Kent,

Did you drive to King, or park at the gate and walk, or did you bike to it?

Have you fished Fontal in the last couple of years?

I'm headed out fishing locally in two weeks and think I'll make my trip to little 
Cavanaugh using your directions.

Paul W

> ----------
> From:         Kent Lufkin[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Reply To:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent:         Friday, June 09, 2000 10:18 AM
> To:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject:      RE: King and Little Cavanaugh lakes
> 
> >If you'd like to provide directions to little Cavanaugh, I'd like to 
> >hear them.  I hunted off and on for about 10 years for that lake.  I 
> >can find it on the map.. but driving my truck... I can't find it on 
> >the road....trail.. or whatever.
> 
> Little Cavanaugh is roughly 6 or 7 miles south of Gold Bar. Take Hwy 
> 2 a couple miles past Gold Bar and look for Forest Road 62 on the 
> right past the big 'S' curves (it's well marked.) Follow FR 62 about 
> 7 miles. The unpaved road is steep in parts with some switchbacks. 
> Stay to the right at the first fork.
> 
> When you get to the top, you'll be in a pretty extensive clearcut. 
> You'll cross a creek then stay left as a gated road takes off to the 
> right. After another mile or so, you'll enter a stand of uncut 
> second-growth. As you leave the trees and enter another clearcut, the 
> road down to the lake is on the right but isn't marked.
> 
> If you pass the lake road, you can't go much farther before you'll 
> run into the closed yellow gate that marks the north end of 
> Weyerhaeuser's Snoqualmie Tree Farm.
> 
> You might want to get a copy of the Gold Bar 7-1/2 minute topo map 
> for reference. Both Metzger's Maps and (I think) REI have it.
> 
> 
> >Which King Lake.. not the one behind the gates up on High Rock road?
> 
> Yep, that's the one.
> 
> Take the King Lake Road north off Lake Fontal (High Rock) Road. 
> Follow the main road and past the hand-painted "No Trespassing - 
> Private Property sign (it's not) after a couple miles. You'll come to 
> a yellow  steel gate that's open. After a quarter mile or so, take 
> the left-hand fork as you enter a clearcut. The lake's couple hundred 
> yards or so down a rutted road.
> 
> Let us know how you do.
> 
> Kent Lufkin
> 

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