I once again had the pleasure of hiking a somewhat obscure route in the Mt Saint Helens area with guidebook author, Craig Romano. Craig is in the process of hiking all the trails in the Mount Saint Helens National Volcanic Monument as research for a new book he is writing. I am honored to accompany him on some of these hikes as he finishes up his research in an area that is near and dear to my heart.
The Cinnamon Trail (trail #204) lies SW of Mt Saint Helens and runs along a ridge (we'll just call it Cinnamon Ridge) that parallels the Kalama River for a spell. We picked up the trail from near the Kalama Horse Camp just off of the Toutle Trail (#238) and followed it east, to its end at Red Rock Pass and another junction with the Toutle Trail. The ridge is the dividing line for the monument boundary. The trail stays near the 3700 foot level as it follows this invisible border, topping out around the 4000 foot level in one spot. Once we got to Red Rock Pass, we turned to the west and followed the Toutle Trail back to where we left my car at the Blue Horse Trailhead (#237). Returning to the starting point of the hike as a longer loop was an option, but we decided that due to the short amount of daylight, and our uncertainty of snow conditions on the ridgeline, that the shorter loop would be the better way to go.
I was surprised to find that there is a lot of old growth timber in this area. Some very large trees. On the ridge, there were great views to the north of Saint Helens, and Goat Mountain. To the east, Mt Adams made its presence known and views to the south towards Oregon revealed a hazy and distant view of Mount Hood. Down in the river valley, McBride Lake was a bonus to the day. More of a meadow nowadays than a lake. You can almost envision an elk herd lounging about here as the Kalama babbles it's watery tune nearby. Along the final couple miles back to the car, we crossed several springs that were flowing out of the hillside with heavily icicle laden vegetation nearby.
For being an unknown (to me), the Cinnamon Trail (dare I call it the Cinnamon Loop?) turned out to be a nice little fall hike. Cinnamon is not exactly a pristine wilderness experience however. It does cross old logging roads a few times near the top and is open to horseback riders as well as mountain bikers. If you're like me though and like to be outdoors and enjoy nice views, I think you'll like it. Especially on a fall day when you are likely to have it all to yourself.
Roll mouse over image to see route taken. No mouse? See GPS map at the end of this post.
Maps are for informational and entertainment purposes only. Use at your own risk!
How did the Cinnamon Trail get its name? I asked Craig the same thing. As a guidebook author, he has lots of experience tracking this kind of stuff down but he was unsure about Cinnamon. Sometimes these things can be hard to discover as it might have simply been called this by loggers whose stories are long gone. If you know how Cinnamon got its name, leave a comment below. I'd love to hear about it and I'm sure Craig would as well.
Jay-you should be writing books! I love your story telling and your photos are gorgeous-I may have to hire you for a photo shoot someday. Great as always hiking with you!
Wow, beautiful photos! I came across your website last week after Craig linked it on facebook, and I’ve already spent several hours looking at your photos. My wife and I want to hike the Wonderland Trail next year, so I really loved those! Great website Jay! It’s definitely one of my new favorites!
Jay…..love your photos, as usual. I particularly love the icicles – gorgeous! Have hiked some at MSH, but didn’t know about this trail. Nice to have some lower trails in the line up. Will give this one a try. Can’t wait for spring!
Hi Laurie! I still need to get our PCT hike on here. I kind of put it on the back burner until we get at least to White Pass. Cheryl and I need to come back down there and do that 20 mile section we missed that weekend. Maybe you can come meet us for that? I’m hoping to get it done this spring.
My son and I were just down in your neck of the woods a couple weekends ago. Cape Dissapointment for one night and Astoria the other. Sure is a beautiful area you live in.
The Cinnamon Trail was fun, but Craig tells me that the Strawberry Mountain trail is even better. I’m going to try to do that one this year as well as the Loowit Trail.
Hi Jay,
We sought out to hike Toutle but we think we hiked Cinnamon instead. We never made it down in the valley or to the Mcbride lake. Did you loop back to the lake when you came to Red Rock Junction? We aren’t sure how we got on Cinnamon and not to Toutle as we were following the book. Any insight would be great.
Gosh AB, sorry you couldn’t find the Toutle Trail but you were probably on it for a spell. If you started on the same trailhead we started at and went across the bridge going over the Kalama River then yes, you were probably on the Cinnamon Trail. We looped back on to the Toutle Trail when we got to Redrock Pass but only hiked it for a few miles before getting off at a different trailhead where we had staged a shuttle car. I updated my blog post above to show the map with the GPX data. It’s at the bottom of the post. Not sure why it wasn’t showing before but it’s there now.
Great photos as usual, Jay!
Jay-you should be writing books! I love your story telling and your photos are gorgeous-I may have to hire you for a photo shoot someday. Great as always hiking with you!
Thanks Craig! I really enjoyed the hike. Lets do it again soon!
Love following your journeys, Jay!
Thank you both. You’re too kind. Just documenting my love of the outdoors!
Wow, beautiful photos! I came across your website last week after Craig linked it on facebook, and I’ve already spent several hours looking at your photos. My wife and I want to hike the Wonderland Trail next year, so I really loved those! Great website Jay! It’s definitely one of my new favorites!
I’m glad you’ve enjoyed the site Erik. Have fun on the Wonderland Trail. You’ll love it!
Jay…..love your photos, as usual. I particularly love the icicles – gorgeous! Have hiked some at MSH, but didn’t know about this trail. Nice to have some lower trails in the line up. Will give this one a try. Can’t wait for spring!
Hi Laurie! I still need to get our PCT hike on here. I kind of put it on the back burner until we get at least to White Pass. Cheryl and I need to come back down there and do that 20 mile section we missed that weekend. Maybe you can come meet us for that? I’m hoping to get it done this spring.
My son and I were just down in your neck of the woods a couple weekends ago. Cape Dissapointment for one night and Astoria the other. Sure is a beautiful area you live in.
The Cinnamon Trail was fun, but Craig tells me that the Strawberry Mountain trail is even better. I’m going to try to do that one this year as well as the Loowit Trail.
Good luck on securing WT permits this year!
Jay
Count me in for that 20 mile PCT section – I can help with car jockeying. Let’s get some summer hikes in – I’m ready!
Hi Jay,
We sought out to hike Toutle but we think we hiked Cinnamon instead. We never made it down in the valley or to the Mcbride lake. Did you loop back to the lake when you came to Red Rock Junction? We aren’t sure how we got on Cinnamon and not to Toutle as we were following the book. Any insight would be great.
Thanks!
AB
Gosh AB, sorry you couldn’t find the Toutle Trail but you were probably on it for a spell. If you started on the same trailhead we started at and went across the bridge going over the Kalama River then yes, you were probably on the Cinnamon Trail. We looped back on to the Toutle Trail when we got to Redrock Pass but only hiked it for a few miles before getting off at a different trailhead where we had staged a shuttle car. I updated my blog post above to show the map with the GPX data. It’s at the bottom of the post. Not sure why it wasn’t showing before but it’s there now.
Jay