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UN 10,425
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UN 10,425 

Page Type: Route

Lat/Lon: 44.35250°N / 109.9471°W

Route Type: Hiking

Season: Summer

Time Required: Most of a day

Difficulty: Class 2

Route Quality: 
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Page By: Bob Sihler

Created/Edited: Feb 12, 2007 / Sep 24, 2007

Object ID: 269408

Hits: 564 

Page Score: 86.69% - 2 Votes 

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Overview

UN 10,425 is an easy alternative to Eagle Nest and offers almost the same views that Eagle Nest does. Particularly impressive are the views south into the ridiculously wild confluence of the Teton and Washakie Wilderness Areas and west into eastern Yellowstone’s Thorofare region.

Getting There

U.S. 14/16/20 connects Cody and the East Entrance of Yellowstone National Park. Theodore Roosevelt once characterized the stretch between Wapiti Valley and Yellowstone as being the 50 most beautiful miles in America. I can think of a few roads I think are more scenic, but this trip paralleling the North Fork of the Shoshone River is still no slouch. Between Wayfarers Chapel and Chimney Rock (getting the USFS map for the north half of Shoshone National Forest would be a good idea), look for an unpaved road heading south. It crosses the river almost immediately, and almost immediately after that there is a fork. FR 446, the left fork, leads about two miles to a scout camp. The other fork, FR 448, is the one to take. This road, passable to passenger vehicles, continues south for a few miles until it reaches a gate and a tiny parking area (room for maybe three or four cars) just where the road turns right to enter a subdivision. This parking area is the trailhead for Forest Trail 757, which follows Kitty Creek and later Neva Creek through Paradise Valley and ultimately to Flora Lake.

NOTE: When I was there in 2001, there were no signs directing people to the trailhead or informing them they were there once they were. Also, the location of the trailhead didn’t fit with the directions in the Falcon Guide I had with me at the time. It was a local resident who confirmed that I was at the trailhead, and it seemed that the trailhead had been relocated a mile or two north from where it had been before. This made what the book described as a 6-mile hike to Flora Lake more like 8 miles. Fortunately, my wife and I were there to backpack, anyway, but this is useful information for anyone wanting to try Eagle Nest as a day trip, which I do not recommend.

For five or six miles, the trail is pretty uneventful and mostly passes through a dense lodgepole pine forest, but there are occasional views of nearby mountains, and the stream is often close by. The trail is moderate in grade and shouldn’t have you worn out by the time you reach its end, not if you’re in decent shape, anyway. When the trail reaches Paradise Valley, things open up, and you find yourself strolling through the kind of subalpine, flower-filled meadows common in the Wyoming Absarokas. You’re not above treeline here or anywhere else along the trail, but the valley is wide enough, and the rolling mountains flanking it high enough, to lend an alpine feel to the setting.

Finally, after going back into the trees for a bit, the trail opens up for good and reaches tiny Flora Lake, across which you can throw a rock. Flora Lake is less a tarn and more a water-filled depression in a grassy meadow. But it makes a nice destination for a few reasons: it sees little traffic and is in the heart of some real wilderness; gentle ridges (Eagle Nest’s being exceptions) beckon hikers to enjoy some solitary, unforgettable views of some of the wildest country in the U.S.; it is itself in a scenic, relaxing area that makes a wonderful antidote to everyday life; and, even if you have no intention of straying from the trail, you can hike to the top of the rise just a few feet south of the lake and enjoy a view deep into the wild, rugged mountains from Pinnacle Mountain to Glacier Basin, areas that have no trails and see almost no human traffic-- what wonders await the bold and the prepared out there may defy imagination.

Route Description

At or near Flora Lake (9800'), look west to the 10,207’ saddle connecting Eagle Nest to UN 10,425. Find what looks to be the easiest way up there; this involves easy Class 2 hiking and some minor bushwhacking through a small stand of trees. Then head north for a few minutes, and you’re there. Views are spectacular. If you’re lucky, you’ll share the slopes with bighorn sheep; my wife and I encountered a herd when we were here in 2001.

 

 

 

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