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🥾 Trip Overview

Trail Length: ~4.2 miles round trip
Elevation Gain: ~1,190 ft (trailhead ≈4,350 ft → summit ≈5,500 ft)
Technical Difficulty: Moderate day hike with exposed sections near summit (Class 3), single-track trail & narrow switchbacks.

The classic trail ascends steeply through a south-facing meadow of wildflowers with panoramic views of the Sauk and Skagit valleys and North Cascades peaks as you climb.

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🕘 Timing & Logistics

Meet at Green Lake P&R @5:00 am

We will make a quick stop at Safeway in Arlington

Start Early — ~7:30 AM from Trailhead

Estimated Hike Timing

Trailhead → Summit: 2–2.5 h
Summit → Trailhead: 1.5–2 h
Total: ~4–5 h with breaks/photo stops

Trailhead & Parking

Forest Road 1030 off Highway 20 — steep, paved/dirt but passable with 2WD (slow and bumpy).
Rough road patches near the trailhead — plan for cautious driving.

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🌸 What to Expect on the Trail

🌼 Wildflowers (Subject to elevation & timing)

Because this is a lower-elevation, south-facing trail, the wildflower display is usually ahead of many other North Cascades routes.
Typical blooms (mid-May onwards):

Cow parsnip & valerian near the lower meadow.
Penstemon, paintbrush & pearly everlasting through mid-slopes.
Saxifrage, thyme buckwheat & yellow coralbells near the rocky upper reaches.
If snow just melted, you may catch lingering glacier lilies or spring beauty near early snowfields.

Wildlife: Marmots and small alpine critters are common; many hikers report their calls and sightings.

Trail Character: Open meadows for most of the ascent with no shade — sunscreen, hats and plenty of water are essential.

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🥪 Summit Experience

At the top you’ll be treated to 360° panoramas of:

Glacier Peak and a sea of jagged North Cascades peaks
Mt. Baker to the north
Puget Sound and San Juan Islands on exceptionally clear days
The Sauk & Skagit River valleys far below

While it’s a short hike, exposure on the last rocky stretch and occasional lingering wind can make conditions feel alpine — layered clothing and wind protection are advised. We will also stop for a quick lunch at the summit of Sauk.

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🧭 Optional & Preferred Traverse to Bald Mountain (Adventure Variation)

What to know before attempting the traverse:

There is no maintained trail between Sauk and the nearby Bald Mountain ridges. Routes involve off-trail travel, bushwhacking and route-finding.
Approaches used by peakbaggers often involve descending Sauk’s NE ridgeline to a saddle, then navigating steep grassy slopes and brush up to Bald Mountain’s summit.
Views on Bald Mountain are more limited due to trees on the true summit and bushy terrain, though intermediate viewpoints show dramatic North Cascades scenery.
This variation transforms a simple day-hike into a full alpine nav/adventure — best suited for experienced route-finders comfortable with minimal trail, elevation transitions, and loose terrain.

Recommended if:

You have previous experience with off-trail peak scrambles and can comfortably navigate using a map/compass/GPS.
You’re prepared for a longer day (~+2–4 h and +1,000 ft gain/loss beyond Sauk).
You’re aiming for a more exploratory peakbagging experience.

If you prefer a more straightforward day, I recommend just bagging Sauk Mountain and savoring the scenic wildflowers and summit views — it delivers a high reward for effort without extra risk. However, I do plan on bagging Bald Mountain if people are up for it!

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🎒 Gear Checklist

Essential

Daypack with water (2–3 L) lunch/ snacks
Sunscreen + hat + layers (warm, windproof outer)
Trekking poles (helpful on steeper switchbacks/snow patches)
Navigation (map/GPS/phone with downloaded maps)
Sauk Mountain Trail on AllTrails
https://www.alltrails.com/trail/us/washington/sauk-mountain-trail?p=-1&sh=y72ka7&utm_medium=trail_share&utm_source=alltrails_virality
First aid + blister kit

Optional

Camera or binoculars (excellent views + wildflower foregrounds)
Headnet/bug spray (midges can be active in spring)
Microspikes (only if lingering snow patches are icy)

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🚗 Final Tips
Hydration & pacing matter — the steep switchbacks are continuous; plan for a relaxed ascent with plenty of photo stops.

General Expected Conditions on Sunday

Temperatures: Likely in the upper 30s to mid-40s °F on the ridge — cold at elevation typical for mid-May.
Precipitation: Most rain/snow threat drops out on Sunday; overcast skies and variable visibility are probable.
Snow on Route: Given this low snow year, snow is minimal or absent on the south-facing Sauk trail down low. However, patches around the ridge and near the summit saddles can linger — expect transitional spring snowfields above ~4,500 ft.

Related topics

Events in Seattle, WA
Rock Climbing
Hiking
Mountaineering
Outdoors
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