I ski and hike all winter, but the first few hikes of spring are always a special joy. Warming temps begin to dry out the landscape and budding trees dot the trails and hillsides as birds find their songs after their winter silence.

View of Mt. McKenzie from top of Mt. Baker
Mt. Baker offers nice views of Mt. McKenzie (left) and McKenzie Pond, as well as the High Peaks in the distance.
And so on an unseasonably warm, breezy April day, Wren and I set out for a hike on Baker Mountain in Saranac Lake. Since Baker is a short hike of only 0.9 miles from the trailhead to the summit, and since it is a local mountain, I regularly hike it as a workout, sometimes summiting it twice to lengthen my efforts.

Baker begins at Moody Pond in Saranac Lake. There are two major routes up the mountain which part ways near the bottom. The left trail is narrower, snakier, muddier, and less busy than the right. It can grant a quiet, solo hike even on this well-traveled mountain as a result. The right fork is the main trail – wider and easier to follow than the left. It also offers excellent views to the West and Southwest, of the Village of Saranac Lake, and its surrounding lakes like Kiwassa and Lower Saranac.

Wren and I chose to climb the left fork and after a perpetually muddy section of trail, found the footing to be relatively good. Recently arrived winter wrens sang along the slopes as we hiked, and the hammering of yellow-bellied sapsuckers rang through the woods. Pine siskins, which moved south in big numbers this winter and have remained to nest in the spring, called almost incessantly overhead. Not far up the trail a quiet sound on the leaves alerted me to a recently emerged two-foot-long garter snake out to bask and forage in the sun.

We worked hard climbing the trail – as I mentioned it is a good mountain for a workout – as we meandered our way up the slope. The total elevation gain of Baker is 900 feet, covered in less than a mile, and we arrived at the top breathing heavily and happy to take a break for some water. Wren has a tendency to drink very little water on summits, preferring to use her time there to find food left by hikers snacking at the top. I took in the views of Mt. McKenzie, McKenzie Pond, and their accompanying wilderness area to the east, and the High Peaks to the south and southeast, and then we descended Baker on the main trail (not the trail we came up).

The top of Baker is a spider web of trails, and the main trails themselves are not well marked. It is much easier to wander the wrong way while descending the trail, so any hiker on Baker should bear this in mind.

Wren Baker Rocks
Wren stands on the rocky outcrops on Baker Mountain which overlook the village of Saranac Lake and the many lakes in the region.

On our descent we stopped at the rocky outcrop overlooking Lake Flower and the Village of Saranac Lake, although our view of them while looking west in the afternoon sun was dazzling and almost blinding. The rocky overlooks also gave nice views of the High Peaks.

Once down from the top, the main trail became more obvious, and we followed it back to the trailhead; it took us about an hour total to hike up and down the mountain. Wren, as always, excitedly wanted to run ahead of me at the bottom. She was hot and was ready for a swim in Moody Pond. Once she was sufficiently wet and a bit mucky from wading around in the shallows, I took her home and topped off her day with a bath so that she wouldn't smell like pond muck all night. She was due for a bath anyway.