Beaver Lake by Charlie Duncan Photography
Beaver Lake by Charlie Duncan Photography

Beaver Lake Trail #783

Beaver Lake is an easy enjoyable walk through the woods which makes it a great family hike.  It has historical significance as well following the old Sauk River Logging Railroad grade.  As you start your hike challenge yourself to find signs of the past, when at one time a train whistled its way through the forest.  The first sign will be old piers where once a bridge crossed the river.  Continuing onward note that you are walking on the old tracks themselves which have been buried although you may see them from time to time along the trail and in ditches.

This is a nice four season walk. In spring and early summer you’ll find an array of wildflowers such as Yellow Wood Violets,  Western Bleeding Heart and Trillium.  In autumn the trail is transformed as the leaves turn color and the forest floor becomes a fairy kingdom of fascinating mushrooms.  Cold winter days freeze the pond and frost clings to everything making this trail a wonder to experience.

At a little less than a mile, you encounter the first washout where you will see the old tracks protruding from the bank of the Sauk River.  If you look down toward the river you will see the old trestle that at one time supported the rails.  For several years the trail halted here due to the washout.  A Washington Trails Association volunteer crew cut a new trail into the bank reconnecting the route to the beaver pond.  Once getting back on the old grade, you soon come to a bridge crossing over part of the beaver pond.  The pond is a work of natural art with one long wall creating a continuous dam, somewhat like a small scale Great Wall of China. This pond and habitat would not exist, if it had not been for the work of some very busy and determined beavers.

A short distance past the beaver pond, the trail comes to a second washout which is impassable.  At one time this trail continued onward to the Mountain Loop Highway.  Now this is two trails, the other end going to the Lookout Tree, another unique historical walk.

Views From Beaver Lake Trail

Getting there:

From the Darrington Ranger Station, take the Mountain Loop Highway and drive 10 miles. Once you pass the turn off for the White Chuck Bridge to the left, you will see the road to the trailhead with a parking area on the right.

History:

This trail follows the old Sauk River Logging Railroad, look for the clues along the way.

Type of trail: USFS
Length:
 2 miles
Elevation: 900 – 1,000
Level of difficulty: easy
Best Seasons:  All seasons

For more information see the Darrington Ranger District Website

Learn More About Beavers:

Enjoy this wonderful video by American Public Service, How Beavers Make Dams

Did You Know?

Beavers are the largest rodent in North America.

Beaver’s teeth never stop growing.

Their teeth are orange because they have a lot of iron that makes them very strong.

They build dams using rocks, mud, moss and wood from local trees.

Their flat tail is used like a rudder, they paddle with their webbed hind feet and grab with their clawed front feet.

Contact Us

We're not around right now. But you can send us an email and we'll get back to you, asap.

Not readable? Change text. captcha txt

Start typing and press Enter to search