Pettit Lake to Hellroaring Trailhead

Early morning reflection in Alice Lake.

Early morning reflection in Alice Lake.

My fifth day on the trail was the longest, beginning with a hike to a waiting resupply and ending with a long slog along a lonely forest road, 15.2 miles total. “Everything hurts,” I wrote that evening.

I awoke beside Alice Lake to a clear, crisp morning. It was 26 degrees, and a thin layer of frost covered the ground. The air was still, and so was the water. It reflected the surrounding mountains as the sunrise provided quite a show.

The campers nearby were just beginning to stir as I packed up my campsite and started down the trail. It was 8 o’clock in the morning.

The first order of business was to hike down from Alice Lake (8,596 feet) to Pettit Lake (6.996 feet), where a bear canister holding food, fuel, and other supplies (hopefully) waited. The trail is mostly open for the first two miles, providing excellent views of the jagged peaks, particularly the prominent El Capitan.
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Predawn Scene at Alice Lake

Predawn Scene at Alice Lake ©2009 Jeff Blaylock

Alice Lake was one of my favorite campsites during last month’s trek through Idahos’ Sawtooth Wilderness. Not only was it the site of my first mountain lion encounter, but also it provided breathtaking mountain scenery, such as this predawn glimpse of unnamed peaks reflecting in its mirror-still waters. Turns out there was a couple camped less than 50 yards from me, but we did not disturb each other, and each enjoyed this gorgeous lake.

Predawn Scene at Alice Lake, SW09-0816-5594R, Sawtooth Wilderness, Sawtooth National Forest, Idaho | ©2009 Jeff Blaylock

Lakes of the Sawtooths, Part 2

Toxaway Lake ©2009 Jeff Blaylock

Snowyside Peak (left) reflects in the still waters of gorgeous Toxaway Lake, one of the Sawtooths' most breathtaking bodies of water.

This second post highlighting the lakes of the Sawtooth Mountains covers the middle three days of the backpack, roughly following the Pettit-Hellroaring route, but beginning and ending at Sand Mountain Pass. The trail down from the pass provides spectacular views of Toxaway Lake (Photos from the pass will be presented in a future post.). Unfortunately, I was not able to camp at this lake; I had to press on over a second pass, Snowyside, and on to the beautiful lakes beyond.
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