Diablo Lake Overlook
A short walk from the parking pullout to the classic turquoise-lake overlook. No permit.
Washington · Stamp 45 / 63
The American Alps, home to more glaciers than any other park in the contiguous United States, connected by one seasonal highway.
North Cascades holds more glaciers than any other national park in the contiguous United States, over 300 of them, scattered across jagged peaks so rugged that no road crosses the park's interior. State Route 20, the North Cascades Highway, skirts the park's southern edge and closes completely every winter due to heavy snow and avalanche risk, typically reopening sometime between mid-April and early May.
In 2026, winter storm damage and a spring rockslide pushed that reopening later than usual, closing the road well past its typical spring return before repairs finished in June, a reminder that even the highway's seasonal schedule isn't fully predictable. Diablo Lake, with water colored a striking turquoise by glacial silt, sits directly along the highway and remains the park's single most photographed spot, no hiking required.
Come for the glaciers. Stay for how little of this park most visitors ever actually see, since the vast majority of it has no road at all. Read the story, check current highway conditions before you go, and when you leave, collect the stamp.
Jagged peaks, waterfalls, and over 300 glaciers adorn the North Cascades National Park Service Complex.Adapted from North Cascades National Park's own description of the park
Six ways to spend your time, from a turquoise lake right off the highway to a demanding climb into the high country.
A pullout right along Highway 20 with a sweeping view of the lake's striking turquoise water, no hiking required.
The signature viewA series of switchbacks climbing to a high alpine pass with views deep into the park's glaciated interior.
Full day · confident hikersA well-regarded exhibit hall with a 3D relief map and films on the park's glaciers, geology, and wildlife.
Everyone · 45 minA remote, roadless village reachable only by boat, floatplane, or trail, deep in the park's Lake Chelan area.
Full day to overnight · ferry requiredA steep, strenuous trail to a historic fire lookout with 360-degree views, one of the toughest day hikes in the park.
Full day · very strenuousMinimal light pollution along much of Highway 20 makes for excellent stargazing on clear nights.
Stargazers · after darkAnswer a few questions right here — we'll map your day, stop by stop, with a route, timings, weather, and a packing checklist grounded in real park data. No account, no leaving this page.
Every trail rated honestly, with distance, climb, and a reminder that most of this park has no road access at all.
A short walk from the parking pullout to the classic turquoise-lake overlook. No permit.
A longer lakeside trail following the shoreline, quieter than the overlook pullout above. No permit.
A series of switchbacks to a high alpine pass with sweeping views into the park's glaciated core. No permit.
A relentlessly steep climb to a historic fire lookout, one of the most demanding day hikes in the park. No permit.
A network of easy loop trails near the visitor center through old-growth forest along the Skagit River. No permit.
A network of trails accessible only after a ferry or floatplane journey into the remote Stehekin valley.
No permit for most day hikes · free backcountry permits for overnight camping · State Route 20 closes completely every winter, with reopening timing not fully predictable year to year
Tap any animal to learn its story. Soon, the app will let you log what you spot and keep a life list for every park.
One of the last remaining wild grizzly populations in Washington state, extremely rare and rarely encountered by visitors.
Has begun naturally recolonizing parts of the North Cascades in recent decades after historical extirpation.
Common on the park's steep, rocky slopes, well adapted to the alpine terrain above treeline.
Nests on the park's cliffs, hunting marmots and other small mammals across the alpine zone.
A threatened species requiring the coldest, cleanest streams, found in several of the park's glacially fed waterways.
Common in the park's high alpine meadows, its distinctive whistle a frequent sound on summit trails.
Found among the park's talus slopes and rockfalls, sensitive to warming temperatures at these elevations.
Common in the park's lower-elevation old-growth forest, part of some of the last remaining ancient forest in the region.
Blooms in alpine meadows immediately after snowmelt, one of the first wildflowers to appear each summer.
Found near the treeline throughout the park, often stunted and wind-shaped at the highest elevations it can survive.
Common in the park's high meadows each summer, adding bright red color to the alpine landscape.
Forms low mats across the park's alpine zone, one of the hardiest plants able to survive the short growing season.
Found at higher elevations throughout the park, tolerant of the heavy snowpack common at this latitude and altitude.
North Cascades contains more than 300 glaciers, the most of any national park in the contiguous United States.
No road crosses the park's rugged interior; State Route 20 only skirts its southern edge, and closes completely each winter.
In 2026, winter storm damage and a spring rockslide delayed the highway's reopening well past its typical spring date, with repairs finishing in June.
The remote village of Stehekin, within the park's boundaries, is reachable only by boat, floatplane, or trail, with no road access at all.
Stories, guides, and hard-won tips from the trail. The full North Cascades deep dive lives on the journal.
Log the visit, keep your story, and watch the map of all sixty-three fill in behind you. Every stamp has a keepsake worth holding.
See the full map and track every stamp you have earned.
View the map → PlanTurn North Cascades into a road trip with a custom, day-by-day itinerary.
Start planning → Go deeperThe long-form guide: every trail, season, and secret, on the journal.
Read it → Explore moreFind your next stamp anywhere in the country.
Browse parks →Offline maps, your passport, and every park in your pocket on the trail.
The printed edition, part atlas, part journal, one story per park.
Field-guide posters, enamel stamps, and the passport book to fill in.