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Distance: 11.4 miles (round trip) Walking time: 8 hours Elevations: 3,195 ft. gain/loss Trail: Well used and easy to follow Season: Summer through mid-fall. The upper parts of the trail are usually covered with snow from mid-November through late June. For current conditions call the Spanish Fork Ranger District, Uinta National Forest, at (801) 798-3571. Vicinity: Near Spanish Fork and Payson |
Loafer Mountain Trail |
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Although many peaks along the Wasatch Front are considerably higher than Santaquin Peak, few of the areas hikes are more scenic than this one. The trail is especially beautiful in the fall, as it passes through numerous groves of maple and aspen on its way to Loafer Ridge. Although the elevation gain is over 3,000 feet, the gain is fairly well distributed along the 5.7 mile length of the hike; hence the climb is not excessively strenuous. You should carry a pair of binoculars to the top, since there is a lot to see. Splendid views of Mount Nebo and the Payson Lakes can be seen to the south, while Mount Timpanogos and Utah Lake provide a backdrop for Provo, Payson, and other nearby towns in the north. From the trailhead the path
winds through the woods for 1.1 miles, gaining about 350 feet
in elevation before coming to a trail sign and junction near
an old coral. Turn left here in order to stay on the Loafer Mountain
Trail. (You will be on the Loafer Mountain Trail for the first
4.3 miles of this hike.) The trail continues east for only 0.1
mile before coming to another junction where you must turn right.
Again there is a forest service sign at the junction. You should
stay on the Loafer Mountain Trail, No. 98. |
If you are interested in a supplemental map of the
Santaquin Peak area, we recommend:
Uinta National Forest
(Trails Illustrated, map #701)
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