Elk Meadow is a stunning sub-alpine meadow about 2 miles from Elk Creek. It is a beautiful, flat, and relatively short wildflower hike that would be great with kids. The trail is also part of the Elk Mountain Loop mountain bike ride.
Elk Meadow
The trail into Elk Meadows is an easy hike or bike across a lightly forested flat. The wildflower display in the meadow from mid-June to late August is absolutely stunning, especially with a backdrop of high peaks covered in snow. It makes a great early season hike and is a good destination for younger hikers. The trail disappears completely further out into the meadow for those continuing on to Elizabeth Lake. This hike is part of the popular Elk Mountain Loop, so be ready to get out of the way of speeding mountain bikes and motorcycles. A shorter, 1.5-mile alternative is to head east along old roads (now a trail) to the Park Creek Meadow for a slightly-less-stunning display of wildflowers.
Elizabeth Lake
Elizabeth Lake is a narrow lake tucked into a heavily-forested niche with steep slopes rising directly from the banks. While not very dramatic, Elizabeth offers relative solitude not found at the more popular high mountain lakes. You can access Elizabeth Lake from the north via Trap Creek, but this southern route leads through the beautiful Elk Meadow that can be awash in wildflowers in late June and early July. The trail beyond the Elk Mountain Junction through the meadow is more of a thought than an actual tread.
Though it is marked on the map, the trail is non-existent for most of the way through the meadow. Stay on dry ground in the center of the meadow for 0.8 miles. At the edge of a small stream, a 10-foot post with a “trail” sign attached leads hikers back to some semblance of a trail. From here, follow a faint tread that leads to the north side of the valley. It gets easier to follow along the meadow’s edge through open trees to the junction with the upper Elk Creek Trail. The trail to Elizabeth Lake is easy to follow from here.
The meadow itself is probably the remnant of a shallow moraine-bound lake that filled with sediment before eroding through the natural moraine dam on its downstream shore
Hiking distances and ascents are as follows:
• From the Elk Mountain Trailhead to Elk Meadow: 2.3 miles, 175 feet.
• From the Elk Mountain Trailhead to Park Creek Meadow: 1.5 miles, 120 feet.
• From the Elk Mountain Trailhead to Elizabeth Lake: 5.9 miles, 1,005 feet.
Additional Adventures
The trail continues beyond Elizabeth Lake connects over a mellow divide to Marten + Kelly Lakes, which sit at the head of Trapp Creek.
Mountain Biking
The trail is open to mountain bikes but is NOT recommended for uphill travel as it is steep, loose, and badly eroded from motorcycles climbing an unsustainably steep grade. It is worthwhile to ride to the base of the climb in order to shorten the hike to Elizabeth Lake. Linking Trap Creek to Elizabeth Lake and Elk Mountain is a decent ride with a lot of technical rocky challenges south of Kelly Lake and a steep and loose descent to Elk Meadow. It is best to wait until summer when Elk Meadow is drier to attempt riding through the meadow.
Off-Trail Hiking
From Elizabeth Lake there are two summits on either side of the lake that offer a great view south into the heart of the Sawtooths. Peak 9,300 is the highest point along the Copper to Observation ridgeline and looks a bit easier to summit via its east ridge. The climb to Point 9,205 is a straightforward walk through the trees from the Kelly Divide. Both peaks could be looped on a short 3.2-mile circumnavigation of Elizabeth Lake.
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Our mission is to inspire adventure with beautiful, comprehensive and waterproof map-based guidebooks. Owner, publisher, and photographer Matt Leidecker, grew up exploring and guiding on the rivers in central Idaho. His award winning Middle Fork of the Salmon River – A Comprehensive Guide is the standard by which other river guidebooks are measured. Printed on virtually indestructible YUPO paper, IRP guides are truly unique all-in-one resources for adventure. Each book is loaded with full-color maps, stunning photographs, and information on the history, geology, and wildflowers. Visit Idaho River Publications to explore our guidebooks to the Rogue River in Oregon and the mountains of Central Idaho.
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