Keekwulee Falls, Mt. Baker National Forest-Snoqualmie Trip Report
January 18, 2003
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John Munyan
126 Review(s) to Date
John is an avid hiker, spending a goodly portion of his time up in the hills, or sitting in front of a computer.
Either way, most of what finds his eye is green, or blue, - organic, or lcd. John likes this website, hopes you do too, and invites you to write a review of a couple hikes you've done!
zzzlyle
24 Review(s) to Date
I live in Federal Way, WA and I enjoy getting out into the great outdoors and hiking and would someday like to make it to the top of Mt. Rainier. When I can't get outside, I'm the IS manager at a marketing firm in Kent.
Directions: Directions: From. Seattle drive east on Interstate
90 to Exit 47/ Asahel Curtis/Denny Creek. Turn left over the overpass and proceed
to the stop sign. Turn right and travel one-quarter mile to Deer Creek Road/Forest
Service Road 58.Turn left, drive 2.5 miles, turning left on the paved road just
after the Denny Creek Campground trailhead is at the roads end. Do not block
the driveways when you park here.
Trail notes: Denny Way. Denny Park. Denny Creek Trail. Which
one would David Denny a prominent Seattle settler, be glad to see memorialized
by his name? If you are stuck in traffic Denny Way and can see Denny Park, you
correctly answer "C," Denny Creek Trail. The route bearing his name
is one of the most spectacular in the Snoqualmie Pass area, with several waterfalls
on Denny Creek-most notably Keekwulee Falls--providing the highlights. The trail
turns up under Interstate 90 and climbs gently, reaching lovely Keekwulee and
Snowshoe Falls at 1.5 and two miles.
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Falls to Lake
Reviewed By: AbePuckett on Sunday, February 21, 2010 @ 09:53:47 PM
Rating: 


Difficulty: 

Review:
Snow filled but easy trek to the falls. Snowshoe falls is barley running and not worth it, though if you have the day (and the lungs) head to Mekwala lake a few miles past this fall. Reviews for lake on this site. Low rating just due to low water volume off falls this time of year, surrounding areas breathtaking
Rain Covered
Reviewed By: Abe on Thursday, November 13, 2008 @ 02:44:50 PM
Rating: 



Difficulty: 

Review:
Great afternoon hike I would reccomend to many. I didn't have the time today to make it all the way to the lake so we hit just these two falls. Becasue of all the recent rain there is a good portion of the trail completely covered in water so be prepared. Keekwulee Falls actually looked really powerful and unlike any picture I'd seen so it's deffinitly worth it. Great surrounding views once you hit about 3,000 ft. Actually started to snow right around Snowshoe falls and it was freezing. Franklin Falls is a beautiful fall in the same Denny Creek area so search it out if you have the day
snow-covered, April 2 2005
Reviewed By: Eli on Sunday, April 24, 2005 @ 12:05:30 AM
Rating: 


Difficulty: 


Review: The first lowland stretch of this hike is nothing out of the ordinary, except for going under I-90, and it gets a lot of traffic noise; to my taste, the good part is once you gain some height and especially get into the open (nothing against trees -- I love trees -- but I'd do a different hike for serious trees), so I think I'd rather try this with better traction and an earlier start, and go on to Melakwa Lake. Still, it was good to get out in some snow.
Hike time was three hours.
April 2, 2005: snow on USFS 58, only wheel-tracks clear, a single set. Don't miss the turnoff from 58 to the little lollipop spur road, because it's no fun trying to turn around in the snow. Back at the fork, I just pulled off and parked and walked up the lollipop spur to the trailhead. It turned out the spur was no worse, and probably could have driven up it, but it also wasn't very far extra to walk.
Mostly raining, mostly lightly. Trail covered with packed wet snow, the kind that feels solid until it gives way and your boot skates off or punches through. In the deeper stuff, out of tree cover, there's a very fine line between planting your foot on the snow for traction, and plunging into it up to the knee.
Walking under the arc of I-90 high above does make you think how driving on a highway is the worst of all ways to appreciate the engineering that went into it. The trail crosses Denny Creek and heads gradually uphill, until it comes out onto an open slope, cleared by landslide or avalanche I can't tell. The mountain across the creek, Denny Mountain, comes clear sometimes through the clouds, towering above me. On my ridge, Low Mountain?, the snow line looks to be only a couple hundred feet further up, but I never got past the drizzle. Cross one open stretch, through a patch of trees, across and switchbacking up another. Came to Keekwulee Falls.
I ate another sandwich here, and headed back into the trees. I was tired from this snow surface, and I could tell my feet were going to be soaking wet in not very long.
Back at the car I found that the clearing I was by was a picnic spot, with table and grill. Snow pressed down through the grill, in two rows of fingers, for some reason each curving inwards, so like a ribcage.
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