Hiking the Wonderland Trail: A First-Timer's Preparation Guide (Trailhead Ready)

$12.99
by Sam Merritt

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Only about 4% of Wonderland Trail lottery applicants get a permit. This book is for the people who find a way to get on the trail anyway. The Wonderland Trail is a 93-mile loop around Mount Rainier, the most heavily glaciated peak in the Lower 48 — old-growth forest, alpine meadows, glacial rivers, and a volcano so massive it fills the sky from every angle. Most people complete it in seven to fourteen days, and nearly all of them say it's the best week of their lives. But the Wonderland presents a planning challenge that catches people off guard. The permit system requires you to reserve a specific campsite for every single night, through a lottery with a roughly 4% acceptance rate. Your food has to be packed into buckets and cached at ranger stations before you start. A major road closure has eliminated one of the trail's three resupply points. And the Pacific Northwest weather means rain isn't a possibility — it's a guarantee. Most people who want to hike the Wonderland Trail never make it past the planning phase. Not because they can't handle the miles, but because the logistics stall them out before they ever reach the trailhead. This book fixes that. Chapter by chapter, it walks you through every decision in the order you actually need to make them: Can you do this trail? What the Wonderland actually demands — the constant elevation, the weather, the time, and the cost - The permit system, decoded. The lottery, the general release, walk-up permits, cancellation monitoring, and the hybrid strategy that gives you the best odds - Your campsites. Why Summerland and Indian Bar shape your entire itinerary, which camps to target, and which ones to avoid - Timing your trip. Rain, snow, wildfire smoke, mosquitoes, and crowds — every month has tradeoffs - Building your itinerary. The anchor-first method for planning around the campsites that matter most - Food and cache logistics. The bucket system, mailing vs. hand delivery, fuel restrictions, and planning each food carry - Gear that matters. Rain gear that actually works, the footwear debate, and why you don't need a bear canister - Getting trail ready. Training for 23,000 feet of cumulative elevation change, even if your local trails are flat - What to expect on the trail. What each section feels like, where the hard parts are, and what coming home is really like This isn't a trail guide, a memoir, or a motivational speech. It's the preparation manual that takes you from "I'm interested" to "I'm standing at the Wilderness Information Center with my permit and my caches in place." Trail regulations, permit systems, and conditions change from year to year. This book tells you exactly where to verify the latest details and how to make sense of what you find. Think of it as your planning foundation — the book that shows you what to search for so you don't have to dig through dozens of sources on your own.

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