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A view of Andrew's Glacier & Andrew's Tarn in Rocky Mountain National Park.

Get Outside! Hiking The Loch, Andrew's Glacier

See Waterfalls, Lakes, Cascades, Beautiful Scenery

The Basics:
approx. 9.4 miles roundtrip
2,150 feet elevation gain!
Rocky Mountain National Park, Glacier Gorge trailhead
From Metro Denver take Highway 36 to Boulder, through town to Lyons, through town to Estes Park. At junction in town, turn left to Beaver Meadows/Park headquarters entrance. After entrance, take first left, Bear Lake Road. Follow this to the sign saying "shuttle" parking lot on the right. Take Bear Lake shuttle to Glacier Gorge trailhead.

The Good:
Lots to see: waterfalls, lakes, streams, cascades
Impressive trail: crews have put in stone steps, log steps, etc...
Solitude after Andrew's Glacier turnoff
Shuttle system at park

The Bad:
Too much elevation gain for me
Crowded from Alberta Falls to trailhead

This is a great hike for people who want to see a lot of things. But this is a hike for people who are truly in shape, and I wasn’t. And honestly, if you’re in shape enough for this hike, I have a suggestion for a much better hike that includes all the sights from this one.

But let’s start at the beginning. The trail to Andrew’s Tarn is on the Rocky Mountain National Park park map, but I was surprised there wasn’t much information on the Internet for “Andrew’s Tarn,” but there was much more for “Andrew’s Glacier.” Turns out, they’re really the same. The tarn is at the base of the glacier. You don’t see one without seeing the other.

The hike starts at the Glacier Gorge on the road to Bear Lake. Take the shuttle across from Sprague Lake, even at 8 a.m. the Glacier Gorge lot was full. We had to park at Bear Lake and shuttle back, that wasted time. We couldn’t just started on the shuttle near Sprague Lake. It’s easy to catch and they give out maps at the shuttle parking lot.

We counted, and I think my boyfriend and I have started four hikes from this trailhead together: Black Lake, Sky Pond, Shelf and Solitude Lakes and now Andrew’s Tarn.
Alberta Falls in Rocky Mountain National Park. Just .8 of a mile from the Glacier Gorge trailhead, many people turn around here, or you can continue on to several lakes.

As I said at the top, there’s lots to see on this trail. Less than a mile from the trail head is the spectacular Alberta Falls. Many people make this their destination for their entire hike. It’s definitely worth some time to sit and enjoy the Falls. There are a couple places where you may wonder if you’re at the falls, but don’t worry, you’ll know you’re there because there’s a sign. There are several places along the trail though to look into Glacier Gorge and enjoy the cascades.
Cascades along the trail to "The Loch".

Then we start climbing. The trail winds around this area on a rocky path, climbing and climbing. At about 1.75 miles, you’ll turn into another canyon-like area and the view just kind of opens up. I’m not sure how to describe it, but you come out of the trees and into a basin. The trail hangs on one side as you start descending a bit. It’s just a great view in this area. You make your way down into the basin, to a trail split. Taking the first and hiking 2.1 miles takes you to Lake Haiyaha. Going left and hiking another mile takes you to the very beautiful Mills Lake. Taking the second right, we hiked the last 0.9 of a mile to The Loch. This is a bit of a climb, but it’s really not bad. I like this part of the trail because you get to hear the sound of the cascades below the trail and at one of the switchbacks you get a really good view of the cascades.
"The Loch", a beautiful lake in Rocky Mountain National Park.

The Loch is a beautiful place. While the hike there is “only” 3.1 miles, this is a great destination in itself for people looking for a moderate hike. You’ll see lots of hikers carrying fishing poles to The Loch. I think you should bring lunch and walk around the lake until you find a good spot. Then again, I’m not sure there’s a bad spot. The view when you first arrive at the lake is beautiful, the view from the opposite side of the lake looking back is great, the view from half way around is good too because in the distance you can spot Timberline Falls, another good destination, another mile or so away. If you hike to Timberline Falls, definitely make the climb up the falls, if you’re able. At the top are two more spectacular alpine lakes: Lake of Glass and Sky Pond. If you think I’m overusing the word spectacular, then take this hike and let me know if you disagree. We loved the trip, especially the climb up Timberline Falls two years ago.
A view of Timberline Falls from about a half mile away at the trail cutoff to Andrew's Glacier.

But this time the destination is a different drainage. After hiking around The Loch, we continued on the main trail to a junction 0.6 of mile away. Here you get a view of Timberline Falls through the trees and a sign saying Andrew’s Glacier to the right. Look closely and you can see a trail cut in the dirt and rocks next to Andrews Creek. From here, we started climbing, and climbing and did I mention climbing? The trail is very impressive, some crews have done a lot of work to create steps, log crossings, and a trail, even through a large field of rocks and scree. I’m not sure the elevation change between the turnoff and Andrew’s Tarn, but it was a lot. The trail map says it’s only 1.3 miles from the turnoff to the Glacier, but it took us nearly an hour, even on the way down! I have no idea how long it took to go up. Most of the way it wasn’t too bad, but when you hit the field of rocks and scree it got tough! It was harder to find the trail, it was even harder to find your footing at times and there was a lot of elevation gain.

We had a great view of a snowfield directly in front of us and several snow fields in a drainage to the left. Honestly, we weren’t sure which way to go, but neither way had a “tarn” or a lake in our sight. We decided to stay on the trail. I kept looking at that snowfield in front of me, way up high and wondering if the tarn was at the bottom. I thought if the tarn is there, it sure would be nice to climb up the side of that snowfield and look over the ridge. Turns out, that snowfield was not our destination, our destination was over that ridge and if we wanted to see it, we were going to have to climb even more. The trail next to the snowfield was one of those places where you take four to six steps, then stop and take four to six breaths and continue the cycle. Holy cow!
This is a look up the trail towards Andrew's Glacier. That snowfield at the upper right is not the glacier, you have to hike above that snowfield to get to the glacier & tarn.

We finally reached the ridge and then we spotted it, Andrew’s Glacier with Andrew’s Tarn in front. This is what I saw in the pictures on the Internet that were so pretty. As we plopped down on some rocks on the shoreline and looked at the glacier, we saw people, nine people on the glacier. We only saw four people on the hike up after the turnoff for the main trail and now suddenly here was a “crowd.” It turns out four of them were climbing up! The other five were coming down from hiking an entirely different trail.

This is where my advice comes in. If you can manage the 10-ish miles roundtrip to hike to Andrew’s Glacier, then you should really consider hiking from Bear Lake to Flattop Mountain, crossing past Hallett Peak, looking in Chaos Canyon, passing Otis Peak and then climbing down Andrew’s Glacier and taking the trail out that we came in on. I don’t know the exact route, I haven’t done it, it’s just several people told they were doing that hike told us there was no way they would have come up the way we came. I’m not sure the distance on that circle hike, maybe 12 miles, but I think it might be a much better choice. Just one person’s opinion, I welcome yours.
This is a zoomed in picture of Andrew's Glacier where you can see a group of four people climbing up and over.

The Glacier is amazing to look at. It was hard not to walk around the tarn and try hiking up part of that glacier. I’m not going to recommend climbing it or not, that’s your choice, but it you choose to climb, consider some safety gear and taking it very carefully. Enough said.

We had a nice lunch at lakeside or tarnside, then headed out pretty quickly since the storm clouds were starting to build.

I really enjoyed Andrew’s Tarn once I got there, but I just wasn’t in shape to handle this hike. I will say this hike did motivate me to start walking on weeknights and working out again.

As always, I welcome your thoughts, comments, hiking suggestions, etc, just e-mail me, deb_stanley@kmgh.com.


Previous hiking reports:(lower elevation hikes have a star)
Boulder:
Caribou Ranch*, Mallory Cave*, Marshall Mesa,Heil Valley Ranch* Forsythe Canyon*, South Boulder Peak*, The Boulder Flatirons*, Walker Ranch*, Bear Peak*, Rabbit Mountain*, Bald Mountain*, Betasso Preserve*, Wonderland Lake*
Golden area:
Forgotten Valley, Chimney Gulch*, Apex Park*
Jefferson County:
Mt. Falcon*, Elk Meadow*
I-70 area:
Herman Gulch, Chicago Lakes, Chief Mountain
Rocky Mountain National Park:
Granite Falls, Twin Sisters, Bierstadt Lake, Chasm Lake, Lulu City & Little Yellowstone, Sandbeach Lake
Indian Peaks/James Peak Wilderness:
King, Bob & Betty Lakes, Forest Lakes, Arapaho Lakes, Mitchell & Blue Lakes, James Peak Area, Heart Lake
Northern Colorado:
Homestead Meadows, Devil's Backbone*, Lake Agnes
Summit & Eagle Counties:
Booth Falls, Missouri Lakes, Mohawk Lakes & Continental Falls
Grand County:
St Louis Lake, Waterfall At Snow Mountain Ranch, Granby Ranch
Other:
Exploring Fulford Cave, Our Favorite Hikes, Our Favorite Bike Rides

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