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Flattop Mountain
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Flattop Mountain 

Page Type: Mountain/Rock

Location: Alaska, United States, North America

Lat/Lon: 61.09056°N / 149.66528°W

County: Municipality of Anchorage

Activities: Hiking

Season: Spring, Summer, Fall

Elevation: 3510 ft / 1070 m

 

Page By: hgrapid

Created/Edited: Jul 12, 2007 / Dec 23, 2007

Object ID: 311140

Hits: 2013 

Page Score: 86.87% - 12 Votes 

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Overview


Approaching Flattop Mountain from Anchorage


Flattop Mountain is one of the most popular hikes for Anchorage residents and even for Anchorage visitors. In fact, it is one of the most popular hikes in all of Alaska.

There are several reasons for this.

1) The mountain is located within the limits of the Municipality of Anchorage, so it is easy to get to from anywhere in town.

2) Because the trailhead starts at around 2,300', a fair chunk of the climb gets knocked out by your vehicle.

3) It is a short hike, requiring forty minutes to an hour to reach the summit.

4) Because of the high latitude of Anchorage, the summit of the mountain is located above tree line.

5) This is quite a beautiful mountain. While is doesn't necessarily stand out in the brilliant Anchorage skyline, once you get there, you enter another world. Sunsets over the Cook Inlet, and views to the Chugach Mountains are your reward for not too much effort. Scrambling up to the summit is very fun and for more dogged mountain hikers, you can drop down and continue along the class III ridge to the southeast to the next two peaks at elevations of 3658' (Peak Two) and 4111' (Peak Three).


Peak Two and Peak Three from just east of the summit of Flattop


The only deterrent to hiking Flattop is the crowds. On a good, clear summer day, you may have to share the summit with dozens of others. I know people in Anchorage who routinely use the trail as a workout after work. My hike up this gorgeous little mountain was completed on a particularly beautiful evening in late-August at sunset.

Getting There

Getting to Flattop is easy. You take either Minnesota Drive or Seward Highway heading South and exit at O'malley Road.

Take O'Malley Road for several miles to the east until you reach Hillside Drive on your right. There is a sign at the turn to Hillside Drive that says "Chugach State Park".

Take Hillside Drive for about a mile until you get to Upper Huffman Road on your left, heading towards the mountains. Take Upper Huffman to near its terminus where you take Toilsome Hill Drive. Toilsome Hill winds around the hillside (and turns seamlessly into Glen Alps). After a few miles you will see signs for the parking area and the Glen Alps trailhead on the left side of the road. The trail itself starts up a staircase on the northeast end on the parking lot.

The trail itself is pretty straightforward. There are usually crowds, but if not, make sure to head in the most obvious direction. There are lots of little side trails, but you need to stay on the main trail. Early on you descend a long ridge to the start of the uphill climb. After about 1 mile you get to a sitting area with a bench. From here, a use trail goes some of the way up, but the last 200 feet or so is all class II scrambling. The rock quality is good, without much rock fall and excellent footholds and handholds at the tricky spots. Yellow targets on the rocks guide you in the right direction all the way to the top. At the summit you will see a couple wind shelters. The true summit is obvious when you get there.


View from the trail of the north edge of Flattop


The summit is only 1.5 miles one-way from the parking area, with an elevation gain of 1252 feet. You gain roughly 1,000 feet in the last mile.

Sunset

Below are some gorgeous sunset views taken from Flattop on August 26th, 2007 between the hours of 8:45 and 9:15pm.



Sunset over the summit


 



Orange Sun (center)


 



Orange Sun (right)


 



Yellow Sun


 



Sunset over Susitna


 



Storm in pink


 



View to the South


 

Red Tape

There is a parking fee for day use if you choose to park in the parking lot. The lot has about 40 or so spaces, but these can fill up fast during the summer. I parked on the road just before I got to the fee area where several other cars were parked. Technically, you can be ticketed for this, so if you park here, you are taking your chances.

External Links

Wikipedia
REI Anchorage page
Local Hikes Trail Description

Images

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