Primary Navigation

About Arapaho National Forest
Park Overview 
Highlights 
Camping 
Fishing 
Mountain Biking 
Picnicking 
Hiking & Walking 
Backpacking 
Boating 
Horseback Riding 
Mountaineering 
Search
Y! Travel The web
Local Maps
 Map

Driving Directions

Related Information
  Destination Guide
•  Colorado
  Hotels
•  Colorado Hotels
•  Local Hotels
  Interest Guides
•  Colorado Ski Resorts

Tools
Yahoo! Weather  Yahoo! Weather
Yahoo! Maps  Yahoo! Maps

 
Cascade Creek Trail Content provided by   Wildernet
Quick Facts
Ending Elevation:  12,541 Feet
USGS Maps:  Monarch Lake
Usage:  Heavy
Length, One-way:  10.5 Miles
Elevation Gain:  4,195 Feet
Difficulty:  Difficult
Beginning Elevation:  8,346 Feet
Trail Number:  1
Reservation:  No
Season:  Summer - Fall
Directions
From Granby, Follow Highway 40 west to Highway 34. Go north on Hwy 34 to Forest Road 125, on the south end of Lake Granby. Follow 125 east to the Monarch Lake Trailhead.
Location Information
The Cascade Creek Trail, #1, begins at Monarch Lake and leads up to Pawnee Pass. It is one of the most heavily used trails in the Indian Peaks Wilderness. It is also one of the most spectacular, offering the traveler a large diversity of attractions. Campsites and fishing are available along the creek. Horses are not allowed past Cascade Falls. Backpackers going up to or over the pass should be prepared for extremely windy and often cold weather, especially in early and late summer.

The trail leads past Hell Canyon and Pawnee Lake. It intersects the Buchanan Pass Trail and the Crater Lake Trail.

Snow is normally present on the trail above the Crater Lake-Cascade junction, and Pawnee Lake is frozen until the end of June. The pass trail is generally free of snow by mid-July. After crossing the pass, the trail can be followed down to Lake Isabelle and Long Lake, on the east side of the Divide.
Next: Backpacking
E
mail this page  Email this page
 More Resources at Wildernet 
 •  More Information: Guidebooks & Maps
 •  Trip Reports and Current Conditions
 •  More Information and Reservations

Copyright © 2009 Wildernet. All rights reserved.