Fri. 12 July: Twin Lakes/Arnica Lake ... and more!
Hoary marmot on a windy summit |
If
you want to tie together these four spectacular lakes in one journey, then take
a clockwise route starting at Castle Mountain Junction. Head up Altrude Creek to Lower Twin Lake , then along to Upper
Twin Lake ,
up over the pass and down to Arnica Lake , down the murderously long and steep mountainside
to Vista Lake , up to Highway 93, then finally
enjoy a free bike ride back to Castle Junction.
Any other way you are giving yourself a much greater challenge than you need. Also, in my view,
I
was up early and heading out of the city shortly after 5 a.m. I was curious to see if there were any signs
of the floods which tore up the Trans-Canada
Highway in Canmore. In the space of a couple of weeks they have
worked miracles to repair the road and reshape the creek-beds. Around Cougar Creek the rubble left by the
raging creek still covered the ground on each side of the highway. Further west a temporary road diversion
bypassed a washed out bridge. But overall,
there has been a remarkable recovery.
I
drove eight kilometres up the Radium Highway 93 to leave my bike at the Vista Lake
parking area, before returning to the Altrude Creek trailhead at Castle Junction.
A couple of cars were parked here. Presumably
these people were camping up at Twin
Lakes . It is the Altrude Creek trail which gets a lot
of bad press in the guidebooks for being a boring forest route with “slurpee”
meadows at the far end. I found it to be
a well graded, attractive trail, with good bridges over the creek, and
occasional glimpses of Castle
Mountain through the
trees. After about four kilometres the grade
eases off and the rest of the trail to Lower Twin Lake is almost flat.
As
I emerged into the meadows, the Continental Divide peaks around Storm Mountain
(10,370 ft.) came into view. It was easy
to chart a course through the grass and bog keeping my feet fairly dry. The creek ran through the meadows, making for
a photographers paradise. A simple wooden
bridge spanned the outlet to the lake. I
walked a couple of hundred yards along the shoreline of the lake to an ideal
viewpoint. The mountain wall across the
lake was certainly spectacular, but it was the waterfall rushing down the steep
slopes into the lake which caught my breath. This was not even given a mention in the guidebooks,
yet was worth the long journey all on its own.
A trail
leads up the forested slopes to the Upper
Twin Lake .
A small back-country campsite sits close
to the lake. It appeared to be empty,
although a couple of backpacks hung from the bear-proof wires between two tall
trees, so there was someone in the area. The Upper
Lake is also spectacular, but smaller
than the Lower Lake .
They are similar in setting, which would have been easy to guess from
their names!
To
reach Arnica Lake
I had to climb 640 vertical feet over an arm of Storm Mountain .
The forested trail was well graded. At the top there were stands of larches which
would make this a spectacularly colorful place in the Fall. On my way down the other side of the ridge I met
a young woman hiker then further down her male colleague. I guessed they were the campers at Twin Lakes . We
just exchanged “hellos” – they looked a little worn out by the climb.
From
Arnica Lake
down to Vista Lake is one consistently steep drop of
almost two thousand vertical feet, through the forest then down steep slopes. The younger growth of trees allowed good
views of the Bow Valley
and Castle Mountain to the north, and the mountains
to the west. The stony trail sometimes
switchbacks across the slopes, then drops steeply in other places. Finally it reaches the valley far below,
where the green waters of Vista
Lake beckon the weary
hiker. To make this journey in reverse
would be very hard work.
From
Vista Lake the trail contours very nicely up
the mountainside for about three hundred vertical feet, to the Highway above, making
this final section of trail an easy affair.
Now
the fun began. Climbing onto my road
bike, I set off down the fairly busy highway for Castle Junction, just over
eight kilometres distance and almost entirely downhill apart from the first few
hundred metres. All I had to do was hold
on to the handlebars and let the bike do all the work. In no time at all I was back at the trailhead
at Altrude Creek.
As
an added bonus I strolled through the trees to a small lake which I had noticed
on the map, called Copper
Lake . It was a small body of water in the trees,
just a few hundred yards from the Trans-Canada
Highway . The
wildflowers beside the lake were colorful.
The wild roses were prolific.
Having
come all this way from the city, I was in no hurry to rush back, so I decided
to stop in Banff , take the gondola up Sulphur Mountain , and hike to the south peak. The usual crowds of visitors from all round
the world, many on bus tours, thronged the base of the gondola but I only had a
short wait for my turn to climb aboard for the effortless journey to the summit.
By simply turning left at the top, I
left all the tourists behind and had the south peak trail entirely to myself. In a short time I reached bare limestone
slabs. I scrambled up the rocks to the
summit. This might be tricky in wet weather,
but was a fun scramble today. From the
top I could see further along the ridge to a much trickier section. The views down to Banff were made even more spectacular by the
foreground of white rocks. I was
able to look down on the upper station of the gondola and to the stone
observatory on Sanson
Peak .
This
lone summit, populated only by myself (and a wind-blown hoary marmot!) seemed
to be a fitting conclusion to a very active day. I was reluctant to return down the gondola
and join the busy traffic back to the city.
Statistics:
Total
Distance: 17.7 (hike)+8.4 (bike) = 26.1 km
Height
Gain: 3,134
ft.
Max.
Elev.: 7,497
ft.
Time
on Trail: 7 hrs. 24 mins.
Lower
Twin L: 9.52 am
Upper
Twin L: 10.31 am
Arnica
L: 11.27 am
Hwy
93: 1.33 pm
Start
bike: 1.47 pm
Castle
Jn: 2.09 pm
Copper
L: 2.26 pm
Ret.
to car: 2.39 pm
Temp: +4 to +19 deg.C
Weather: Sunny, a few clouds building up
4-Lake Circuit (excl. Copper L.):
Castle J. - Lower Twin L. = 8.1 km ; 1,985 ft. Gain
Lower - Upper Twin L. = 1.0 km ; 115 ft. Gain
Upper Twin L. - Summit = 1.4 km ; 640 ft. Gain
Summit - Arnica L. = 0.8 km ; 443 ft. Loss
Arnica L. - Vista L. = 3.6 km ; 1,903 ft. Loss
Vista L. - Hwy 93 = 1.4 km ; 394 ft. Gain
Hwy. 93 - Castle Jn. = 8.4 km ; 788 ft. Loss
Total: = 24.7 km ; +/- 3,134 ft.
4-Lake Circuit (excl. Copper L.):
Castle J. - Lower Twin L. = 8.1 km ; 1,985 ft. Gain
Lower - Upper Twin L. = 1.0 km ; 115 ft. Gain
Upper Twin L. - Summit = 1.4 km ; 640 ft. Gain
Summit - Arnica L. = 0.8 km ; 443 ft. Loss
Arnica L. - Vista L. = 3.6 km ; 1,903 ft. Loss
Vista L. - Hwy 93 = 1.4 km ; 394 ft. Gain
Hwy. 93 - Castle Jn. = 8.4 km ; 788 ft. Loss
Total: = 24.7 km ; +/- 3,134 ft.
Early morning mist along Trans-Canada Highway |
Bridges intact up Altrude Creek - fast-flowing stream |
Meadows below Continental Divide |
Lower Twin Lake |
Awesome waterfall at far end of Lower Twin Lake |
Upper Twin Lake |
Arnica Summit (7,497 ft.) |
Arnica Lake |
Unusual view of Castle Mountain from trail below Arnica Lake |
Views from steep trail down to Vista Lake & Hwy 93 |
Vista Lake |
Vista Lake from above |
Indian paintbrush along trail |
8.4 km in 22 minutes down Hwy 93 to Castle Jn. trailhead!! |
Colorful meadows |
Copper Lake |
View from S. peak of Sulphur Mountain to Sanson Peak |
Views north from Sulphur Mountain |
3 comments:
What a brilliant suggestion, to do this loop clockwise! We did it today, and it was fantastic! I've been into Twin Lakes a couple of times, via the Vista Lake trail, and I must say that today's route was by far the most enjoyable. Next time you are at Arnica Summit, check out the trail that goes south up thru the trees to a scree slope... the views of both Twin Lakes as well as Arnica Lake are spectacular. Today it was clear enough that we even could see Assiniboine, out over Gibbon Pass.
Thanks again! Your blog is great!
Cheers,
Cheryle
Thanks so much for the feedback. I look forward to checking out the trail at the summit. So glad you had a nice trip. It's certainly an awesome set of lakes.
A little late in the year now but I am going to make this loop my first hike for 2018. Thanks for the advice. Do you have a Facebook page?
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