The legacy of King Coal in King County is the fact that there are some places you just don't hike. |
Snoqualmie Valley Trails Club had to make some adjustments to our hiking plans yesterday because King county had decided that the hazards of hiking in what had been coal country presented required mitigation. The hike was led by Yaz Obara from the Cougar Mountain Regional Wildlife Park trailhead, and we hadn't gone 100 yards before we came across the surprise expressed in the hoto immediately above. So we changed directions, but we still got in a nice hike on this drizzly an rainy day in an area with lots of side trails. Yaz's summary afterward noted that we hiked from the trailhead to the anti-aircraft Peak and back. "We hiked Cave Hole Trail, Klondike Swamp Trail, Harvey Manning Trail, Shangri-La Trail and Coyote Creek." His map is immediately below.
Distance for the day: At least 3.5 miles
Conditions: Chilly, raining, overcast.
Load: 17 pounds pounds
Elevation gain: 400 feet, at least
Statistics, year to date:
Distance: 256.2 miles
Elevation Gain: 75,978 feet
Below is a more complete map of the park; click on it and you obtain a larger image, which can be downloaded and saved. Copies are provided at the trailhead.
The "history" that must have been in this small building has gone the way of the Nike missiles. |
The Nike missiles were our air defense against Russian bombers. They had a maximum speed of 1,000 mph, a 25-mile range and a 70,000 foot ceiling. They packed a punch -- a tactical nuclear warhead. Documentation that I discovered in a cursory search indicates they may have also carried conventional explosives. The missiles were driven by four radars at the Integrated Fire Control (IFC) area of each Nike site: Target Tracking Radar (TTR), Target Ranging Radar (TRR), Missile Tracking Radar (MTR), and High-Powered Acquisition Radar (HIPAR).
There were approximately 265 Nike missile bases which can still be seen around cities across the United States. As the sites were decommissioned they were first offered to federal agencies.
Fellow hikers: Yaz, Richard and Cherie, Tom, and two others whose names eluded me.
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