We woke up around 8am, packed up, and swung into the the local market to grab some last minute items, including our licenes. Unfortunately we had some trouble getting out of the house and had done basically no preperation the night before, so it was nearly 9:30 by the time we actually hit the road. The only thing I don't like about Barclay is the drive to the trail head. It takes about an hour from North Seattle and frankly, I'm usually too excited to want to wait that long. I hike to get out into the woods, not sit in the car. But I digress...
Hit the trail about 11 with a rather chilly wind in our face, even though it was around 50 degrees and clear outside. Near balmy for mid-March on the west side! I was surprised to see that just a few steps in we noticed snow spots on either side of the trail. My last hike to Barclay about a month ago was on a cold, rainy day and there wasn't even a hint of snow anywhere. Apparently old man winder was insistant on getting one last cheap shot in this year.
A little over a mile in we came to what I call the "Stubborn Trees Doorway." Somehow a pair of trees on either side of the trail have decided that the best place to grow is on top of what I'd assume are old ice age boulderrs. As you can guess that doesn't lead to much nutritional value for the root structure, but as I've been shown time and time again; Nature Prevails. Somehow these tree roots have managed to grown over the top of these rocks and find theier wasy down into the dirt. The amount of time this took, and the struggle it must've been for these trees to survive at all is pretty amazing.
We came into the lake around noon, feeling great and excited to fish. We could hear some people sitting down by the water, which is always disappointing to me but hey, gotta share the woods a little I guess. What was really disturbing was how frozen over the lake was! When I hiked in to Barclay a month ago probably only a third of the lake was frozen over, all in the shadow of Baring Mountain. This time about 90% of it was frozen! Make that two last cheap shots for old man winter... and so much for our fishing endeaver. Damn! Oh well. The kids that had been testing the echo of Baring (which really is pretty impressiver) had left so at least we had a little peace and quiet for a snack and some water.

I soon realized that driving all the way out here to sit by a frozen lake wasn't really what I had in mind, and began persuading Cassandra to make the trip a little more adventourous and see about continuing our hike up to Eagle Lake. I'd never been there but had heard there is an old cabin on the shore, and that the climb is steep and trail-less. Flags only! She must've had the same thought I did because it only took a few more handfuls of trail mix and half a tuna sandwich to get the official fiance green light. All she needed was a quick stop by the toilet and we'd be on our way.
Relieved and ready for what may lie ahead we headed up the mountian. And I mean UP. The combination of no trail and gaining at least 1800 feet in just under two miles made this portion of the hike worth working up a sweat for, to say the least. It was definitely a little nerve racking at first because it takes a whilte before the flags even start showing up and you're basically headed out into the woods blind.
This thought process worked great untill we began running into snow that was steadily becoming less patchy, and more of a ground covering. Cassandra had made the unfortunate decision to skip the waterproof shoes that day and soon enough her feet were getting pretty cold, and leaning towards wet. It was also about that time the flags were becoming scarce again and the snow was making the trail harder to follow than ever. Oliver however absolutely LOVED the snow. I think it reminded him of his puppy days, since it snowed in Seattle just weeks after we got him.

Our attempt at conquering the wilderness had taken quite a bit longer than expected and it was nearing 4:30pm by now. The sun had dipped behing Mt. Baring and dusk was soon approaching so we high tailed it out of there, gettign back to the car in about 40 minutes.
Exceptionally frustrated at this point we both said 'screw it'. It was late, I was beyond cranky (thank you Cassandra for allowing me to vent through a series of yelling and incoherent mumbling. You're an angel) and we were both ready to be home.
Hooking back up with Hwy 2 we figured it'd be faster to take 522 back to Seattle. Never should have done that. Withing a couple miles of Gold Bar we saw an exit for Echo Lake, and again tried valiantly to get a hook out, even if it was only going to be for an hour, and probably n the dark. So once again we led ourselves back into a series of turns, and once again we didn't see anything resembling a dock. We were very clearly circling the lake however, and on our second loop we found the dock. And the locked gate in front of it with a sign proclaiming "This Gate Locked During the Hours of Darkness".
Flabbergasted I stopped the car, took a deep breath and pronounced "That's it. I'm done. Cassandra simply smiled and said to me sweetly "ok, that's good" and we headed home.All in all a highly adventurous, if even a little frustrating day. We've since vowed to make the tripo back to Eagle Lake soon, this time armed with overnight packs and camping gear. We will get to that lake! I will sit on the porch of that cabin! And I WILL catch a fish! SO HELP ME GOD I WILL!



My disdain must have made the transition to an audible groan because Cassandra was suddenly breaking my thought track and telling me “if it’s this popular, the views must be pretty impressive.” Alright… I’ll believe you. She usually knows best anyway, but I always find myself frustrated when I see other people on MY trails, in MY woods disrupting MY trips into nature. That’s not too self-centered right?

Strike three, four, five, six, seven (jackass on the cell phone deserves three of his own)
A few pictures later we were back on the trail and a foggy mist started rolling in around us. Nothing blinding, but enough that I couldn’t see more than a hundred yards or so from where I was, and the drizzle that had been threatening all morning was steadily becoming more of a rain. “No way” I thought to myself. “Come hell or high water I am getting to that lake, I am catching a fish, and I’m GOING TO ENJOY IT.” The God’s must have given up because the rain lasted only a few minutes and returned to it’s drizzle right about the time I came to the Barclay Creek crossing. The directions I had said it was about halfway to the lake, which made sense because I’d been pounding the trail for 40 minutes or so. The crossing is nothing more than your typical trail carved log. Built to be functional without taking away any of the nostalgia of the woods. Oliver was not such a fan. For being an adventurous dog he wanted nothing to do with crossing over a log with water below. After a little coaxing he figured the best solution was to just get across the thing as fast as canine-ly possible. This would have been fine with me except that the rain had made things a little slippery. White knuckled with Oliver’s leash in one hand and the rail on the other I shuffled my way across, thankful to be dry at the other end.
The lake itself was mostly clear of ice, with just a thin layer remaining in the sun parched shadow of Mt.Baring. It looked like the perfect opportunity for an early season hiker to wake the senses of winterized fish with a brightly colored rooster tail. After the first few nightmare casts I regained my touch and before I knew it had spent a good 40 minutes or so throwing in line after line without so much as a nibble.
I hadn’t gotten a quarter of the way there when I noticed a small wooden “toilet” sign and a flag or two headed up the hillside. I had read about Eagle Lake in my research, another two miles of grunt hiking straight up the hill with no trail, but that the lake was three times the size of Barclay and the fishing was a lot better.