Climbing, hiking and cycling around Mount Rainier

TACOMA — I called it the Rainier Triple Crown, and finishing it proved more rewarding than I ever expected.

The idea started percolating, when I was kid staring at the mountain from home and dreaming of climbing it and then of hiking around it. My triple crown idea took shape as an adult when I fell in love with cycling and decided I wanted to bike the hilly roads around the peak.

It’s a totally contrived accomplishment, I know. But I’m one of those guys who need goals — contrived or otherwise — to stay motivated to exercise. And that’s all I wanted from my Rainier Triple Crown.

I got it, too. But that wasn’t the best part. Not even close.

Here’s how it would work. I’d climb the 14,411-foot mountain. Then I’d hike the 93-mile Wonderland trail. And I’d cap it off with the relentless cycling ultra-marathon called Ride Around Mountain Rainier in One Day, better known as RAMROD. The three trips were a grand total of 261 miles and more than 42,000 feet of climbing.

A better organized and fitter person, less prone to collapsing into a whimpering mass of cramping humanity, could probably knock this out inside a week. I hoped to do it in a year or two.

It took me three days shy of a decade.

Two buddies and I rolled across the RAMROD finish line Thursday evening in Enumclaw after 150 miles and 10,000 feet of climbing. We looked back at the mountain and toasted the occasion with ice cream sandwiches.

They were among the few I’d told of my little goal. Now that I was done, I knew I could count on them to be thoroughly unimpressed.

Rick Beitelspacher and Russ Meyers watched me cramp up in the 97 degree heat just 30 yards from the top of Cayuse Pass. Then again 1 ½ miles from the finish. On one of those occasions they were kind enough to wait for the cramping to stop before making fun of me.

They didn’t have to say what I’m sure they were thinking: If that guy could do it, they definitely could. Heck, almost anybody could.

Absolutely. Although, I’d add, none of these adventures should be taken lightly. Each is challenging. And whether crevasses, rock fall or speeding downhill at 40 mph on tires the width of your thumb, each has inherit risk. People have died attempting each, the merciless upper slopes of Mount Rainier claiming the most, more than 100 souls.

But, yes, prepare well, train wisely (and probably hire a guide for the climb) and most people can do these things.

I was more than halfway finished with my goal before I mentioned it to anybody besides my closest friends. It was the summer of 2012, and I was on a weeklong trip on the Wonderland Trail. My hiking partners, Matt Misterek and Thad Richardson, were lounging next to Reflection Lake, and I struck up a conversation with an elderly man who’d just hiked down from Paradise.

He told me how he still wished to finish his “Rainier Double.” He’d climbed Rainier, but had yet to hike the Wonderland.

His questions were the same as everyone with whom I’ve since shared my goal.

Which one is hardest?

I said the Wonderland was tougher than climbing the mountain, but I quickly amended my answer. “It’s whichever one you did most recently,” I said.

If he asked me today, after biking through the uphill oven that is RAMROD, I’d have said the bike trip. The truth: The pain and suffering fade, the good memories don’t.

What was the best part?

Not what I expected. Not the fitness motivation. Not finishing. Not the gratification of checking it off the bucket list. Not the view from Columbia Crest, the pink sunset at Klapatche Park or the relief of reaching Cayuse Pass.

I pointed at my friend sleeping on the side of the lake. “The friends who go with you,” I said.

Super cheesy, I know. But true.

When I think of the summit, I think of my friend John Osmundson’s celebratory cartwheel. When I think of the Wonderland, I think of the seven days of swapped stories and inside jokes.

I’m sure my enduring memory of RAMROD will be slowly, painfully climbing through the heat for 11 miles up 4,675-foot Cayuse Pass with my friends and them needling me for cramping with the top in sight.

Suffering with friends forges relationships infinitely more meaningful than fulfilling contrived goals.

And friends provide more motivation too. When I told Misterek I was finally finishing the Rainier Triple Crown, he, too, was unimpressed.

“Shouldn’t there be a fourth thing,” he said. A Rainier Grand Slam?

“I guess,” I said, “like what?”

All of his suggestions were terrible. One involved riding a black bear through a mountain lake. But I guess that’s not really the point. There should always be a next adventure, one you can do with friends.

As for what, I guess we’ll discuss it further this summer while we’re hiking the Northern Loop Trail.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Local News

More frequent service coming for Community Transit buses

As part of a regular update to its service hours, the agency will boost the frequencies of its Swift lines and other popular routes.

More than $1 million is available for housing-related programs in Snohomish County, and the Human Services Department is seeking applications. (File photo)
Applicants sought for housing programs in Snohomish County

More than $1 million is available for housing-related programs in… Continue reading

The newly rebuilt section of Index-Galena Road is pictured on Saturday, Nov. 4, 2023, near Index, Washington. (Jordan Hansen / The Herald)
Snohomish County honored nationally for Index-Galena road repair

The county Public Works department coordinated with multiple entities to repair a stretch of road near Index washed out by floods in 2006.

Birch, who was an owner surrender and now currently has an adoption pending, pauses on a walk with volunteer Cody McClellan at PAWS Lynnwood on Thursday, Aug. 7, 2025 in Lynnwood, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Pet surrenders up due to rising cost of living, shelter workers say

Compared to this time last year, dog surrenders are up 37% at the Lynnwood PAWS animal shelter.

Pedestrians cross the intersection of Evergreen Way and Airport Road on Thursday, Aug. 7, 2025 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
In Snohomish County, pedestrian fatalities continue a troublesome trend

As Everett and other cities eye new traffic safety measures, crashes involving pedestrians show little signs of decreasing.

The Mountlake Terrace City Council discusses the Flock Safety license plate camera system on Thursday, June 5, 2025 in Mountlake Terrace, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Mountlake Terrace public express ongoing ire with future Flock system

The city council explored installing a new advisory committee for stronger safety camera oversight.

Crane Aerospace & Electronics volunteer Dylan Goss helps move branches into place between poles while assembling an analog beaver dam in North Creek on Wednesday, Aug. 6, 2025 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Adopt A Stream volunteers build analog beaver dams in North Creek

The human-engineered structures will mimic natural dams in an effort to restore creek health in an increasingly urbanized area.

Ferries pass on a crossing between Mukilteo and Whidbey Island. (Andy Bronson / Herald file)
State commission approves rate hike for ferry trips

Ticket prices are set to rise about 6% over the next two years.

1 person dead, another injured after vehicle crashes into building in Everett

Prior to the crash, two people allegedly fled from Washington State Patrol who was investigating a DUI

Logo for news use featuring Snohomish County, Washington. 220118
Snohomish County departments explain why they’re overspending

District Court, the Office of Public Defense, the Sheriff’s Office and Corrections sat in front of the county council Tuesday.

South County Fire headquarters in Everett, Washington on Thursday, May 18, 2023. (Annie Barker / The Herald)
South County Fire commissioner says board violated public meetings act

The board privately discussed staffing changes to Mill Creek’s fire station, he said. The board chair says it was within the law.

Fire Station One firefighters fill their bowls and plates with dinner on Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2024 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Everett firefighters turn on the burner and fire up the grill

From steak bites to sauteed shrimp, the crew at Station One know their way around the kitchen: “We like good food.”

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.