From east- and westbound Interstate 90, take Exit 47
From Exit 47, turn left from eastbound/right from westbound onto Tinkham Road/Forest Road 55 (road name may not be posted)
Proceed 0.10 miles/0.16 km to intersection
Turn right onto Denny Creek Road/Forest Road 58, as indicated by signage
Proceed 0.20 miles/0.30 km and turn left to remain on Denny Creek Road/Forest Road 58
Continue on Denny Creek Road/Forest Road 58 for 2.50 miles/4.00 km to parking lot on the right just past the junction with Forest Road 5830 on the left. Accessible parking for persons with disabilities is available on Forest Road 5830 immediately to the left.
The trailhead is 0.20 miles/0.30 at the end of Forest Road 5830; be sure to read signage at the trailhead, as the trailheads for the Snoqualmie Pass Wagon Road and Franklin Falls trails are nearby on Denny Creek Road/Forest Road 58 and Forest Road 5830, respectively
Returning to Interstate 90
Denny Creek Road/Forest Road 58 is one way at the trailhead. To return to Interstate 90 from the parking lot, turn right onto Denny Creek Road/Forest Road 58 and continue approximately 2.30 miles/3.70 km to State Route 906 (state route may be unsigned)
Turn right onto State Route 906
For westbound Interstate 90, proceed 0.10 miles/0.16 km and turn right onto the freeway ramp
For eastbound Interstate 90, proceed 0.60 miles/1.00 km to Yellowstone Trail Road, turn left onto Yellowstone Trail Road, and then immediately turn right onto the freeway ramp
The rugged trail to Melakwa and Upper Melakwa lakes generally follows Denny Creek through pleasant, mostly coniferous forest, past waterfalls, along a canyon rim, across sprawling boulderfields, and finally ends where the lakes nestle high in their narrow alpine cradle. Here and there, wildflowers dot the stone-strewn trailside and flourish in mid-summer swaths along the lakeshores. The trail gradually climbs the creek valley before steeply ascending Hemlock Pass at its head and then generally descending the ridge’s undulating flank to the lakes just beyond. Near the lakes, those wishing to venture still further can pick up connecting trails to Lower Tuscohatchie Lake and Pratt Lake.
Do note that this trail is rocky throughout and steep in its mid-section — be prepared with appropriate footwear and other traction gear as required for your comfort. Expect wet feet where the trail crosses Denny Creek at the expanse of smooth rock known as the Slippery Slab 1.25 miles/2.00 km from the trailhead and be ready to turn back if seasonal high water or ice render it too dangerous to safely pass. Above Keekwulee Falls, exercise caution where the trail skirts the canyon rim just steps from the tree-lined precipice. Finally, expect to encounter other hikers on summer weekends; for more solitude, try visiting on a weekday or take the longer Melakwa – Pratt Lake Traverse via Pratt and Lower Tuscohatchie lakes.
Several natural features along the trail derive their names from the Chinook jargon, a pidgin amalgamation of French, English, and Pacific Northwest First Nations languages that was prevalent in the 19th and 20th centuries among the various local European and indigenous peoples (and not to be confused with the now extinct language of Oregon’s Chinook people). In the jargon, “melakwa” means “mosquito.”