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McGonagall Pass, Denali National Park
Alaska, USA
By Peter Potterfield

Classic Hikes Cover Classic Hikes of the World
by Peter Potterfield
So much of the backcountry in Alaska remains in such a pristine state that hiking through it resets your threshold for what constitutes wilderness. And no place in the state is more spectacularly beautiful than the Alaska Range, 600 miles of glacier-covered mountains, rolling taiga, and expansive tundra. Mount McKinley—the locals prefer its Athabascan moniker, Denali—rules here. At 20,320 feet, the peak is the highest point in North America, and from Wonder Lake one of the most transforming views on the continent.

Denali Reflection
The route to McGonagall Pass begins at Wonder Lake, where the view of Mount McKinley is unsurpassed.
Photo © Peter Potterfield

But even from Wonder Lake, Mount McKinley is almost 30 miles away. The hike to McGonagall Pass covers that final, wild divide, as it takes you across the tundra wilderness right to the very ice and rock of the mountain. Physically, the route is not demanding: less than 20 miles of moderate tundra each way and 3,800 feet of elevation gain. But there are two elements that change the nature of this excursion.

First, you’ve got to cross the mile-wide braided channels of the McKinley River, a potentially dangerous enterprise if you don’t have the skill and judgment to do it safely. Crossing the McKinley is the crux of the route, so practice at crossing wilderness rivers is a pre-requisite for this hike. Secondly, you’ve got to come to terms with the fact you’re sharing the tundra with grizzly bears. There has never been a fatal bear attack in the park, but the mere presence of thousand-pound carnivores is a reminder that out here, you are not at the top of the food chain.

Trek Facts
Distance: 38 miles
Duration: Five to six days
Difficulty: Moderate, with potentially difficult river crossings
Your journey will first start at the airport in Anchorage, and the rental car garage. Midway between Anchorage and Fairbanks, the park entrance is a half-day drive from the Anchorage airport. The visitor center in the funky town of Denali Park, known by the locals as Glitter Gulch, is where the rangers give you a mandatory briefing before issuing you a hiking permit. The campground at Wonder Lake, reachable only by park service buses, is another half-day on the legendary Denali Road from the park entrance. Plan on spending a couple of days here, acclimating to the wild, before setting off on the hike via the recently improved McKinley Bar Trail.

From Wonder Lake Campground, the trail crosses the braided channels of the McKinley, ascends Turtle Hill, then crosses the Clearwater before following Cache Creek (crossing it three times) up to McGonagall Pass. There's a pretty good trail all the way. The hike takes a couple of days each way. McGonagall Pass is so wild and scenic you may wish to spend a full day there, giving you two opportunities for sunset and sunrise on the mountain from extremely close range.

Move on to * New Zealand’s Routeburn Track


Classic Hikes About the Author:
Adventure journalist Peter Potterfield is the author of more than a dozen books on outdoor adventure, including the critically acclaimed
In the Zone and High Himalaya, 2002 winner of the Banff Book Festival Award. He has written for Outside, National Geographic Adventure, Backpacker and Condé Nast Traveler. He lives in Seattle.
RELATED GORP LINKS
* U.S. Hiking Guide
* GORP National Parks
* National Scenic Trails


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[from Outside magazine]