hike around the base of Washington's Mount Rainier on the 93-mile Wonderland Trail, but on a rack of maps, this one had the most allure.

"Can I help you with anything?" An employee asked.

"Maybe. Have you, or anyone here, ever hiked the Wonderland Trail?" I asked.

"Talk to Carl, I think he's done it."

"No, not yet," Carl said. "It's one on my bucket list though," A girl passed by wearing the same shirt with a name tag as Carl. "Hey have you hiked the wonderland trail?" Carl said.

"No, but it's on my life list," she said.

Actually its been on my life list for years now, at number 80. So why am i waiting... now's the time.