Mountain Information:
Driving Directions:
There are 3 different ways to get to the Green Mountain road
trail. I chose the shortest and most scenic route along the Sitka
Spruce trail.
- Directions: I-90/SE Middle Fork Road
- #1 I-90 Exit 34 (created 2016/06/10, followed by winter WTA),
- GPS: 47.4957, -121.6397
- The road from I-90 has you pass the popular
Mailbox trailhead on SE Middle Fork Road that turns to NF-5600. As you
drive past Mailbox trail for another 2.5-3 miles, you will hit the a
concrete bridge over the Middle Fork Snoqualmie River. User "Ellisa" has
great details below in their trip report. I copied their link as it
sounds very helpful since we utilized the NF-9010 aka CCC Road.
http://tmber.com/routes/wa/green-mountain-snoqualmie
- Round Trip ~ 8.8 miles, 4000 ft
- #2 I-90 Exit 34 (winter 2010/02/07) [route only referred in one summitpost]
- GPS: 47.5161, -121.6129
- From end of exit ramp make a left and driver
0.6 miles to the Middle Fork Road intersection. Make a right onto the
Middle Fork Road (National Forest Development Road 5600, FR-5600) and continue for approximately 5.1 miles where there is
a bridge crossing over the river. To the right is a full on view of
Russian Butte. From the bridge it’s another 2.0 miles to the logging
road on the left where the route starts. This will be gated so you need
to park where you can and hike in from here. Refer to the topo below
in conjunction with the text.
- Car to Summit ~ 6.6 miles, 3,803 ft
Round Trip ~ 13.2 miles, 10 hours
- #3 I-90 Exit 32.
- I-90 to exit 32; left across freeway to stop sign; left on "old
highway"; right on Mt Si Rd; follow to pavement end; continue for about 1
mile to blue DNR gate.
- (alternative description from wta 2016/06) #1: Take the I-90 Exit 32. The road from I-90 has you pass the popular
Mount Si and Mount Teneriffe trailheads where the paved road turns to
gravel. You drive until you hit NF 9010-1 aka CCC Road and are stopped
by the DNR 902 blue gate.
Route Information: (Choose the easiest one or the winter route if there are multiple routes)
- Caltopo Route: https://caltopo.com/m/U0E8#
Misc
- Other Links:
- Notes:
- No parking permits required. No water, no toilets. Trekking poles are a
must (especially in early summer). Bring layers as you'll be gaining
nearly 4,000 feet of elevation and be very exposed to weather on the
final mile. We'd advise you steer clear in the rain as the final
approach and scramble would be unsafe. And as we said earlier, this
trail should only be attempted by serious hikers with route-finding
skills.
- Trail difficult/impossible to navigate
- Gears/tracking devices required
- Microspikes & Ice axes used on 2016/04
- Bear siting reported on 2016/12
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