Amazing Snowshoe Trails in Washington | Featured Adventure
Don't barricade yourself indoors just because the temperatures have dropped and snow has covered some of your favorite trails. The winter months are a great time to get outdoors, fill your lungs with crisp mountain air, and visit some of your most-loved summer trails. Washington offers winter adventurers a wealth of trails, many with beautiful vistas and mountain lakes, that are still easily accessible in the snowy seasons. Check road and weather conditions before heading out and be sure to pack enough water.
Without further ado, here are 35 of our favorite snowshoe trails in Washington.
Mount St. Helens
June Lake. Photo by Outdoor Project Contributor Ariana Herrick-Kunitz.
- Mount St. Helens Worm Flows: 12 miles, 5,000 feet net elevation gain.
- June Lake: 4.8 miles, 600 feet net elevation gain.
- Chocolate Falls: 5.4 miles, 1,000 feet net elevation gain.
- South Coldwater Ridge: 7 miles, 1,400 feet net elevation gain.
- Kalama River Trail: 8 miles, 500 feet net elevation gain.
Mount Rainier National Park
View of Lane Peak from Nisqually Vista Snowshoe Trail. Photo by Outdoor Project Co-Founder Tyson Gillard.
- Nisqually Vista Snowshoe Trail: 1 mile, 200 feet net elevation gain.
- Reflection Lakes and Inspiration Point: 7 miles, 670 feet net elevation gain.
- Paradise Valley Snowshoe Loop 2.8 miles, 550 feet net elevation gain.
- Edith Creek Basin 1 mile, 240 feet net elevation gain.
Snoqualmie Pass Area
Summit ridge on Cowboy Mountain. Photo by Outdoor Project Contributor Anthony Kasner.
- Talapus Lake: 9 miles, 1,600 feet net elevation gain.
- Melakwa Lake: 10 miles, 2,500 feet net elevation gain.
- Source Lake: 4 miles, 700 feet net elevation gain.
- Twin Lakes: 8 miles, 600 feet net elevation gain.
- Mount Margaret: 7 miles, 3,000 feet net elevation gain.
- Keechelus Ridge: 6.3 miles, 2,500 feet net elevation gain.
- Amabilis Mountain: 8 miles, 2,000 feet net elevation gain.
- Hex Mountain: 7 miles, 2,600 feet net elevation gain.
- Cowboy Mountain: 4 miles, 1,800 feet net elevation gain.
- Cooper River Trail: 11 miles, 400 feet net elevation gain.
Between Index and Leavenworth
View from the trail to Lake Valhalla. Photo by Outdoor Project Contributor Anthony Kasner.
- Barclay Lake: 2 miles, 230 feet net elevation gain.
- Lake Elizabeth: 11 miles, 1,700 feet net elevation gain.
- East Fork of the Foss River: 8.2 miles, 700 feet net elevation gain.
- Surprise Lake: 8 miles, 2,300 feet net elevation gain.
- Skyline Lake: 3 miles, 1,000 feet net elevation gain.
- Grace and Summit Lakes: 3 miles, 500 feet net elevation gain.
- Lake Valhalla: 7.8 miles, 1,900 feet net elevation gain.
- Lanham Lake 1.5 miles, 1,200 feet net elevation gain.
- Wenatchee Ridge: 14.5 miles, 1,059 feet net elevation gain.
- Chiwaukum Creek: 12 miles, 1,500 feet net elevation gain.
- Hatchery Creek: 5.4 miles, 1,110 feet net elevation gain.
- Eightmile Creek: 13 miles, 2,300 feet net elevation gain.
Mountain Loop Highway
- Kelcema Lake: 9 miles, 1,900 feet net elevation gain.
- Big Four Ice Caves: 7 miles, 320 feet net elevation gain.
View from Artist Point. Photo by Outdoor Project Contributor Anthony Kasner.
Standing atop Artist Point on a crisp and clear winter day grants some of the most awe-inspiring views in the state of Washington. It's only 4 miles and 1,000 net elevation gain, and the sweeping perspectives are incredible.
Article by Outdoor Project Team Member, Kat Dierickx.