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 Washington
 Rocky Mountains Gateway
 Colville
 Hiking
Salmo-Priest Wilderness
Hiking is allowedHorses are allowedFishingMountain bikes are allowedATV are allowedRV campingTent camping
Courtesy of EatStayPlay.com
Tucked among the Selkirk Mountains in the extreme northeastern corner of Washington, the U-shaped Salmo-Priest Wilderness extends its borders along those of Idaho and British Columbia. Its most prominent features are two very long ridges, generally running southwest to northeast, connected near their northern ends by a ridge crowned by 6,828-foot Salmo Mountain. The eastern ridge stands lower, more wooded, more rounded off and more accessible than the steep-sided, rocky-crested western ridge. Streams have cut deep drainages into both ridges. Water from the eastern side of the eastern ridge ends up in Idaho's Priest River. The remaining wilderness drains generally westerly via Sullivan Creek and the Salmo River into the Pend Oreille River. Below the ridge tops of this well-watered Wilderness (at 50+ inches of precipitation annually) you'll find the largest growth of virgin forest left in eastern Washington: western red cedar, western hemlock, Douglas fir, grand fir, larch. The forest houses mule deer and white-tailed deer, elk, black bears, cougars, bobcats, badgers, pine martens, lynx, bighorn sheep, and moose. Though rarely sighted, threatened and endangered species including woodland caribou, grizzly bears and gray wolves also roam through this region. Winter snows may blanket the ground until early July at higher elevations. The Shedroof Divide Trail, the longest path in the area at 21.8 miles, follows the extent of the eastern ridge through open timber and subalpine meadows. It traverses several miles of non-wilderness ridgeline into Idaho, where another 17,585 acres of roadless terrain has been proposed for addition to the Salmo-Priest. The 7.8-mile Crowell Ridge Trail traces the narrower western ridge, offering splendid overviews of trailless backcountry to the north. Several other feeder trails ascend drainages to interconnect the two primary ridge trails.

Facilities: Salmo-Priest Wilderness provides nearby camping.

Reservations: Reservations are not needed or accepted for Salmo-Priest Wilderness.

Best Time To Visit: Salmo-Priest Wilderness is open year-round.

Fees: No fees are charged.

Accessibility: This wilderness is not handicap accessible.

Rules: Do not litter.

Directions: To reach Salmo-Priest Wilderness from Colville, start out going west on East 3rd Avenue toward US-395 for less than 0.1 miles. Turn right onto US-395 and continue to follow for 9.4 miles. Turn left onto WA-25 for 81.1 miles. Turn right onto US-2 for 29.9 miles. Turn left onto WA-21 and continue to follow for 13.6 miles. Turn left to stay on WA-21 for 9.7 miles. From Sullivan Lake follow Forest Service road 22 for 6 miles to the junction of roads 22 and 2220. Northern access-take road 2220 for 14 miles to Salmo Pass Trailhead. Southern access-take Forest Service road 22 a trailhead is beyond Pass Creek Pass.

Address
Sullivan Lake District-Colville National Forest
12641 Sullivan Lake Road
Metaline Falls, Washington 99153
Phone
General: (509) 446-7500
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