Showing posts with label Hidden Lake Overlook Trail. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hidden Lake Overlook Trail. Show all posts

Friday, June 26, 2015

Video of marmot at Glacier National Park

Day hikers stand a good chance of spotting the rare marmot on the Hidden Lake Overlook Trail at Glacier National Park in Montana.

Though several species of marmots exist across the globe, in the United States their range is limited to mountains of the northwest. The result is very few Americans ever see the marmot.

Technically, the marmot is a large ground squirrel. Because of their whistle to warn others in their colony of danger, they sometimes are referred to as “whistle pigs.” Marmots grow up to 32 inches long and can weigh as much as 15 pounds.

A good trail at Glacier National Park to spot a marmot is the 3-mile round trip Hidden Lake Overlook Trail. It does sport a 550-foot gain in elevation.

Here’s a video of a marmot at Glacier:


More:
Trails to see Glacier National Park’s highlights

Learn about other great national park day hiking trails in my Best Sights to See at America’s National Parks guidebook.


Saturday, May 31, 2014

Hike to great mountain vistas at Glacier NP

Hidden Lake from Hidden Lake Overlook Trail
Among the best ways to see Glacier National Park’s major sights is via a day hike. Though the park has several remote areas, just five short trails allow visitors to enjoy the park’s major highlights –mountain vistas, wildlife sightings, moraine lakes, glaciers, and waterfalls.

Mountain vistas
Great views of the rugged Rockies, eroded over the eons by glaciers, abound in the park. One awe-inspiring scene is the towering red peaks over Upper Two Medicine Lake. Take the boat shuttle across the lake to the Upper Two Medicine Lake Trail for a 4.4-mile round trip hike with a 300-foot gain in elevation.

Wildlife sightings
Mountain goats and sheep, moose, black bear and grizzlies all call Glacier home. The 3-mile round trip (550-foot gain) Hidden Lake Overlook Trail offers unobstructed views of the lake and excellent opportunities to spot the elusive mountain goats, bighorn sheep, marmots and even wolverines. Your best shot at a sighting is hiking at dusk or dawn; bring binoculars.

Moraine lakes
Melting glaciers feed several lakes across the park, including Avalanche Lake. Start on the Trail of the Cedars then turn off onto the Avalanche Lake Trail. The 4.7-miles round trip (505-foot gain) trail heads to Avalanche Lake, where 200-plus-foot waterfalls from Sperry Glacier fill the valley with its turquoise waters.

Glacier fields
Twenty-six glaciers dot the national park, with Grinnell Glacier the most accessible of them. Take the boat shuttle across Lake Josephine and hike 7.8 miles round trip on the Grinnell Glacier Trail (1,600-foot gain) to Upper Grinnell Lake, which is meltwater from the glacier.

Waterfalls
With melting glaciers and high mountains, waterfalls can be found aplenty in the national park. You can see one of the park’s most photographed waterfall on the St. Mary Falls Trail, a 2.4-miles round trip (260 foot change in elevation) whose trailhead is off the Going to the Sun Road at the St. Mary/Virginia Falls parking area. Continue another 0.6 miles (1.2-miles round trip) to see tall and narrow Virginia Falls.

Learn about other great national park day hiking trails in my Best Sights to See at America’s National Parks guidebook.