Summit Park Peak Trail

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pages 323-326

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Summit Park Peak Summit Park Peak

Summit Park Peak      Most of the trails above Summit Park, Utah, were made possible by the generosity of an environmentally minded developer named Harrison Gentry who, in the late 1990s, placed a conservation easement on 325 acres of his land in Summit Park. He then donated it to the Utah Division of Forestry, and a short time later the state was able to secure federal financing to help restore the land and build a network recreational trails. The trails were opened to the public in 2001, and a few years later a non-profit organization called Basin Recreation began a project to further improve and expand the trails. The Summit Park Trail system we know today was completed in 2008.
      The Summit Park Peak hike begins on the Short Stack Trail, named after a series of ten short switchbacks that will allow you to gain 200 feet of elevation over the first 0.4 mile. The trail is very well maintained-wide and smooth with a hard packed surface-and it is heavily shaded by a dense grove of conifers. Trails don’t get any better that this! The trail was designed to accommodate mountain bikers as well as hikers, and at least half of the people you see on the first half of this hike will be on bicycles.
      After completing the last switchback the Summit Park Peak Trail bends to the north and then south as it continues climbing gently at a grade you will hardly notice. After 0.6 mile you will pass a less well used trail called Grease Mark that cuts across the Short Stack Trail in an east/west direction. Continue south at this point on the better used Short Stack Trail and in about five minutes you will come to a major junction that marks the beginning of the Road to WOS trail. The Road to WOS trail was constructed primarily with mountain bikers in mind, and when combined with the Short Ribs Trail it forms a delightful three-mile loop back to this junction. The Summit Park Peak hike described here follows the Road to WOS loop for 1.1 miles, so you should bear right at the junction.
      Many people expect to find a two-track road when they arrive at the Road to WOS, but let me assure you that the Road to WOS really is a one-track footpath. There is also a great deal of confusion about the word “WOS”. Some seem to think that WOS is an abbreviation for “Weather Observation Station”, but I don’t believe it. To my knowledge, there is no weather observation station in the area. I think it more likely that the “Road to WOS” is a whimsical name, perhaps inspired by the yellow brick “Road to OZ”.
      After following the Road to WOS for 0.3 mile the Summit Park Peak trail comes to another junction where a primitive connector trail departs on the right toward the Over Easy Trail. This will be your return route after your climb to the top of Summit Park Peak, but for now you should continue straight ahead along the Road to WOS. There is also a jeep road below the trail in this area that leads to a water tank a hundred yards further up the trail.
      The Road to WOS continues to wind eastward along the side of the mountain with very little change in elevation for the next 0.8 mile before coming to a signed junction with the Over Easy Trail. This is where you part company with the bikers. Turn right onto the more primitive Over Easy Trail and begin climbing away from the Road to WOS in a southerly direction. Soon you will begin to see your destination, Summit Park Peak, above the south side of the trail. After climbing 500 feet over the next 0.5 mile you will come to another junction where the Summit Park Peak trail departs on the left. Turn here and continue climbing the last 200 feet to the summit.
      Summit Park Peak lies on the ridge that separates Salt Lake County from Summit County. It is not the highest peak on the ridge-there is another slightly higher peak on the ridge just 2.5 miles further south-but, nevertheless, it is definitely a worthwhile climb. There are nice views of Parleys Park to the east and Lambs Canyon to the south. Interestingly, past hikers have taken the trouble to rearrange some of the flat rocks at the summit into four comfortable Flintstones-style reclining chairs, so be sure to spend a while relaxing at the top and enjoy their handiwork.
      The return route from Summit Park Peak continues to follow the Over Easy Trail west along the ridge for 0.7 mile before again joining the Road to WOS. Five minutes after rejoining the Over Easy Trail you will pass an interesting bivouac on your right. Someone has laboriously constructed a tiny hut just off the trail under a group of trees, and inside there is a chair and a cute table made of sticks.
      0.2 mile beyond the bivouac you will come to a fork in the Over Easy Trail where you should bear right, and beyond that point the trail turns north and begins dropping down the east side of the ridge to meet the Road to WOS. Turn north when you come to the Road to WOS and retrace your steps back over the Short Stack Trail to the trailhead.

Note to web developers: You may copy this material onto your site, but in return please include a link to my home page www.utahtrails.com. Thank you, David Day (utahdavidday at gmail.com)

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