Skip to content

Mailbox Peak Trailhead Traditional Cache

This cache has been archived.

Shaddow: The fun is gone

More
Hidden : 3/19/2010
Difficulty:
1.5 out of 5
Terrain:
2 out of 5

Size: Size:   micro (micro)

Join now to view geocache location details. It's free!

Watch

How Geocaching Works

Please note Use of geocaching.com services is subject to the terms and conditions in our disclaimer.

Geocache Description:


Mailbox Peak From Mt Teneriffe



This cache is located at the start of the hike up to Mailbox Peak. How does a mountain get the name Mailbox Peak? One theory is that the postal service delivered mail at the base for nearby settlements. Whatever the reason, the name stuck and has been taken to heart over the years, sometimes with a sense of humor; on the summit can be found at least one mailbox on a post. In it is the summit register and often many other items people have brought and left including the Dr. Seuss book Green Eggs and Ham.

Warning Sign


picture by Boonie-Medic


Some Elevation Facts About Mailbox Peak:

At 4,841' elevation it's the #31st highest peak in the North Fork Snoqualmie River basin with 17' over Green Mt, 53' over Mt Teneriffe, and 674' over Mt Si. It's 187' shorter then Bessemer South, 282' shy of Russian Butte, 498' less then Rooster Mt. and 1083' lower then Preacher Mt.

Mailbox Peak by Washington Trails Association

Wimpy hikers, turn the page. This trail offers nothing for you but pain and heartbreak. If you think you've got the goods to scramble up more than 1000 feet per mile, read on Mailbox Peak brings a serious burn to the thighs of even the best-conditioned athletes, but the rewards make it all worthwhile.

From the top of this jutting lump of rock, you'll enjoy spectacular views of the lower Snoqualmie River valleys. The entire Issaquah Alps range sprawls at your feet, with the rocky-topped Mount Si directly across the Middle Fork Valley and the sheer wall of Rattlesnake Ledge just across the South Fork Valley. After soaking in the views, pull the summit register out and leave your signature--you'll find the tattered pages of a notebook in an old metal mailbox wedged above the summit rocks.

Start hiking by rounding the gate and walking up the road (avoiding all side roads). At around 0.5 mile from your car, watch for a sign on the left marking the Mailbox Peak Trail. This trail is rough-hewn, since it was built by boots and only recently received any real trail work--and that done mostly by ad hoc volunteers.

The trail leaves the road and turns near vertical, climbing ever-more steeply over the next 2.5 miles--the first 0.5 mile of road walking gains only a few hundred feet of elevation, leaving about 3800 feet for the last 2.5 miles. That means you'll be climbing about 1500 feet per mile, and most hikers consider anything over 1000 feet per mile to be steep!

The first mile of climbing makes use of a few switchbacks though a few more would moderate the pitch more reasonably. From there on, turns and twists become fewer and farther between. The trail climbs with ruthless focus to get to the top in as direct a line as possible. As you move above 4000 feet, the forest falls away, the views open, and all pretense of switchbacks disappears. You'll now be scrambling up steep, open hillsides.

An old forest fire scoured the slope here, removing the tree cover but making space for a wonderful mix of heather, beargrass, and dense huckleberry thickets.

Finally, after one last scramble through the rocky crown around the summit, you're there, standing beside the battered mailbox on the top of Mailbox Peak. After you catch your breath, pat yourself on the back--because if you're on the summit, you've conquered per-haps the most difficult hike in this book!

The Cache

A small cache big enough to hold a log and maybe very small items.

Switchbacks.com Badge

For Garmin users, maps of the trails can be found on Switchbacks.com

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

...urnq hc

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)