Tank Lakes Autumn & Winter Overnights

Tank Lakes Autumn & Winter Overnights

Route:

Necklace Valley (trail, snowshoe)

Oct 2009: Although I don't often include non-climbs on my webpage trip reports, the Tank Lakes area is deserving of a page. On this weekend overnight, my mom and I hiked up to Tank Lakes to enjoy the autumn colors and beautiful October lighting. An arctic system had moved in bringing bringing frigid winds and sub-freezing temperatures, but this created clear skies for some night photography and helped keep me awake at night to take photos. The following page gives several photos from our fun weekend overnight. Hiking with my mom is always a special and enjoyable experience.

Feb 2010: The long snow slog was well worth the unique wintery views and the spectacular sunrise the following morning. I wonder how many people get up here in the winter?

Region: Washington
Elev: ~5,800 ft
Type: 
Trip Report 1:
Autumn overnight
Date(s): October 10&11, 2009 (Sat&Sun)
Partner(s): Sue Abegg
Trip Report 2:
Winter overnight
Date(s): February 27&28, 2010 (Sat&Sun)
Partner(s): Dave Chase

Map

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Labelled Panorama

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Intro

THIS TRIP REPORT IS STILL MOSTLY IN THE EMBEDDED HTML FORMAT OF MY OLD WEBSITE.

SUMMER
(Aug 2006)
AUTUMN
(Oct 2009)
WINTER
(Feb 2010)

The Route

The Lakes:
Tank Lakes are located in the Alpine Lakes Wilderness Area. These lakes rest on a rocky alpine flat with perennial snowfields and scattered evergreens, with stunning views of Summit Chief, Chimney Rock, and Overcoat Peak across the valley.

Route options:
There is no maintained trail to Tank Lakes, but the lakes can be reached via easy cross-country from a few different directions. This area is often passed by parties doing variations of the (1) Alpine Lakes High Route, in which case the approach typically starts on the Lake Dorothy Trail off the Miller River Road off HWY 2 and comes up to Tank Lakes after Chetwood Lake and Iron Cap Pass. Two popular one-day approaches are (2) via Necklace Valley on the East Fork Foss River Trail off the Foss River Road from HWY 2 and (3) via the Dutch Miller Trail off the Middle Fork Snoqualmie River Road from I-90.

Necklace Valley Approach:
I have always approached Tank Lakes via Necklace Valley, as we did on these particular trips. The trailhead (1660 ft) is easily accessed from HWY 2 near Skykomish at about 4.5 miles up Foss River Road. The East Fork Foss River Trail takes you 8.3 miles and 3100 ft to the head of Necklace Valley. From there, Tank Lakes can be accessed via about 1 mile and 1000 ft of cross-country hiking.

Trip Reports

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Painting by Canadian artist Gary Fox, inspired by one of my photos taken on this trip.

The Lakes Then and Now
Some Panoramas I took
Tank Lakes in August 1982 (taken by my parents), in August 2006 (taken on a family backpacking trip), and in October 2009 (taken on this trip). The glaciers on Chimney and Overcoat have changed more than the trees have!


Photo Trip Report

Afternoon and Evening at the Lakes
(Click on images to enlarge)
A cold autumn view of Summit Chief, Chimney, and Overcoat across the valley with a fresh dusting of snow.
Another cold autumn view across the largest of the Tank Lakes.
Exploring the beautiful plateau. I love the autumn lighting.
Exploring the beautiful plateau.
Exploring the beautiful plateau.
Exploring the beautiful plateau.
Sunset over Iron Cap Mtn and our bivy sacs on the granite slabs.


Night Photography at the Lakes
(Click on images to enlarge)
Star trails and twilight above Chimney and Overcoat.
(6 min, f 10.0, ISO 100)
Colorful star trails above the bivy sacs, with a faint glow of the Milky Way.
(16 min, f 7.1, ISO 400)
Moonlight and star trails.
(7 min, f 8.0, ISO 400)
Moonlight and star trails.
(15 min, f 8.0, ISO 400)

Morning at the Lakes
(Click on images to enlarge)
Sunrise on Chimney and Overcoat from our camp.
Difficult to leave this place to go back to problem sets and text books....



Autumn colors and ice formations
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A tunnel of brilliant leaves on the trail.
Cool ice formations.
Red hucklemberry leaves growing in a handcrack.
Finger-like ice formations.
4 trees.
More ice formations.
And more.
A shelter in Necklace Valley surrounded by autumn colors.
More autumn brilliance.
And more.


Photo Trip Report


The Approach
(Click on images to enlarge)
Usually, the 10 mile approach to Tank Lakes would not be feasible as a one-night trip in the winter, unless you like slogging miles of snow-obscured trail. However, with the unusually low amount of snow accumulation in 2010, the approach was quite doable, but a good workout nonetheless.

We hit snow on the trail around 3200 ft, unusually high for Feb.

The last water we encountered was at Jade Lake at the toe of Necklace Valley. Guess we didn't each need to be hauling 4L (we both drink a lot) over the previous 7 miles...

The old shelter in Necklace Valley at 7.4 miles. You could stay here, but the views aren't great.

To get to Tank Lakes, we snowshoed up a ridgeline heading southwest out of the head of Necklace Valley. Necklace Valley is below.

Almost there. And note the cairn still uncovered (in Feb!?).

A big slab avalanche occurred at the head of Necklace Valley on the day we hiked in. The approach to Tank Lakes avoids avalanche-prone slopes if you stay high on the ridge the whole time.

It snowed a little.

Our camp above Tank Lakes. We had to wait until the next morning for views, but it was worth it (scroll below for the photos)!



A Spectacular Morning at Tank Lakes
(Click on images to enlarge)
I've never seen such spectacular morning colors. Within a couple of hours, the lighting had changed dramatically about every 25 minutes. A sequence of shots from dawn to early morning is given below.

5:56am (dawn)

6:12am (dawn)

6:49am (just at sunrise)

6:56am (just after sunrise)

7:07am

Another North "Cascad-agonia" range. (The 7:07am shot.)

7:36am

8:18am

8:54am


Wandering Around Tank Lakes
(Click on images to enlarge)
Before heading out, we enjoyed wandering around the Tank Lakes plateau for awhile. It is snowshoer's paradise in the winter, at least for the few who ever get here in the winter.

A beautiful place to snowshoe (or ski). Classic altostratus clouds. See my cloud page for more photos and descriptions of clouds!

Either a really big glove or a really small tree.

A view across one of the snowy Tank Lakes.

Cool cirrostratus and cirrocumulus clouds. See my cloud page for more photos and descriptions of clouds!

Edge of a well around a boulder.

Rime on tree.


Slogging Back to the Car
(Click on images to enlarge)
A few more photos from the hike out.

Watch out for the "streambed crevasses"!

Shadows of the trees on the clouds. See my cloud page for more photos and descriptions of clouds!

A cool radial pattern on a log cross-section on the trail.

How to snowshoe in the Winter of 2010.

Comments Pertaining to this Page / Trip Report

Useful beta. Updated route information. Corrections. Historical notes. Interesting facts. No fluff please.
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