Culture

Pilgrimage to the Pasayten Wilderness

Whether you're searching for abandoned mines, studying bears, or simply ogling the views, you'll find this "wilderness with an edge" is touched with a lot of history.

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Craig Parsley

Whether you're searching for abandoned mines, studying bears, or simply ogling the views, you'll find this "wilderness with an edge" is touched with a lot of history.

Washington’s Pasayten Wilderness is a clash — of cultures, geologic forces,  and land-use ideologies.  Depending on the day, it is a whiff of wood  smoke or horse turds, arid  Okanagan breezes or Pacific rain. For the  last 6,700 hundred years it  has been hunted, mined, hiked, hard-used,  and burnt boot-black.

As we head into the height of backpacking and hiking season, it's a good time to appreciate this 530,000-acre wilderness as one of the  most beautiful places in  North America, albeit just a little bit crusty  if you look too  closely. The Pasayten is wilderness with an  edge. It’s neither pristine nor   trashed. As a visitor you just  need to be aware that thousands of years of   human activity can leave a significant  historical record. On the other   hand, its unique geologic exhibits  have a tendency to mask any human   scars.

Oddly, the Pasayten’s notoriety has  diminished in recent years with the current generation of "fastpackers,"  hell-bent on mileage, and not landscape  or history. Its main north-south thoroughfare is the Pacific Crest Trail  (PCT), a passage  through breathtaking subalpine splendor. And yet to  the east, 2,000 feet  below the panoramic vistas of the PCT, lays a not-so-well-kept secret:  an abandoned  airfield,  once a hub for  wilderness-seekers wishing to trek to the Canadian border  or hunt mammoth  Mule Deer. Built in 1931, the airfield served as a  base for fire-suppression  activities and trail building.

Misinformation about the airfield abounds,  and this only adds to the  Pasayten’s allure. For example, a popular  myth is that the Works  Progress Administration (WPA) built it. Not true!  President Roosevelt  formed that organization in 1935, four years after  construction of  Pasayten Airfield. It is likely that the charming  log Ranger  Station, nestled in the trees adjacent to the airfield, was built by the  WPA (according to the logbook onsite), but even this is  second-hand  information. The cabin’s true history is as murky  as the rumors of  Depression-era muleskinners packing in an entire bulldozer,   piece-by-piece, to build the Pasayten landing strip.

A west-to-east through-hiker enters  the Pasayten via a grueling slog  up the Boundary Trail from Ross Lake,  cutting just south of one of  Washington’s few backpacker pilgrimage  sites, Desolation Peak, where  Jack Kerouac learned about the value of  solitude. Arriving at the  Cascade Crest (looking east) trekkers are  treated to a panoramic view  that seems to encompass all the space between  British Columbia and  Boise, Idaho. Vast valleys carved by glaciers during  the last Ice Age  snake between peaks easily bagged on day hikes from  base camp.

The glaciers had another interesting  effect on these valleys: They scoured the river bottoms so clean that  very little placer  gold remained in the region.   Since the 1870s, 605 mining claims were  staked in the Pasayten Wilderness,  most of which were “hard rock” mines  given the lack of “flash”  in the pans of prospectors. An adventurous  backpacker, willing  to do a bit of off-trail exploration, will be  treated to a wealth of  mining debris, abandoned shafts, cabins, stoves,  and antique whiskey  bottles. Not the most pristine wilderness,  granted, but the miner  midden piles abandoned 75-100 years ago (prior  to the “pack-it-out”  era) yield up a wealth of history and  entertainment for hikers who would  otherwise spend the afternoon  reading another Bill Bryson novel.

Westbound hikers entering at Horseshoe  Basin (the Tonasket side)  will find a “diggings” once operated by  Germans as a Tungsten mine.   Much of it is well preserved. The tragic irony is, of course, that the  Tungsten extracted from this  claim was used against the Allies during  WWI. While most of its  structures and the mine itself are off-limits  to the public, numerous  other Pasayten mining sites await exploration.  By simply scoping mountainsides  or river tributaries for telltale mine-tailings (or mule trails), a  through-hiker can strike it rich. Slow  walking and a sharp eye will  yield a vast deposit of rich Washington state history.

Beauty Creek, a simple one-day hike  out of Mazama’s Robinson Creek  Trailhead, holds the remnants of a  once-productive gold mine. The  shaft is now flooded (though it  could be siphoned out). In the 1970s,  a local (and old friend  of mine) known as Indian Bob collected several  samples of its mine tailings  to have assayed. He alleges there was  one-half ounce of gold per ton  of debris sitting at the shaft  entrance. I’ve seen the tailings  and I believe him.  Nevertheless,  don’t bother trying to stake  a claim; it’s protected under the  Wilderness Act of 1964 and, besides,  Indian Bob don’t cotton to covetous  claim jumpers. He  is typical of many old-timers met by hikers up in  the Pasayten — hard-living,  cantankerous, and fiercely independent.

It seems this country has hosted  all kinds of notables. Parson  Smith stands out for his eccentricity.  A mountain man and poet, he  paused on June 6, 1886, to carve his  initials on a tree within a  stonecast of the then-unmarked Canadian  border. Known as Parson Smith  Tree, it stood for years as an unofficial  wilderness boundary marker  between the U.S. and Canada. The tree  was eventually cut down and  packed out to Twisp, Washington. All  that remains of Parson Smith’s  legacy is a stump cast in concrete  and one of those nicely routered  U.S. Forest Service (USFS) signs.

The border  is now marked with an impressively  straight clear-cut about a hundred  feet wide. Aluminum obelisks spaced  at regular intervals stand sentinel  on the world’s longest undefended  border.  You’ve got to see  it to believe it.

No story of the Pasayten can be told  without mentioning Claude Miller, a  horsepacker of some repute. Outfitters  like to chide him over his  infamous Sunset magazine cover photo 40  years ago. Locals joke he  needed a larger hat after the publication  (with all due respect, of  course). Miller had a reputation  for treating his packhorses  well. One year, before the infamous  Andrews Creek Fire (aka Farewell Fire),  he dropped  a party of hunters and some saddle stock up at Airview Lake  (best fishing  in the Pasayten back then). One gentleman asked Miller  how he  wanted the horses tied out at night — hobbled or on a pony-drag.   “Don’t tie up my horses at night,” Claude bellowed, “You’ll  lame em’  up.”

Just before sundown the hunters did as they  were told, unsaddling  the stock, and leading them to a meadow. The next  morning the horses  were found at Spanish Camp, 17 miles away. When Mr. Miller  returned the following day with the wayward horses,  his Stetson brim  was pulled down low over his eyes. As he dismounted  from his own horse  he growled, “How come you didn’t hobble em’  ya city slickers.”

Unlike some wilderness areas, particularly  the High Sierra, horses  and hikers seem to get along pretty well in  the Pasayten. Backpackers  know that it is horse country and has  always been horse country. True,  wilderness purists might take  offense to some guy that looks like Robert  Mitchum allowing his pack  stock to drink out of the same creek they do, but  that sort of attitude  is best left at the trailhead. Horse packers  have their designated  concessions, granted by the USFS. If a  backpacker doesn’t like  horses, then a few extra miles of trekking will  give the Pasayten hiker  all the solitude and pure water he or she  desires.

Personally,  I like the horses because they have a tendency to  keep the black bears  and cougars out of the camps. Although these  days it seems that  the grizzly bear has become latest camp boogieman,  and as anyone who  has seen these awesome creatures will tell you, a  “Griz” isn’t  afraid of anything.

For the last two summers (2009 and  2010) my fellow Pasayten devotees  and I have run into parties of biologists  intent on finding grizzly  fur and scat. Their methodology is fascinating. First, they pack into  the airfield cabin a supply of rotten fish (“Griz  Bait” imported from  Montana) and barbed wire. Then, these young  scientists wander through  the woods spreading the bait on game trails, wrapping it in a  ring of barbed wire. The wire is supposed  to capture bear hair samples for  DNA tests. Last year my buddies Jerry,  Craig and I shared the airfield  camp with some of the bear biologists.  Jerry asked them a few poignant  questions about their methodology. It went something like this:

Jerry: What happens if the bears  decide to come into our camp to eat the bait?

Biologist: We’ll make a lot  of noise.

Jerry: Does that scare a Griz?

Biologist: It depends on the  bear and how hungry it is.

Jerry: How hungry do they get?

Biologist: I wouldn’t want  to be around a hungry Grizzly.

Jerry: Then maybe you better  wash that bait off your clothes, you smell like a fish.

It seems there is no end to the study  of the Pasayten. After 30  years of visiting, I have met just  about every kind of scientist  involved in the study of forests. The  grizzly study is just the most  recent. Geologists, entomologists,  hydrologists, fire scientists, and  amateur ornithologists all seem to  have a reason to be in the Pasayten  hinterlands. What they do  with their field notes is a mystery. Things  never seem to change  there from year to year; the fires keep burning,  Pine Beetles continue  to eat the trees, the grizzlies keep hiding from  the biologists (oh  they’re up there, all right), and rivers still flow  in the same direction,  real cold and full of fish.

There is a point though: It is a landscape worthy of study. Sen. Henry "Scoop" Jackson figured that  out in the mid-1960s. The Pasayten  wilderness was not included in  the Wilderness Act of 1964. When the senator proposed the North  Cascades National Park in 1967, he attached  language that added the  Pasayten to the National  Wilderness Preservation System.   The wilderness designation was secured in October 1968. In his  Interior  Committee report to the Senate, Jackson described the Pasayten  thus:

To the east of Ross Lake…will  be the Pasayten Wilderness, a region  of mellow geology and dry climate  compared to the [North Cascades] park  area. With the completion of the  North Cross-State Highway [SR 20] to  the south, increasing numbers will  backpack or pack train into the  heart of this unsurveyed back country…This  act will establish for all  generations to come a matchless complex in  an untouched land of silent  glaciers, unique geologic exhibits,  and important ecologic  communities. [Emphasis Added]

While the Pasayten may not have been "untouched" it certainly never  did have a proper geological  survey. The first comprehensive geologic  study occurred in 1971, when  the U.S Dept. of the Interior sent in  several intrepid geologists to  do some serious fieldwork. In a  remarkably detailed account titled Mineral Resources of  the Pasayten Wilderness, geologist M.H. Staatz found a wealth of poorly documented mining  claims. Staatz was also the  first geologist to make sense of the lack of  placer gold in the region. (Note to hikers: If you want to find an  abandoned mine, read this book.)

Sen. Jackson was also correct about  important ecological  communities. The USFS has been conducting  studies on what grizzly  biologists refer to as landscape permeability. Translation? A grizzly  needs contiguous ecosystems suitable as habitat  to promote bear  migration. That is, migration from southern British  Columbia. The  Pasayten and North Cascades Complex are perfect habitats  for migrating  bears. So good, in fact, that B.C. game biologists (in  conjunction with U.S.  counterparts) are working on what they call “augmentation”  of the  grizzly populations in the Manning Provincial Park area (directly  north  of the PCT’s terminus). The plan is to place female bears  (of good  temperament) next to the U.S. border in hopes of increasing  the sparse  grizzly population. Where?  The Pasayten, of course,  and perhaps the  northern Ross Lake area.

The grizzly enhancement project is,  no doubt, well-researched. But  party lines are quickly drawn depending  on whom you talk to up in the  Okanagan region. Regular users of the  Pasayten, such as horse packers,  lama trekkers, and backpackers, find  the idea a bit weird. The  Canadians (in cooperation with their  U.S. counterparts) are planning a  density of grizzly bears in the North  Cascades of around 1.5 grizzly  bears/100 square kilometers. While I don’t  think the bear planters are intending  uniform grizzly density over the  entire Pasayten, it is important to  point out that there are 2,145 square  kilometers of land out there. That’s a lot  of bear country. There will  be problems…particularly on the heavily  used PCT.

How could it be otherwise? I can only  add this context from personal  experience: In 1983, Indian Bob and I took a  pack string up to Beauty  Creek. In a fluke accident one of our  horses fell and broke its neck  while getting a drink. The next  morning we found a Cinnamon Bear at  the carcass. After his slurry of  expletives directed at the bear, and a  few well-placed stones, Indian  Bob made a prophetic statement, “If I  didn’t know better I would  swear that’s a young Griz.” Perhaps it was,  maybe it wasn’t. All I can vouch for is that some of that horse’s  bones can still be  seen amongst the mine tailings at Beauty Creek.

It’s hard to find places like the  Pasayten anymore. Abandoned mines  are usually the stuff of tourist traps,  or so heavily visited as to be  monuments to graffiti artists with pocketknives. To hike in an area  where you are nearly certain to see a bear, likely  a cougar, and  occasionally a wolverine is, well, rare. The place  is like a  half-million-acre museum of everything we have done right  and wrong to  our national wilderness.

That's why the Pasayten  is so compelling as a destination.  There are no more secret spots untrod  by human feet. Those days are  long gone. What remains is one of  Washington’s most intriguing  wilderness areas — a place where nearly  every visitor has left his or  her mark.

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