![]() |
|
Fall Foliage search - part II |
|
| Disappointed with my seach last week (see Lena Lake) I set out once again to find the elusive Pacific Northwest fall colors. | |
October 14, 2006
Click on map for larger image ---> |
|
I sent out a call to my friends that I was going out in search of dirt and leaves on Saturday and Ron answered. He has a Buell Ulysses and was ready to go exploring with me. We agreed to meet at 8am the next morning up near Lynnwood, which meant that I didn't even have to change my alarm clock from my normal workday time. I got up, threw some last minute stuff on the KLR and headed out in the chilly early morning fog. Ron was waiting for me when I got there and we took off for the mountains. The goal was to reach at least 4,000' in elevation, as that's where I understood the foliage I was after could be found. We darted east on Hwy 2 through the heavy clouds, waiting for the sun to get warmer and the roads drier. I spied mounds of manure piled in a field, each stack steaming like a miniture volcano. The sign outside of Monroe told me that it was 43 degrees out. Combined with the damp air it made for a cold ride even though I was making my bike's electrical system work extra hard by powering my heated grips and my heated jacket. As we neared the town of Index the clouds broke. The sun streamed down through them, blinding me with its intensity. Each bend in the road brought us out from under the heavy layer of clouds and into warmer temparatures. At the summit of Stevens Pass I stopped for some pictures of the avalance chute plant life, which was at least a start to finding some color! But I wanted to see it up close, and I wanted to see, of all things, Larch trees. |
|
![]() |
![]() |
Stevens Pass colors |
Close of up the colors |
|
We kept on riding, dropping down the east side of the
Cascades where the air cooled off surprisingly until we reached Leavenworth.
A quick stop for coffee and hot cocoa and then we were on our way up
Icicle Creek Canyon. My "Washington State Atlas and Gazeteer"
showed that there were many logging and forest service roads in that
area, and I felt that it would be an optimum place to explore. Icicle
Creek Canyon is nicely paved with frequent pullouts for hikers to park.
The popularity of this area for leaf peepers was evident by how many
cars were parked along the side of the road and various people wandering
around with packbacks and cameras. We rode past them all, looking for
the end of the road. Ron and I stopped to check our maps and consider
our options. A young guy in an Acura stopped to ask if we needed any
help and when we declined, he then asked us about the road we were on.
We told him what we knew (that it was an in/out road and not a loop)
and after thanking us he continued on his way. We eventually found the
end of the pavement, but the road kept going. Instead of staying on
the canyon road, we took an offshoot over a bridge to see where it would
lead us. It went up. |
|
![]() |
![]() |
Icicle Creek Canyon road |
Burned area from forest fires a few years ago |
Up and dirt, that's what we
had found. I took the lead and blasted my way round corners and over
rocks. I was grinning from ear to ear. The road that we had found climbed
the side of the canyon, snaking its way along the sides, curving sinuously
with the terrain. An early stop gave us a glimpse of the canyon floor
we were leaving behind and a suggestion of what we were headed for.
The road was by no means difficult and I took the lead to race up and
around the mountainside.
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
Looking back |
Looking forward |
![]() |
![]() |
View from near the bottom of the canyon |
The bikes |
![]() |
![]() |
Fall colors! |
Dirt! dirt! dirt! |
|
I had mentioned that this road was not technical at
all and as if to prove the point, we had company. As Ron and I stood
there admiring the scene laid out below us and the various skills necessary
to accurately photograph elevation changes (something that I have to
practice) I heard a rhythmic "thump thump" in the distance.
It sounded oddly like someone with their car stereo up too loud. We
looked at each other in curiousity when our question was answered: the
young guy from Icicle Creek had followed us up this road in seach of
his own photographic subjects. We all laughed at his presence and he
continued up the road. Ron and I followed shortly after it and it didn't
take us long to overtake him. He let us by and we continued up on roads
that hugged the exposed side of the mountain, the outter edge of the
road dropping off to the canyon floor far below us. |
|
![]() |
![]() |
Heading up
|
Climbing the canyon walls |
![]() |
![]() |
Surprise! (he gave up shortly after here) |
Note the angle of the mountain in the background |
|
It didn't take long after passing the Acura that we
came to a switch back that marked the end of the car's advance. A hefty
washout, large rocks and loose soil grabbed my total attention, as well
as my front tire. I wrestled the KLR through the surprise turn and immediately
began climbing again, this time a little more seriously. In addition,
the road appeared to dive back into a side canyon and away from the
openness I had enjoyed previously. The trees closed in over the road
and the surface varied from heavy rocks to smooth hardpacked dirt. Brush
from the side became more frequent and we even had a tree that had falled
across the road, just high enough to duck under on the high side. Occassionally
the road would almost disappear in overgrown bushes and grasses, small
twigs slapping against my gear and the bike. The road periodically became
a trail, opening back up to the sunshine that we had been blessed with
since leaving Index that morning. |
|
![]() |
![]() |
No Acuras up here! |
Views from further up |
![]() |
![]() |
The glowing larch |
The road gets more rustic |
![]() |
![]() |
Still climbing |
The bikes just after cresting a small ridge |
![]() |
![]() |
Rougher rocks |
Looking back down |
![]() |
![]() |
Ron ducks under a tree |
Ron cresting another ridge |
![]() |
![]() |
Views from further up |
Golden trees and hillsides |
![]() |
![]() |
The mule (I should have left the bags at home) |
The road becomes a trail |
Ron took the lead and not more than five minutes later he stopped short. I pulled up behind him, curious. He stopped because the road had stopped. Well, part of the road was still there, but not a whole lot of it. We walked to the other side to see the condition of the road on the other side and also to better guage the width of the trail that was left. The other side looked very overgrown, but that could have cleared up 20 yards further on for all we knew. But what we didn't know was if this road looped back down into the canyon or if we'd have to backtrack down through here. Ron's Ulysses could fit, and if I took a bag off the KLR it would fit. But it was a long way down. And we weren't sure where we were headed. So we left the single track for another day and retreated back down the mountain. A side road that we had noticed on the way up deserved some exploration, so I hauled the KLR up the steep incline and into more trees. The road opened up and was in beautiful condition. I kept up a healthy pace and reached a good spot to wait for Ron in order to get his picture. I sat and waited and caught him as he came up a small rise. We discussed where this road might go and eagerly guessed that it must loop back down the other side of the side canyon and into the main canyon of Icicle Creek I hopped on the KLR eager to continue, came around the next bend and found... a field. I big, open, gravel/grass/tree chip field. There was no other way out, so we laughed, wheeled the bikes around and went back to the main road, all the way to Icicle Creek Canyon road. From the pavement it was but a short hop to Leavenworth, a quick gas stop and then back over Hwy 2. At Stevens Pass I took the Old Cascade Highway for its brief parallel along the new highway, enjoying the seclusion and sharp corners. I think I surprised Ron when I took us across the wooden bridge that Steve and I had ridden across a couple of weeks before when coming back from Entiat. It was warm and sunny until we got to Index. Oddly enough, the morning clouds had never burned off or blew away, so we had the same cold and damp weather coming back into Seattle that we did on the way out. It was a very hot shower I took when I got home that evening. |
|
![]() |
![]() |
The trail becomes a path |
Exploring a different road |
![]() |
![]() |
Fast dirt |
Returning down Icicle Creek Canyon road |