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DENALI NATIONAL PARK
ZONE 31-32

LOCATION:  Central Alaska
HIKE STARTS:  Denali Park Road
HIKE ENDS:  Denali Park Road
TOTAL DISTANCE:  25 Miles
HIKE TYPE:  One Way, Shuttle Hike
HIKE DIFFICULTY:  Very Difficult
TRAILS USED:  No Trails, Bushwack
TRAIL TRAFFIC:  None
TRIP TYPE:  Multi-Day Hike
MANAGEMENT:  Denali National Park

HIGHLIGHTS:  It's more than a mountain. Denali National Park & Preserve features North America's highest mountain, 20,320-foot tall Mount McKinley. The Alaska Range also includes countless other spectacular mountains and many large glaciers. Denali's more than 6 million acres also encompass a complete sub-arctic eco-system with large mammals such as grizzly bears, wolves, Dall sheep, and moose.

The park was established as Mt. McKinley National Park on Feb. 26, 1917. The original park was designated a wilderness area and incorporated into Denali National Park and Preserve in 1980. The Park was designated an international biosphere reserve in 1976. Today the park accommodates a wide variety of visitor use including wildlife viewing, mountaineering, and backpacking. It continues to provide a laboratory for research in the natural sciences. There are no trails in Denali National Park, so part of the excitement of a backcountry hike is plotting a course across the open tundra or just wandering along the many riverbanks and drainage ditches.  For that reason, map and compass skills are a major plus if you plan to hike more than a mile from the Denali Park Road. 

The National Park Service limits the number of backcountry permits, so you are nearly assured of a true wilderness experience. There is a large variety of wildlife in Denali, and you are likely to see moose, caribou, dall sheep, and even grizzly bear from both the Park bus and the open tundra if you are hiking the backcountry.  The route we chose through Zones 31 and 32 was a brutal one.  We crossed one canyon, two mountain ranges and forded the Toklat Rivers frequently on the last day of the hike.  The scenery however, was spectacular, and we saw more wildlife on this trip than I have ever seen in over twenty years of backpacking.  If you are up to the challenge, and in great physical shape, consider this hike.

Denali National Park Hiking And Backpacking Trails Guidebook Lonely Planet Hiking in Alaska Denali National Park Hiking And Backpacking Topographical MapTrails Illustrated Map: Denali
 

MORE DETAILS

bullet click to see trail photos from this hike in Denali National Park: June 30, 1995
bullet click to see an article on this hike that ran in Backpacker Magazine during November/December 2005
bullet click to view a detailed trip report on this backpacking trip in Denali National Park: June 30, 1995 (password required)
bullet click to view or add a brief trip report at yourhikes.com on Zone 31-32: June 30, 1995
bullet click to view trail maps from this hike in Denali National Park:  Zone 31-32 area map, Denali NPS detailed map, N2 detailed map (password required), Denali National Park map, Zone 31-32 profile map, Denali TopoZone map
bulletclick for the hiking and backpacking trails discussion forum for all Other Destinations
bullet click to access the guidebook "Lonely Planet: Backpacking In Alaska" which has details on this hike in Denali National Park
bullet click for more Alaska hiking and backpacking books
bullet check Backpacker Magazine for an article that ran on the Wyoming Hills in their October 2008 issue
bullet click here to add your hike, trip report, or feedback for this destination 

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