City Trails

Cougar Mountain Regional Wildland Park

A forest maze from Issaquah trailheads and back again.

By Allison Williams April 1, 2014 Published in the April 2014 issue of Seattle Met

 

 

Cougar Mountain Regional Wildland Park

The Forest Maze
Cougar Mountain Regional Wildland Park

Gets You From Trailheads west of Issaquah to a wooded preserve (and hopefully back again)

Best Traveled By foot, in mud-ready shoes, throughout the year.

Road Blocks There is no shortage of trails in the 3,100-acre Cougar Mountain area, but don’t try to trace just one. Grab a map at the trailhead—yes, it looks like a toddler had a field day with crayons—and wander the labyrinth of 0.25-to-2 mile stretches.

Stops and Sights Try to reach any of Cougar Mountain’s landmarks—sunken cave holes left from coal mining days, the thundering Coal Creek Falls, a coal mining exhibit, Klondike Marsh—and you’ll likely take a wrong turn somewhere. Rather, park at the Red Town Trailhead (Lakemont Blvd SE, 3 miles south of I-90 exit 13) or the Anti-Aircraft Peak Trailhead (SE Cougar Mountain Dr) and take a relaxed stab at wayfinding. The well-signed web will deliver something good, even if it wasn’t the mining relic or viewpoint you were expecting. kingcounty.gov

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