Read more
Informationen zum Autor Andrew Dean Nystrom is an award-winning guidebook author. He lives in Los Angeles with his wife, Morgan, and his son, Maximo. Bradley Mayhew is an international guidebook author living in Yellowstone County in Montana. Klappentext Top Trails: Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks spotlights 46 "must-do" trails for hikers, backpackers, and horseback riders visiting the parks. Leseprobe TRAIL 41: Grand Teton National Park Phelps Lake TRAIL USE Hike, Backpack, Horse LENGTH 4.0 miles, 2–3 hours VERTICAL FEET ±420 to overlook, ±850 to lake DIFFICULTY 2 TRAIL TYPE Out-and-back SURFACE TYPE Dirt FEATURES Child friendly Lake Stream Autumn Colors Wildflowers Birds Wildlife Cool & Shady Great Views Photo Opportunity Camping Swimming Geological Interest FACILITIES Restrooms Horse Staging Beyond the scenic overlook of the park’s fourth-largest lake, this rewarding route provides access to a group of three charming lakefront campsites that feel miles from the trailhead. Wildflowers, trout, moose, and black bears are abundant. Reserve campsites as far ahead as possible for this popular, family-friendly overnighter. Best Time Snow usually disappears from the trail by mid-June. Wildflowers appear soon after the snowmelt, and bird-watching is most diverse in early summer. Autumn colors peak in late August and early September. There’s enough shade to make the trail pleasant any time of day. Finding the Trail From south of the park in the town of Jackson, head 1 mile southwest through town on US 26/89/191 to the WY 22 junction. Turn right and go west 4.5 miles to WY 390 (Moose Wilson Road). Turn right and go 7 miles north, past Teton Village and Jackson Hole Mountain Resort. Continue north through the park’s Granite Canyon Entrance Station, where the road turns to dirt; proceed 5 miles north, past the Granite Canyon trailhead, and turn left on a paved road signed for Death Canyon. Bear left after 0.3 mile: the pavement ends after 0.5 mile, and the rough, one- lane dirt road (no trailers or mobile homes allowed) gets worse for the next mile until it passes a larger parking area (best for low-clearance vehicles). There are parking spots all along the road until it dead-ends soon after at the crowded trailhead parking area near the White Grass Ranger Station. From the north, look for the junction with Teton Park Road across from the Moose Visitor Center. Drive south 3 miles on a narrow, winding, paved but scenic stretch of Moose Wilson Road and turn right at the signed Death Canyon Trailhead Road junction. Trail Description From the Death Canyon trailhead (6,780 feet) near the seasonal White Grass Ranger Station, keep left at the signed Valley Trail T-junction, 0.1 mile beyond the parking area. For the next 0.8 mile, the well-beaten path—once a popular horseback-riding route for dudes staying at the White Grass Ranch—rises gradually through meadows, mixed-conifer forest, and colorful groves of aspens, crossing a couple of streams flush with thimbleberries. Ignore all the unmarked horse trails that intersect the trail as it climbs to the overlook. Once atop the lateral moraine—deposited more than 15,000 years ago by a mass of ice pouring out of Death Canyon—there are nice picnic spots tucked among the boulders to the left, and good views over the lake to the Jackson Hole valley from the Phelps Lake Overlook (7,200 feet). For an easy, hourlong outing, some folks prefer to turn back here and return to the trailhead. To experience the variety of habitats around the lakeshore and for a better look up the glacial, U-shaped canyon, follow the switchbacks down the steeper, southern face of the moraine 0.7 mile to the Death Canyon Trail junction. The spur trail for the three lovely campsites perched above the lak...