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May 30, 2022

East Bank Baker Lake

Easy, peaceful lakeshore backpacking

Yu Chen Hou
Yu Chen Hou

Went midweek with my sister who is new to backpacking, and we chose an easy trail for something that’s both do-able early season and does not offer too much of a challenge. I do think this trail is the one for that!

The road to the trailhead was a little rough with potholes, but also quite short, but I think any car can probably make it with careful driving. My Rav4 handled it just fine.

Google Maps of our route and points of interest

The trail itself is very serene and quite enjoyable rain or shine. We’ve had a wet week and the first day of our hike was very cloudy, so we did not catch a view of Baker at all on our hike in, but we still had a good time looking at the mossy forest and the occasional giant tree. Not much to say about the trail, you’re walking in a mostly flat forest with glimpses of the lake, and all creek crossings have bridges. There’s one blowdown that’s yet to be cleared, but we saw fresh sawdust around many other tree stumps, so those were probably cleared recently. Thank you to the trail crews!

Creek crossing
Creek crossing

When we arrived at Maple Grove camp about 2 hours in, we had a campground mostly to ourselves, there were 2 other groups there, but lots of space. Each site had a bear locker and fire pit. The toilet was probably one of the best I’ve seen in the backcountry in recent times, it uses a conveyor belt system so the inside of the toilet was really clean and there’s no smell at all. How amazing! There was a friendly deer in the campground and hung around for a while before leaving. We tried (but didn’t manage) to start a camp fire due to how damp everything is, and went to back sometime later.

Maple Grove
Bulletin board at Maple Grove
Campsite at Maple Grove
Campsite at Maple Grove
Deer at camp!
Deer at camp
Dock at camp!
Boat dock at the campground

Next morning the weather was a lot better and we managed to catch a view of Mt. Baker before heading back to the car.

Permits

No advanced permits are needed for this trip. This trail can get crowded on weekends, so plan ahead (or around this)!

You’ll also need a National Forest / Interagency pass to park at the trailhead.

When to go

I think this trail can be attempted year-round. We did it in May which was fine, even though the clouds obstructed views of the mountains nearby.

How to get here

The forest road to the trailhead starts off right after getting to the Baker Lake dam, after a short (but rough) drive down a dirt road. I think any car can handle it with caution, though.

What to pack

I’ll probably write a more in-depth post about my backpacking gear later, but it’s good to carry your 10 essentials as with any hike.

You have a lake, so filtering water is not a problem.

A bear canister is not required but recommended for all overnight trips in the area, and as always, please observe Leave No Trace principles. Enjoy!

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Backpacking Washington
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