
A 2-day weekend on the Chain Lakes Loop at Mount Baker: a ~6.5-mile loop past Bagley, Mazama, Iceberg, Hayes, and Arbuthnot lakes, with nonstop views of Baker and Shuksan.
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The Chain Lakes Loop is a roughly 6.5-mile loop in the Heather Meadows and Artist Point area at the very end of the Mount Baker Highway (SR 542), inside the Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest. It threads the high country directly between two volcanoes, glacier-draped Mount Baker to the west and the jagged horn of Mount Shuksan to the east, and it is one of the most scenic day hikes in all of Washington.
The loop strings together a chain of alpine lakes, Bagley Lakes, Mazama Lake, Iceberg Lake, Hayes Lake, and Arbuthnot Lake, set in heather meadows that erupt with wildflowers in late summer and turn fiery red and orange in fall, when the huckleberries ripen. You can start from Artist Point at the top or from the Bagley Lakes / Heather Meadows trailhead lower down, and either way you are rarely without a view of Baker or Shuksan.
The catch is elevation: this is high, snowy country. Artist Point Road and the loop itself are usually only snow-free from roughly late July or August into early October, with a huge snowpack sitting over everything the rest of the year. Always check the forest road and trail status before you drive up, bring layers, and expect the weather to change fast even on a clear morning.

This is the key constraint: the Mount Baker Highway, Artist Point Road, and the loop are usually only snow-free from late July or August into early October. The rest of the year the area carries a massive snowpack, and Artist Point Road stays gated. Check the Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest road and trail status before you commit to the drive, and pack layers and rain gear even in August.
Drive the full length of the Mount Baker Highway (SR 542) up from Glacier or Bellingham to its end at the Heather Meadows and Artist Point parking areas, around 5,100 feet. It is one of the great scenic byways in the state, climbing through old-growth forest into open alpine country with the white mass of Mount Baker filling the windshield. You'll need a Northwest Forest Pass or America the Beautiful pass to park at the trailheads up top.
Then hike the main event, the Chain Lakes Loop, roughly 6.5 miles with about 1,800 feet of gain. Most hikers start from Artist Point and run it clockwise, dropping past Iceberg Lake and the chain of Mazama, Hayes, and Arbuthnot lakes before climbing back over Herman Saddle and out along Bagley Lakes. You can also start lower at the Bagley Lakes / Heather Meadows trailhead and reverse it. Either way, Baker and Shuksan trade places on the skyline the whole way around.
Spend your second day soaking up the high country around Artist Point without the long loop. The short, steep Table Mountain trail switchbacks up the flat-topped butte right above the parking area for a 360-degree view over Baker, Shuksan, and the whole tangle of the North Cascades, and the Ptarmigan Ridge trail runs out toward Baker for as far as you want to walk. Both are easy add-ons to the loop or a fine standalone morning.
On the way back down the highway, stop for the Picture Lake stroll in Heather Meadows, the famous spot where Mount Shuksan reflects in a small tarn, one of the most photographed scenes in Washington. Getting home: from here it is roughly 1.5 hours back to Bellingham (BLI) or about 2.5 hours to Seattle (SEA), so time the drive for the long evening light and the chance of fall color burning red and orange across the meadows.
You've seen both days. Open the free drag-and-drop planner and tune it for your dates, your pace, and whether you base in Glacier or down in Bellingham.
You need a Northwest Forest Pass or an America the Beautiful pass to park at the Heather Meadows and Artist Point trailheads. There is no entrance fee for day hiking and no permit required, just a valid pass on the dash.
This is high, snowy country. The Mount Baker Highway, Artist Point Road, and the Chain Lakes Loop are usually only snow-free from roughly late July or August into early October. Late summer brings wildflowers; late September turns the meadows fiery red and orange.
Artist Point Road stays gated under a massive snowpack for much of the year and opens late. Always check the Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest road and trail status before you drive up, because the upper road can stay closed even in early summer.
At over 5,000 feet between two volcanoes, the weather changes fast. A clear, warm morning can turn cold, windy, and socked in by afternoon. Carry warm layers, a rain shell, and the ten essentials even for a day on the loop.
There is no lodging at the trailhead. The closest base is the small town of Glacier partway up the highway; for more choice, stay down in Bellingham and make the drive up each morning. Book ahead for prime late-summer weekends.
There is no reliable drinking water on the loop, so carry your own or a filter. The alpine lakes are beautiful but cold, and Iceberg Lake can hold ice into summer, so test before any swim and keep an eye on lingering snowfields on the trail.
Trailheads and mileage, the snow-free window, the parking pass you need, where to base in Glacier or Bellingham, and the byway and Picture Lake stops that make this a full Mount Baker weekend.
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