Dogs Leashed
Features
Commonly Backpacked · Lake · Swimming · Wildflowers
This trail enters the Marble Mountain Wilderness and the usual federal wilderness area regulations and restrictions apply here. Practice Leave No Trace (LNT) backcountry skills and ethics. Camp 100 feet from fragile areas; bury human waste at least 200 feet from water, trails, and campsites. This trail is usually closed by snow between November and May.
Need to Know
Although it's a wilderness, this area is open to grazing in the summer, so expect to meet a cow or two. Be sure to treat or filter all of your water, even that which you get from the lakes. There is an excellent down-valley viewpoint just before you reach the PCT.
Description
The Shackleford Trail starts as a now-abandoned road until it reaches the wilderness boundary where it narrows down into a singletrack trail. It then climbs gently up the drainage (but not next to the creek) under the forest canopy. At 2.8 miles from the trailhead, you pass a junction with the Campbell Cutoff Trail #5543 and then, at 3.4 miles, a junction with the Back Meadows Trail #5549 (which takes you to the trail to Calf Lake). Another 0.1 miles farther along, you'll pass small, shallow, Log Lake to arrive at a junction with the
Campbell Lake Trail #5541 at 4.0 miles.
Beyond the
Campbell Lake Trail #5541 junction, the #5542 passes a boulder field, an unsigned junction with the now-abandoned Little Elk Lake Pass Trail #5536 (you can still follow this route to Little Elk Lake but it's almost all a cross-country adventure now), and at 5.5 miles from the trailhead, Summit Lake and a junction with the Bull Meadows Trail #5548. Summit is a popular campsite for backpackers and has a few good spots for swimming.
Past Summit Lake, the trail climbs more aggressively and, in 0.7 miles, reaches a great viewpoint and, shortly thereafter, ends at its junction with the Pacific Crest Trail (PCT).
Contacts
Shared By:
BK Hope
2 Comments