Olallie and Monon Lakes Loop Hike
From Oregon Hikers Field Guide
- Start point: Olallie Lake Trailhead
- End point: Monon Lake
- Hike type: Double Loop
- Distance: 7.5 miles
- Elevation gain: 150 feet
- High point: 4,970 feet
- Difficulty: Moderate
- Seasons: Summer into fall
- Family Friendly: Yes
- Backpackable: No
- Crowded: No
Contents |
Description
NOTICE: Trails in this area were affected by the 2020 Lionshead Fire. Expect some challenging trail conditions.
Trails keep close to the shores of the two largest lakes in the Olallie Lake Scenic Area, with a short road section at Monon Lake and a longer section on FR 4220 (Skyline Road) along the west shore of Olallie Lake, allowing the hiker to make a pleasant double loop. You will get great views of Olallie Butte and Mount Jefferson, and the tranquil lakes offer several small inlets and peninsulas as well as wetlands, coniferous woodland, and delicious huckleberries, especially along the east shores of the lakes, in late summer ("Olallie" means huckleberry in Chinook Jargon). The Olallie Lakes area was covered by an ice sheet during the Pleistocene Epoch, and the various lakes fill depressions carved by glacial ice. The middle part of the hike, encompassing the south shore of Olallie Lake and the north shores of Monon Lake, was scorched by a fire in 2001 and some of the same area was burned again in 2020. No swimming is allowed in Olallie Lake and motorboats are not permitted on either lake.
Cross FR 4220 to the day-use area, where there’s a great view across the dock area to Mount Jefferson. Walk a short stretch under conifers and past the historic Olallie Ranger Station to the Olallie Lake Resort Store, where you can purchase a good map of the area. Then, head down the shore on a logged-lined trail below the cabins. Olallie Butte looms above. The trail heads into the Paul Dennis Campground, shaded by mountain hemlock, subalpine fir, silver fir, lodgepole pine, and Alaska yellow-cedar. Look for Trail #731, which heads into the woods from Campsite #15. There’s an understory of huckleberry and grouseberry. After passing a walk-in campsite, head up into the 2001 burn and then down into the woods. Bear-grass becomes part of the carpet here. Reach the unsigned Olallie Lake-Long Lake Trail Junction in what is officially the Warms Springs Reservation. As of 2017, a sign has been posted stating that only tribal members and authorized personnel can use the Long Lake Trail.
The trail enters the burn again and passes a small lake on the left. You'll continue along the Olallie Lake shore with great views of Twin Peaks to the north. Pass Nep-te-pa Lake, with its sprinkling of water lilies, on your left. When you reach the sign for Trail #732 at the Olallie Lake-Monon-Olallie Lake Trail Junction, go left above Nep-te-pa Lake. See small Mangriff Lake on the right. There are great views of Olallie Butte from here. The trail reaches the Monon Lake-Monon-Olallie Lake Trail Junction at Monon Lake.
Go left here on the Monon Lake Trail #729, and pass a long pond. The trail proceeds through a bog along planks and a boardwalk. Deep blue gentians bloom here in early fall. Engelmann spruce is more common in this area. There are more planks in boggy spots before you pass a campsite on the right. A spur leads right across a meadow to a peninsula. Keep right at the next junction, and reach FR 4220. Here, go right and hike along the road, which passes near the shore and has many pullouts with campfire circles. After 0.3 miles, the signed Monon Lake Trail #729 resumes at the Monon Lake Trailhead and heads along the lakeshore on planks through a blueberry/gentian bog. There are more good views of Olallie Butte. A bridge over a channel joins Monon Lake with one of its former arms. The trail then heads through more huckleberries and white rhododendrons. A spur leads right to a peninsula. When you reach the Monon Lake-Monon-Olallie Lake Trail Junction again, turn left for the short hike to the Olallie Lake-Monon-Olallie Lake Trail Junction, where you'll go left again.
The trail keeps close to the lakeshore and then reaches the Peninsula Campground. From here, join the campground road and pass the James A. Potter Memorial Theater. You need to follow the campground road and then go right down the spur to the Group Camp area. A trail leads off to the left along the lakeshore to reach Camp Ten and the main road. The dusty road, FR 4220, heads above the shore and then a recently maintained, flagged route, rather rough, drops down to the shore. This rejoins the road later, but drops off, unmaintained but flagged, on a section along the north shore. Head back to the road, and go right into the day-use area.
Fees, Regulations, etc.
- Dogs on leash
- No swimming in Olallie Lake (humans or dogs)
Maps
- Maps: Hike Finder
- Green Trails Maps: Breitenbush, OR #525
- U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service: Olallie Scenic Area
- U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service: Clackamas River Ranger District
- U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service: Mt. Hood National Forest
- National Geographic Trails Illustrated Map: Mount Hood
- Adventure Maps: Mount Jefferson, Bull of the Woods & Opal Creek Wilderness Trail Map
Trip Reports
- Search Trip Reports for Olallie and Monon Lakes Loop Hike
- Olallie Lake 9/13&14
- Olallie Lake 8/4
- Olallie Lake 6/6 and 6/7/16
- Ridin' the storm out, Olallie Lake 9/2 & 3
- Monon Lake Trail wildflower show / Olallie Lake 7/28
- Pffft, mosquitoes.. Olallie and Monon Lake loops 5/24
- Olallie Lake 3/8
- Olallie Lake-- fall colors, no people 10/6/14
- Summer's end, Olallie Lake (fall colors explosion) 9/17&18
- Olallie Lake winter/summer 6/26-27
- Around Olallie and Monon Lakes
- Olallie Lake, Monon Lake 6/26
Related Discussions / Q&A
- Search Trail Q&A for Olallie and Monon Lakes Loop Hike
Guidebooks that cover this destination
- Extraordinary Oregon! by Matt Reeder
- 101 Hikes in the Majestic Mount Jefferson Region by Matt Reeder
- 100 Hikes: Northwest Oregon by William L. Sullivan
- Best Short Hikes in Northwest Oregon by Rhonda & George Ostertag
- Hiking Mount Hood National Forest by Marcia Sinclair
- The Olallie Scenic Area Guidebook by Tony George
- Oregon's Columbia River Gorge: Camping & Hiking by Tom Stienstra & Sean Patrick Hill
- Oregon Hiking by Sean Patrick Hill
- Oregon Campgrounds Hiking Guide by Rhonda & George Ostertag (Monon Lake only)
More Links
- Olallie Lake Trail #731 Monon Lake Trail #729 (USFS)
- Monon Lake Trail #729 (USFS)
- Olallie Lake Trail 731 (Trail Advocates)
- Mon-Olallie Lake Trail 732 (Trail Advocates)
- Monon Lake Trail 729 (Trail Advocates)
- Olallie Lake (Atlas of Oregon Lakes)
- Monon Lake (Atlas of Oregon Lakes)
- Olallie Lake Resort
Page Contributors
- bobcat (creator)