Dilly Dally Peak

Written by: U.N. Randonneur

This trail, like so many others in the Lower Mainland, was constructed by the indefatigable Halvor Lunden.  Eventually BC Hydro named the entire 24 Km trail, up Dilly Dally, along Eagle Ridge, and down past Lindsay Lake and Polytrichum Lookout, after him.  He passed away in 2008.  The trails he worked on have deteriorated since.

This is a challenging trail that gets its name from the 10-12 hours it takes to complete – not enough time to dilly dally on the way.  Also, it’s a remote trail as the approach reveals so you won’t meet many, if any, hikers on the way.  Dilly Dally Peak is at 1250 m and the trail head is at 95 m so the elevation gain is 1155 m. The trail is well marked with metal markers and flagging.  I’ve hiked Dilly Dally six times over the years, most recently on 20 July 2013.  As time passes, the trail has deteriorated so do it while you can.

Dilly Dally Peak, Sept 2009

Photo courtesy of Steve Vanderwoerd

The Approach

To get to the trailhead, drive to Buntzen Lake parking lot.  You must then walk along the eastern shore of the lake, either along Powerhouse road (shorter) or on the Lake trail (nicer but longer).  At the end of the lake (North Beach) continue on the gravel road, past the trailhead for the Swan Falls trail, to where the road ends at a gate. Go right on a rough gravel road that leads to the tiny settlement of Buntzen Bay. After about 20 minutes on this road, at a bend, you will see a trail sign and flagging on a tree. This dead end road leads to a Hydro pylon.  This is the trailhead. It takes about an hour and ten minutes just to get here.


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The Hike

From the hydro pylon, you go up steeply into the woods, gaining about 40m then losing some as you descend to a creek. In August, an easy crossing because there is no water.  Earlier in the summer, be careful as the water rushes in front of you. Those rocks are slippery – as I found out in May 2012. Then comes an easy half-hour walk on a steady incline to the next creek (I call it Dilly Dally Creek).  There is water here even in August.  (There are a couple of small usually dry creeks between the two major ones). Cross the creek, climb right then go left and you will soon come to the start of an old logging road at 200 m.  You head up quite steeply in a general NW direction for about half an hour, to a trail junction on your left at 360 m. This side trail leads to two viewpoints, one called Croker Lookout (an island in Indian Arm) and the other higher up, which is Little Horn Mountain at 450 m. Don’t try this trail today.

Dilly Dally Peak, Sept 2009

Photo courtesy of Steve Vanderwoerd

Once you pass the trail junction you find yourself on a rough diversion constructed to avoid obstructions on the road. This diversion was itself badly damaged during the winter of 2012-13 and there are many deadfalls to overcome as you head up to a viewpoint called 157 Lookout. On this stretch, watch for a sharp left-angled bend on the diversion.  If you miss it you’ll go off trail. It takes about 30 minutes to get from the trail junction to the viewpoint, which is at 545 m.

After a rest, continue on the old road, now free of deadfalls, for ten minutes to its end. Now look to your left and you will see a trail that climbs steeply up from the road end and ascends relentlessly.  There is one large new deadfall on this stretch but getting around (or over) it is not difficult. When you come to a ditch, pay attention.  It’s possible to lose the trail here.  Keep close to the trees on your left, descend in and out of the ditch, keep left and go up to where you see a red marker on a tree.  Make for it, pass by, up a bit more then angle down to the rocky (Dilly Dally) creek. Drink all you can and fill your bottle.  If you are coming back this way, it will be 2½-3 hours.  If you descend via Swan Falls it will be about the same.  If you return along the ridge, longer still. The creek is about 30 minutes from the road end at an elevation of 800 m.

Crossing the creek is easy and up to the 900 m marker you gain height comfortably by switchbacks. From 900 m the trail gradually deteriorates. You’ll find yourself side hilling at one point, with the creek far below. You will also encounter a small, muddy ditch that you must leap across. At 1,000 m conditions become quite rough as you approach the pass, The pass itself, when you reach it, is a mess. There’s a huge deadfall which you can either walk along or go up to the right to avoid a huge branch and then come down, making for a tape attached to the end of the tree. You turn right just after the end of the deadfall to leave the pass. From the creek to the pass, which is at 1040 m, is about 40 minutes.

Dilly Dally Peak, Sept 2009

Photo courtesy of Steve Vanderwoerd

After the pass, you head steeply up. It’s rough until at about 1150 m the terrain changes, you ascend moderately on a pleasant wooded trail, with even a view or two. The last 100m up are quite enjoyable, especially when you see a signpost on a tree ahead. You are at the summit!  Another signpost to the right says “Viewpoint”. There are small trees dotted about but there are great all-round views. The trail itself passes between two rocky outcrops – ideal for your lunch break. It’s about 40 minutes from pass to summit, or around four and a half hours from the parking lot to summit (excluding rest stops).  The summit elevation is 1250 m.

The Descent

  1. You can return the way you came. Advantage: you know the way and there’s water. Disadvantage: that long trek back from the Hydro Pylon.
  2. Swan Falls. Disadvantage: It’s a very steep trail. I did it last in August 2012 and found that it had deteriorated markedly since I descended that way in 2009. No water until the falls (340m), about 2½ hours away. Advantage: it’s the shortest way back.
  3. Eagle Ridge. Advantage: very scenic and after the ups and downs of the high ridge, a good descent, right to the parking lot.  Disadvantage: it’s the longest of the three. Look at the time before deciding which way to descend. (Gate closes at 8 pm in summer months, up to Labour Day).

No. 3 is best, 1 and 2 are about equal.

Photos

All photos for this post, including the header image, provided by Steve Vanderwoerd courtesy of the Wanderung Hiking Group.

U.N. Randonneur has been hiking the trails of south-western B.C. for 42 years and up to now has done 1,860 hikes in these mountains since he began in September 1973. He also climbed Kilimanjaro in September 1992

7 responses to “Dilly Dally Peak”

  1. AnonyGirl says:

    Me and a friend did this hike back in August 2014 and it took us 19 hours. It was a stretch but the views were amazing. A piece of advise… DO NOT, look up when you’re going up mountain! So overwhelming…

  2. TJacobs says:

    We did this trail June 29. No snow, but lots of marshy sections. I recommend hiking boots, not runners… We often hike up to Polytrichium, so decided to do the full loop this time. We had 30 lb packs to spend the night. After a bear encounter and an injury, we chose to do the entire descent back to the far end of the lake on the first day. it took us ~12 hours (leaving a simple 1 hour hike out the next morning). considered hiking right back out and going home the first night, but the gate was closed anyway, so we spent the night. The lake first thing in the morning with no one else around is such a treat! This trail is steep! The descent left me in agony and destroyed 4 toenails 🙁

  3. Valerie says:

    My friend and I did this hike on July 5, 2014. We started at the Lindsay Lake end and went north along the ridge to Mount Beautiful and then up to Dilly Dally peak and down, then back along the road. There were a lot of deadfalls, but the trail was well marked, nonetheless. Not an easy trail and steeper than I thought it would be but beautiful. We did it in 9 1/2 hours, and we are fairly energetic hikers.

  4. Chris Ludwig says:

    I hiked this route and Swan Falls trail in the Fall. The sun set when I reached the Buntzen Lake Road and I needed my headlamp to get out. Make sure you bring your headlamp in the Fall!
    B.C. Hydro locks the gate at sunset, and if you don’t get back in time, they might call Search and Rescue to look for you. For me, that would be very embarrassing. Two B.C. Hyrdo workers were at my car worried when I got back! Be warned.

  5. Nice one. Think this could be run, or too steep? 1155m elevation gain over 24k, right?

    • Peter Harnetty says:

      Not a good trail for a run unless you are super-fit and prepared to descend the steep Swan Falls trail. On that point, in 2009 I did encounter a man and a woman who were doing the run from Buntzen Lake, up to Lindsay Lake, along Eagle Ridge and down via Swan Falls. Dilly Dally is badly overgrown in places and not very scenic, except for 157 and the summit. Why not run around Buntzen Lake, or over Diez Vistas and around one side of Buntzen? Maybe you’ve done that. The Dilly Dally elevation from 95m to 1250m would be about 10 km – steep! The other 14km are from DD along Eagle Ridge and down via Lindsay and Polytrichum.

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