Hike Review - Battery Point Trail, Haines, Alaska (Alaska Trip Journal 7/22/2018)

in #travel6 years ago (edited)

Battery Point Trail

is a very accessible, mostly flat hike through woods to magnificent views across the Chilkoot Inlet at Kelgaya Point and Battery Point.


battery point trees and mountains.jpg
Looking across the Chilkoot Inlet of the Lynn Canal (fjord) from Kelgaya Point


Hike Difficulty: Easy

The broad, well maintained and mostly flat 1.2 mile long trail through the woods to Kelgaya Point (gravel & dirt shored up with wood in places) is hikeable nearly year round as heavy use keeps the snow pack down. There are a few short sections of steep uphill or downhill climbs; the very young or elderly may need some assistance. The trail is not wheelchair traversible. From Kelgaya Point to Battery Point is another .7 miles, a moderately difficult hike along the beach or an easy hike on the trail.


Access:

From anywhere in Haines, head to the water (Front Street) and take a right. Stay on Front Street as it changes from a paved road to a gravel road and finally dead-ends in the Battery Point Trail parking lot.

trailhead.jpg


The Trail

This short video will take you from the trailhead down the trail to the beach before Kelgaya Point

vertical green.jpg
Devil's Club (foreground)

The first section of the trail descends through thick woods choked with devils' club interspersed with marshy hollows filled with the massive leaves of skunk cabbage.

skunk cabbage.jpg
Skunk Cabbage (center)


The trail winds around huge boulders that seem out of place with the surrounding landscape, a common sight in the woods around Haines. These boulders are more properly called glacial erratics and they were deposited by the glaciers that covered the entire area during the last ice age.

battery point boulder.jpg

boulder.jpg

Leo tree boulder.jpg


trail marker vertical.jpg

After about 3/4 of a mile or so you will come to a fork in the trail - keep right (marked as straight on the trail marker) to stay in the woods all the way to Kelgaya Point (easiest difficulty) or take a left to emerge onto the beach.

In the video above we take a left to walk along the beach.

The trail along the beach to Kelgaya Point is moderately more difficult than staying on the trail in the woods, particularly the first jagged rocky section before it turns into a pebble beach. The bigger rocks are deceptively slippery, covered with a layer of algae that will put you on your bottom even if they look dry.

battery point beach.jpg
Looking back down the beach from Kelgaya Point


battery point trees.jpg
A sheltered meadow on top of Kelgaya Point

Although the trail is named for the second point (Battery Point), the first point you come to is actually the primary destination for most hikers. Kelgaya Point is a rocky bluff sticking out into the water with trails winding around it and many small sheltered meadows. The long crescent beach beyond Kelgaya Point leading to Battery Point, although beautiful to look at, is a difficult hike in places across thick deposits of detritus left above the high tide line during winter storms.

The trail does continue through the woods past Kelgaya Point to Battery Point as well, but we did not go down it and I have not been on that section of the trail personally since they did major improvements to the trail system a few years ago. It used to be almost nonexistent when I was a kid growing up in the area.


Battery Point - Carl and Gabe.jpg
My old friend Gabe stopped by my parents' house looking for us shortly after we left for this hike - he ran the trail in his flip flops to catch up with us

battery point seed pods.jpg
Wildflower seed pods on Kelgaya Point - both Kelgaya and Battery Point are covered in wildflowers

battery point beach trail view.jpg


Adjusting your weather expectations


We absolutely lucked out on our recent trip to Alaska and had clear blue skies every single day of our trip. This is... not the norm, to put it mildly, even in the middle of the summer. It is far more common to see overcast grey skies. For reference, this is the same scene as the cover image of this post but shot almost exactly two years earlier (July 24th, 2016 for the photo below; July 22nd, 2018 for the cover image at the top of the post above).

battery point trees and mountains 2016.jpg

This is typical southeast Alaska summer weather :) Even if you can't see the tops of the mountains it will still be a beautiful hike.

IMG_20160724_133405011.jpg
Looking at Battery Point from the far side of Kelgaya Point - July 2016

More from our recent trip to Alaska:


Dance of the Dead frogs - Valley of the Eagles Golf Course

Dig Down - Steem exclusive music video shot on location in my parents' basement and on the beaches of Haines, Alaska

All photos, video and music are my own original creations

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The closes I've been to Alaska is the Anchorage aiport. How full of nature it is, I never realized. Very nice and well done. Great kids!

Alaska is a very large area with many different kinds of wilderness. I grew up in Alaska and still have a lot of friends and family there so we try to visit as often as possible. My kids did not want to leave! They absolutely loved running around in the woods and on the beaches. Cheers - Carl

Hiya, just swinging by to let you know you're being featured in today's Travel Digest #301.

Please drop by to check out all the rest of today's great posts and consider upvoting the Travel Digest if you like what we're doing.

Oh I fancy to take a bath...
I am myself back from a few days in the Pyrenees, also stumbled with some misty mountains... thanks for sharing your hiking trail :) Nature is home!

Yay for misty mountains! Good to hear :)

sneak peek, I hope to have some time to make a post... I only do a few a week because I struggle with time and now I'm focused on finishing a videoclip that will premiere here :)

but here a snippet, this is Aguas Tuertas, valle de Hecho, Aragón and one of the best preserved Dolmens of the area. Cloaked in mist, slight horizontal rain... moody fantasy
Day: Last Friday :)
company: the best :)
https://www.instagram.com/p/Bms32SUAqTv/?taken-by=yidneth

Oooooh woah that is obviously a magical place!!!

If you get into the mist and cross the valley (which is all crossed by a serpenting river) you get into a mountain lake. It's a 20 Km hike but totally worth. North of Spain is really beautiful. I live in Navarre (neighbouring province) and I hike every weekend. I am trying to gather the energy/skills to start bloging regularly (even vlogging) but life always happen in between hahaha XD still I hope to share last weekend the following days.

I thoroughly enjoyed reading about this Hike and all the pictures Carl. I'd love to visit Alaska one day, or even Canada. Wilderness is few and far between here in the UK but we do have some lovely spots, but they're a good drive away from where I am.

I fell in love with (the idea of) Alaska watching a show which was on here when I was a teenager called: Northern Exposure. Have you seen it? I'm pretty sure that the town of Cicely in the show is very much an idealized version of Alaska but it really struck a chord with me and has left me curious to visit. Maybe if I ever get away travelling I'll make it up north.

Anyway, thanks for the views :-)

Yeah of course I was generally aware of Northern Exposure but I actually didn't have a television growing up. Shocking, I know :) LOL That show was actually filmed in Washington state. My neck of the woods in southeast Alaska is very close to Canada (British Columbia) and is part of the same coastal rainforest.

wow! the wonderful landscapes, must be an unforgettable experience, a great adventure, how beautiful is our nature, we must know how to enjoy it and take care of it. I loved your photos, I fell in love with the landscape, congratulations and thanks for sharing it.

Thanks @Luces! That is my hometown where I grew up, lots of good memories of family picnics on that hiking trail <3

Wow, it must have been great growing up in a place like this, you're lucky.

Wow, it must have been
Great growing up in a place
Like this, you're lucky.

                 - luces


I'm a bot. I detect haiku.

Very beautiful and clean place. Even looking at the pictures makes it easier to breathe. I imagine how fresh and beautiful it is in reality. And you do a great job of talking about routes for other travelers. That's a good idea.

yes it is still a wild and pure place :)

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absolutely gorgeous! i admire your video techniques. im trying to learn how to make videos. alaska isnt what i pictured it to be but its still wonderful!

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