Region
Most climbed route
Highlights
Routes
1 summit • 6.8 mi • 2,086 ft gain • 3 hr 52 min
Latest summits
"Hike from Alpental, tag the north summit, get to the middle and south summits via Beckey route. Easy-Peasy. On the rock my Garmin inReach read the north at 5150, the middle at 5135, and the south at 5130." — cloudbreach • Jul 11, 2020
"Great day to be scrambling around in the mountains! We hit Snoqualmie Mountain, Snoqualmie Snow Dome, checked out the 2 high points in between them, and finished with Guye Peak." — Al-Rashid • Jul 21, 2018
"I approached from Alpental, taking the west side trail, then the North ridge route. I took the gullies down and around the North peak, then continued along the ridge to the true summit. The first gully you drop down (East side of the ridge, just before you get to the North peak) isn't bad at all. For the gully you ascend before regaining the ridge on the South side of the North peak, I recommend skirting under the overhang as much as possible, where good holds can be found." — Al-Rashid • Sep 17, 2017
"We managed to pull off a two-summit day on this beautiful Saturday, which was a first for us. We started with Snoqualmie Mountain, which is exactly as described in the hiking guide and trail reports: Pretty much straight up with boulders, roots and an eroding trail. The high point of the climb up were the falls just after the trail split - beautiful! We hit snow at about 5,700 feet, and I expect if anyone tackles the mountain after the next week or two, the snow will be almost, if not completely gone. No need for micro-spikes, although the ice-axe was nice for balance. We didn't even bother putting on gaiters either, as we just followed the tracks all the way up. Spectacular views in all directions from this summit, and we were lucky enough to have the true summit to ourselves, as one pair was just leaving, and the next pair was just arriving after our half-hour lunch. We saw about 18 people in total on the trail (one group with a lot of people in brand new running shoes - not sure if they made it) , which wasn't bad for such a nice day, and being on a trail so close to I-90. We made it to the summit in about 2 hours and 15 minutes from the Alpental parking lot.
After heading b..." — BryHong8 • May 9, 2015
"A hot trip with perfect viz. Didn't see anyone on Guye Peak Trail until topped out on North Summit. Was surprised to see that wasn't the end of the line... the scrambling up and down across the ridge was the definite highlight of the day. Despite running out of water at top of Guye decided to head up to Cave Ridge next..." — scott • Aug 1, 2014
"2000 ft. vertical gain in less than 1 mile; some technical climbing at the end (not difficult). This was the first peak I climbed in the area. I saw the knife-edge view of Guye from due south on the PCT a week before and said, "I gotta go there". There are three little peaks on Guye. When you get to the first one, the trail seems to end at a 1000 ft cliff, but after hunting around, I discovered that slightly to the left, you can climb down to level ground 10 ft down, and proceed on to the other two peaks. From the first peak, you can look down a sheer wall and see that there is a path down there, so there must be a way to get there. Although it didn't look like you could go down that without ropes, on the way back it didn't look so bad, so I scaled up the wall without much difficulty." — markgarrett • Jul 19, 2014
"One of the easier winter hikes I've done this winter. It was raining and snowing hard all day, but we kept together and made the summit with good timing. With a little bit of route finding after the stream crossing. There were 7 of us, and it was 7 hours RT including breaks. " — aimk13 • Mar 16, 2013
"Up in 80 mins. We took a few shortcuts up and down due to the snow. Definitely bring an ice axe. Hard and icy in places, and post-holey in others. Summit block is snow-free. Rain, hail, wind, fog, lightning... an interesting day." — diana • Jun 23, 2012
"From Cave ridge followed a rough trail south past the fork to Snoqualmie Mtn trail, and nearly stright up the north face. This trail is incredibly steep, and has 3 fairly large blowdowns over it. At the very summit there was what seemed like a battle between two colonies of ants, a very strange thing to witness." — Jeb • Sep 4, 2011