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Difference between revisions of "Silver Star Mountain Hike"

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[[Category:Exposed Hikes]]
 
[[Category:Moderate Hikes]]
 
 
[[Category:Southwest Washington]]
 
[[Category:Southwest Washington]]
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[[Category:Gifford Pinchot National Forest]]
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[[Category:Moderate Hikes]]
 
[[Category:Viewpoint Hikes]]
 
[[Category:Viewpoint Hikes]]
 
[[Category:Wildflower Hikes]]
 
[[Category:Wildflower Hikes]]
[[Image:180_TrailLookingNorth.jpg|thumb|400px|Looking back at the Silver Star trail.  Saint Helens and Rainier in the distance.  ''Jeff Statt'']]
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[[Category:Family Hikes]]
[[Image:180_Trail.jpg|thumb|250px|The trail follows an abandoned lookout access road.  One of the false summits in the background.  ''Jeff Statt'')]]
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[[Category:Hikes]]
[[Image:180 FalseSummit.jpg|thumb|250px|One of the many spine-line ridgelines in the Silver Star area.  ''Jeff Statt'']]
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[[Image:HoodFromSilverStar.jpg|thumb|250px|Mount Hood from the Silver Star summit.  ''Jeff Statt'']]
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[[Image:SilverStarTrailNetworkSS.JPG|thumb|380px|USGS Silver Star network map]]
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* Start point: [[Silver Star Trailhead]]
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[[Image:180_TrailLookingNorth.jpg|thumb|400px|Looking back at the Silver Star Trail with Mount Saint Helens and Mount Rainier in the distance ''(Jeff Statt)'']]
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[[Image:180_Trail.jpg|thumb|250px|The trail follows an abandoned lookout access road.  One of the false summits is in the background. ''(Jeff Statt)'')]]
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[[Image:180 FalseSummit.jpg|thumb|250px|One of the many ridgelines in the Silver Star area  ''(Jeff Statt)'']]
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[[Image:HoodFromSilverStar.jpg|thumb|250px|Mount Hood from the Silver Star summit  ''(Jeff Statt)'']]
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[[Image:SilverStarMountainMap.png|thumb|300px|The route described along the north ridge of Silver Star Mountain  Courtesy: ''Caltopo/USFS'']]
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{{Start point|Silver Star North Trailhead}}
 
* End point: [[Silver Star Mountain]]
 
* End point: [[Silver Star Mountain]]
 
* Trail Log: [[Silver Star Hike/Log|Trail Log]]
 
* Trail Log: [[Silver Star Hike/Log|Trail Log]]
* Hike Type: Out and Back
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* Hike type: Out and back
* Distance: 6 miles (round trip)
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{{Distance|5.6 miles}} (round trip)
* Elevation Gain: 1200 feet
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{{Elevation gain|1240 feet}}
* Difficulty: Moderate
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* High point: 4375 feet
 +
{{Difficulty|Moderate}}
 
* Seasons: March through November
 
* Seasons: March through November
 +
* Family Friendly: Yes (older kids)
 
* Backpackable: No
 
* Backpackable: No
 
* Crowded: Yes
 
* Crowded: Yes
* Family Friendly: Yes (8 and older)
 
  
 
=== Hike Description ===
 
=== Hike Description ===
[[Silver Star Mountain]] is one of the best 360 degree summits within a day's drive of Portland, boasting a rocky, exposed viewpoint of five major cascade volcanoes. It is also a great wildflower area in the spring, and features huckleberries in the fall. Further, there are enough unique and sometimes fanciful rock outcrops along your journey that you'll wish you brought a geologist along!
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[[Silver Star Mountain]] is one of the best 360 degree summits within a day's drive of Portland, boasting a rocky, exposed vista to five major Cascade volcanoes. It is a great wildflower area in the spring, featuring meadows abundant with avalanche lilies and beargrass blooms. Huckleberries ripen along sections of the trail, an old jeep road, in the fall. In addition, there are enough unique and sometimes fanciful rock outcroppings along this north ridge of the exposed pluton that will arouse your inner geologist! Note that this hike, using Trail #180, is the shortest and most direct route to the summit of [[Silver Star Mountain]], but it also has the worst road for access, so make sure you have high clearance and 4WD. 
  
Of the many hike options in the Silver Star area, three are most established: The [[Silver Star via Grouse Vista Hike|Grouse Vista Trail]], [[Silver Star Hike|Silver Star Trail #180]] and the [[Bluff Mountain Hike|Bluff Mountain Trail]].
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The Silver Star Trail is exposed just about the whole way up, so you'll want to bring a hat and sun protection in the spring/summer months. The trail starts as a single track dirt path through a young maple forest. It soon comes to a closed jeep road and follows this rocky old lookout access road most the rest of the way up the north ridge of the mountain. You'll pass the signed lower end of [[Silver Star-Ed's Trail Junction|Ed's Trail]] at a switchback. (You have an option here to embark upon the more rugged [[Silver Star via Ed's Trail Loop Hike]]). There's a great view of [[Mount Hood]] and also back to [[Mount Saint Helens]] and [[Mount Rainier]]. After rising up the track a short distance, you'll see an unsigned junction with the [[Silver Star-Chinook Trail Junction|Chinook Trail]], which drops to the right.  
  
The Silver Star Hike using trail #180 is the shortest and most direct route. It is also also the best for wildflower lovers. In late spring the meadows here are abundant with avalanche lily and beargrass blooms.
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Next, you’ll pass a jeep track and campsite on the right before ascending above a noble fir wood among rocky outcrops. Down to the right is the Coyote Creek drainage flowing to the larger Rock Creek valley, with a number of clearcuts visible. [[Larch Mountain (Washington)|Larch Mountain]] is visible across the valley, and the profile of [[Sturgeon Rock]] juts up from a western ridge ahead. Looking behind you, you can see [[Mount Saint Helens]] dominating the horizon. The track continues across bear-grass meadows that bloom exuberantly with wildflowers in spring and become a swath of brilliant yellow smooth hawksbeard in early summer. On the crest, a spur to the left gives you a clifftop view that also includes [[Mount Rainier]] and [[Mount Adams]], with the deep and rugged valley of Star Creek below. A picturesque rock pillar rises to your right. The Silver Star Trail now follows a wildflower corridor hemmed in by firs, but a gap in the trees offers a view along the [[Little Baldy Mountain|Little Baldy]] – [[Bluff Mountain]] ridge. In short order, you’ll arrive at a [[Silver Star Upper Trail Junctions|five-way junction]], with the Sturgeon Rock Trail coming in on the right and the Bluff Mountain Trail and Ed’s Trail joining on the left. When you arrive at a [[Silver Star-Summit Trail Junction|junction with a rockpile]], and make a left to ascend to the summit.  
  
The trail itself follow an old lookout access road. In fact, the road -- although rocky -- remains in good enough shape for a 4x4 pickup to drive it even now. The trail is also exposed just about the whole way up. Bring a hat and sun protection in the summer months.
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The jeep track passes a campsite on the left (there’s a connector to the Bluff Mountain Trail from here) before leaving the sheltering noble fir forest and emerging into an open meadow of bear-grass, huckleberry, spiraea, lupine, and bistort. At a saddle, you’ll see the lower summit of [[Silver Star 2]] to your right and the rocky prominence of [[Silver Star Mountain]] to the left. The spectacular ridge that conveys the [[Silver Star Mountain via Bluff Mountain Hike|Bluff Mountain Trail]] past [[Little Baldy Mountain|Little Baldy]] stretches to the east. [[Mount Adams]] is on the eastern horizon, with [[Mount Rainier]] to the far left and [[Mount Hood]] to the far right. Once on the summit of [[Silver Star Mountain]] itself, which more than likely will have other occupants, you’ll note the concrete platform from the former lookout. Looking north, you can see up Silver Star’s north ridge and the route of [[Silver Star via Ed's Trail Loop Hike|Ed’s Trail]]. [[Mount Saint Helens]] forms a spectacular backdrop. Far to the south, [[Mount Jefferson]] should be visible on any clear day.
  
After passing a couple of false summits, the trail eventually dips into the forest near the junction with Ed's Trail and the Bluff Mountain trail. As you approach the summit, you get your first views of [[Mount Hood]] and the gorge near Washougal, Washington. The trail basically ends at the middle of a saddle. This is a dual-summit of sorts. Take the left spur to the "true" summit which has the remnants of an old lookout tower. Then turn back and hike up the short 'south summit' (called '''Star 2''' on the USGS maps) for the great photo-op of the north summit with [[Mount Rainier]] and [[Mount Saint Helens]] at its side. 
 
 
You can return the way you came, but many people will return using Ed's Trail. Ed's trail parallels trail #180 for a few miles and shows off a few more interesting geologic formations - including an impressive rock arch.
 
  
 
== Maps ==
 
== Maps ==
{{HikeMaps|latitude=45.74000|longitude=-122.23000}}
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{{HikeMaps|latitude=45.74749|longitude=-122.23895}}
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* [https://www.dnr.wa.gov/geo/yacolt.pdf  Yacolt Burn State Forest Recreation and Trails Map (Washington DNR)]
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* Washington Department of Natural Resources: ''The Yacolt Burn State Forest Map''
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* Green Trails Maps: ''Bridal Veil, OR #428''
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* U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service: ''Mt. St. Helens National Volcanic Monument & Administrative Area''
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* U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service: ''Gifford Pinchot National Forest''
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* National Geographic Trails Illustrated Map: ''Mount St. Helens, Mount Adams''
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* National Geographic Trails Illustrated Map: ''Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area''
 +
 
 +
=== Regulations or Restrictions, etc. ===
 +
* High clearance required on access road
  
 
{{TripReports|{{PAGENAME}}}}
 
{{TripReports|{{PAGENAME}}}}
(Click [http://portlandhikers.com/forums/AddPost.aspx?ForumID=8 here] to add your own)
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* [https://www.oregonhikers.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=30384  Skamania's Silver Star Summer Solstice Saturday Sunrise]
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* [https://www.oregonhikers.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=28991  Silver Star 6-25-2020]
  
== Related Discussions / Q&A ==
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{{RelatedDiscussions|{{PAGENAME}}}}
* (Click [http://portlandhikers.com/forums/AddPost.aspx?ForumID=141 here] to ask a question or start a conversation)
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== Guidebooks that cover this hike ==
 
== Guidebooks that cover this hike ==
 +
* ''Day Hiking: South Cascades'' by Dan A Nelson & Alan L. Bauer
 +
* ''Day Hiking: Columbia River Gorge'' by Craig Romano
 +
* ''100 Classic Hikes: Washington'' by Craig Romano
 +
* ''60 Hikes Within 60 Miles: Portland'' by Paul Gerald
 +
* ''Day Hikes in the Columbia Gorge'' by Don J. Scarmuzzi
 +
* ''PDX Hiking 365'' by Matt Reeder
 +
* ''100 Hikes in Northwest Oregon & Southwest Washington'' by William L. Sullivan
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* ''Best Hikes Near Portland, Oregon'' by Fred Barstad
 +
* ''Hiking Washington's Mount Adams Country'' by Fred Barstad
 +
* ''Take a Hike: Portland'' by Barbara I. Bond
 +
* ''Afoot & Afield: Portland/Vancouver'' by Douglas Lorain
 +
* ''Best Short Hikes in Washington's South Cascades & Olympics'' by E.M. Sterling & Ira Spring
 +
* ''95 Virtual Hikes of the Gifford Pinchot National Forest and the Mt. St. Helens National Volcanic Monument'' by Northwest Hiker
 +
* ''Skamania 231: A Scrambler's Guide'' by Kelly Wagner
 +
* ''100 Oregon Hiking Trails'' by Don & Roberta Lowe
 +
* ''33 Hiking Trails: Southern Washington Cascades'' by Don & Roberta Lowe
 +
* ''Lookouts: Firewatchers of the Cascades and Olympics'' by Ira Spring & Byron Fish
  
 
== More Links ==
 
== More Links ==
 +
* [https://www.fs.usda.gov/recarea/giffordpinchot/recarea/?recid=31634  Trails #180 & #180D Silver Star & Summit (USFS)]
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* [https://www.fs.usda.gov/recarea/giffordpinchot/recarea/?recid=32122  Trailhead: Silver Star (USFS)]
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* [https://www.wta.org/go-hiking/hikes/silver-star-mountain  Silver Star Mountain (Washington Trails Association)]
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* [https://www.hikingproject.com/trail/7050860/silver-star-trail-180  Silver Star Trail #180  (Hiking Project)]
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* [https://www.columbian.com/news/2020/jul/20/silver-star-one-of-washingtons-best-twilight-vistas-found-east-of-vancouver/  "Silver Star: One of Washington’s best twilight vistas found east of Vancouver" (The Columbian)]
 +
* [https://www.summitpost.org/silver-star-mountain-skamania/151376  Silver Star Mountain (Skamania) (Summit Post)]
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* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silver_Star_Mountain_(Skamania_County,_Washington)  Silver Star Mountain (Skamania County, Washington) (Wikipedia)]
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* [http://oregonwildflowers.org/viewlocation.php?ID=10  Silver Star Mountain (OregonWildflowers.org)]
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* [https://nwwildflowers.com/places/Silver_Star_Mountain  Silver Star Mountain (Northwest Wildflowers)]
 +
  
== Contributors ==
+
=== Contributors ===
 
* [[User:jeffstatt|jeffstatt]]
 
* [[User:jeffstatt|jeffstatt]]

Latest revision as of 00:30, 1 January 2023

Looking back at the Silver Star Trail with Mount Saint Helens and Mount Rainier in the distance (Jeff Statt)
The trail follows an abandoned lookout access road. One of the false summits is in the background. (Jeff Statt))
One of the many ridgelines in the Silver Star area (Jeff Statt)
Mount Hood from the Silver Star summit (Jeff Statt)
The route described along the north ridge of Silver Star Mountain Courtesy: Caltopo/USFS
  • Start point: Silver Star North TrailheadRoad.JPG
  • End point: Silver Star Mountain
  • Trail Log: Trail Log
  • Hike type: Out and back
  • Distance: 5.6 miles (round trip)
  • Elevation gain: 1240 feet
  • High point: 4375 feet
  • Difficulty: Moderate
  • Seasons: March through November
  • Family Friendly: Yes (older kids)
  • Backpackable: No
  • Crowded: Yes

Contents

Hike Description

Silver Star Mountain is one of the best 360 degree summits within a day's drive of Portland, boasting a rocky, exposed vista to five major Cascade volcanoes. It is a great wildflower area in the spring, featuring meadows abundant with avalanche lilies and beargrass blooms. Huckleberries ripen along sections of the trail, an old jeep road, in the fall. In addition, there are enough unique and sometimes fanciful rock outcroppings along this north ridge of the exposed pluton that will arouse your inner geologist! Note that this hike, using Trail #180, is the shortest and most direct route to the summit of Silver Star Mountain, but it also has the worst road for access, so make sure you have high clearance and 4WD.

The Silver Star Trail is exposed just about the whole way up, so you'll want to bring a hat and sun protection in the spring/summer months. The trail starts as a single track dirt path through a young maple forest. It soon comes to a closed jeep road and follows this rocky old lookout access road most the rest of the way up the north ridge of the mountain. You'll pass the signed lower end of Ed's Trail at a switchback. (You have an option here to embark upon the more rugged Silver Star via Ed's Trail Loop Hike). There's a great view of Mount Hood and also back to Mount Saint Helens and Mount Rainier. After rising up the track a short distance, you'll see an unsigned junction with the Chinook Trail, which drops to the right.

Next, you’ll pass a jeep track and campsite on the right before ascending above a noble fir wood among rocky outcrops. Down to the right is the Coyote Creek drainage flowing to the larger Rock Creek valley, with a number of clearcuts visible. Larch Mountain is visible across the valley, and the profile of Sturgeon Rock juts up from a western ridge ahead. Looking behind you, you can see Mount Saint Helens dominating the horizon. The track continues across bear-grass meadows that bloom exuberantly with wildflowers in spring and become a swath of brilliant yellow smooth hawksbeard in early summer. On the crest, a spur to the left gives you a clifftop view that also includes Mount Rainier and Mount Adams, with the deep and rugged valley of Star Creek below. A picturesque rock pillar rises to your right. The Silver Star Trail now follows a wildflower corridor hemmed in by firs, but a gap in the trees offers a view along the Little BaldyBluff Mountain ridge. In short order, you’ll arrive at a five-way junction, with the Sturgeon Rock Trail coming in on the right and the Bluff Mountain Trail and Ed’s Trail joining on the left. When you arrive at a junction with a rockpile, and make a left to ascend to the summit.

The jeep track passes a campsite on the left (there’s a connector to the Bluff Mountain Trail from here) before leaving the sheltering noble fir forest and emerging into an open meadow of bear-grass, huckleberry, spiraea, lupine, and bistort. At a saddle, you’ll see the lower summit of Silver Star 2 to your right and the rocky prominence of Silver Star Mountain to the left. The spectacular ridge that conveys the Bluff Mountain Trail past Little Baldy stretches to the east. Mount Adams is on the eastern horizon, with Mount Rainier to the far left and Mount Hood to the far right. Once on the summit of Silver Star Mountain itself, which more than likely will have other occupants, you’ll note the concrete platform from the former lookout. Looking north, you can see up Silver Star’s north ridge and the route of Ed’s Trail. Mount Saint Helens forms a spectacular backdrop. Far to the south, Mount Jefferson should be visible on any clear day.


Maps

  • Maps: Hike Finder
  • Yacolt Burn State Forest Recreation and Trails Map (Washington DNR)
  • Washington Department of Natural Resources: The Yacolt Burn State Forest Map
  • Green Trails Maps: Bridal Veil, OR #428
  • U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service: Mt. St. Helens National Volcanic Monument & Administrative Area
  • U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service: Gifford Pinchot National Forest
  • National Geographic Trails Illustrated Map: Mount St. Helens, Mount Adams
  • National Geographic Trails Illustrated Map: Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area

Regulations or Restrictions, etc.

  • High clearance required on access road

Trip Reports

Related Discussions / Q&A

Guidebooks that cover this hike

  • Day Hiking: South Cascades by Dan A Nelson & Alan L. Bauer
  • Day Hiking: Columbia River Gorge by Craig Romano
  • 100 Classic Hikes: Washington by Craig Romano
  • 60 Hikes Within 60 Miles: Portland by Paul Gerald
  • Day Hikes in the Columbia Gorge by Don J. Scarmuzzi
  • PDX Hiking 365 by Matt Reeder
  • 100 Hikes in Northwest Oregon & Southwest Washington by William L. Sullivan
  • Best Hikes Near Portland, Oregon by Fred Barstad
  • Hiking Washington's Mount Adams Country by Fred Barstad
  • Take a Hike: Portland by Barbara I. Bond
  • Afoot & Afield: Portland/Vancouver by Douglas Lorain
  • Best Short Hikes in Washington's South Cascades & Olympics by E.M. Sterling & Ira Spring
  • 95 Virtual Hikes of the Gifford Pinchot National Forest and the Mt. St. Helens National Volcanic Monument by Northwest Hiker
  • Skamania 231: A Scrambler's Guide by Kelly Wagner
  • 100 Oregon Hiking Trails by Don & Roberta Lowe
  • 33 Hiking Trails: Southern Washington Cascades by Don & Roberta Lowe
  • Lookouts: Firewatchers of the Cascades and Olympics by Ira Spring & Byron Fish

More Links


Contributors

Oregon Hikers Field Guide is built as a collaborative effort by its user community. While we make every effort to fact-check, information found here should be considered anecdotal. You should cross-check against other references before planning a hike. Trail routing and conditions are subject to change. Please contact us if you notice errors on this page.

Hiking is a potentially risky activity, and the entire risk for users of this field guide is assumed by the user, and in no event shall Trailkeepers of Oregon be liable for any injury or damages suffered as a result of relying on content in this field guide. All content posted on the field guide becomes the property of Trailkeepers of Oregon, and may not be used without permission.