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Outdoor Report: Mummery Glacier is like 'being in a Lord of the Rings movie'

Paul Karchut talks about hiking on the Mummery Glacier, an epic walk through the Blaeberry Valley.

'Knowing the route is the tricky part, so do your homework'

The Mummery Glacier hike is a beautiful yet tricky hike for those looking to tackle something new. (Outdoor Report)

This is hiking at the next level.

We went to the Blaeberry Valley, just west of the Alberta-B.C. border, and this trip takes you deep into this valleyand up into the Mummery Glacier.

We've featured some pretty accessible trail walks on the Outdoor Report this summer, so let's mix it up a bit. Let's get adventurous.

Darlene Whiting is a longtime Calgarian who retired out on the Blaeberry, and she's the one who invited me out on this trip.When we got to the foot of the glacier, I asked her to set the scene for us.

"We're sitting at the base of a huge boulder, the size of an apartment building, basically, looking across to where the glacier used to be," she said."It's just all slabs, and waterfalls, and all the peaks I don't have the name for most of them.

"There's something almost weird, almost I don't know spiritual about this place. It's almostlike being in a Lord of the Rings movie. And looking through the forest, out at the glacier, it almost feels a little like an outdoor churchor something. You kind of get into a different place when you're up here."

Getting up there is the trick. It was kind of a multi-sport day. First of all, you have to drive up the Blaeberry Forest Road, and you'll want to have a truck or SUV to get up there, because it is pretty rough in places.

The hike requires some tricky navigation. (Outdoor Report)

Then there's a very clear spot where you're not getting any farther in a vehiclebig washout in the road. That's where you'll end up hopping on a mountain bike(bringing your bike along shaves about two to three hours off your round trip, so it's worthwhile).

There's a bit of bushwhacking in places, water crossings and a final mountain bike climb gets you up to the old trailhead.

This is where you normally would have started, in the old days,and this is where you ditch your bike at the trailhead. That's alsowhere it starts to get really beautiful.

You'll discover really thick cedar groves and feel like you're hiking on the West Coast. And when you come to a creek crossing where Mother Nature flexes her muscles every year withavalanches in winter, big spring runoffs in the spring you'll see a place that's constantly changing.

You can see the evidence of change, but you can't get up here until sometimes in June. It depends on the year.

You have to find some stones to get across on, or just come to terms with the fact your feet are going to get wet. It's up, up, up to the foot of this glacier, with waterfalls andsome of those massive, house-sized boulders shuffled around by the glacier. This hike has some of the finest examples of just sheer, raw powers of nature.

There'ssome pretty interesting history behind it, too.

This area was really important for David Thompson back in the early 1800s, in his explorations. Also, it was briefly considered for the Trans-Canada Highway as a route, but then the avalanche activity in the area nixed that idea.

The view from the top is spectacular. (Outdoor Report)

It's expansive, it's spectacular and it makes it hard to turn back.

Who's it suited for?

If you have done a number of hikes this summer, and have built up some fitnessand have some route-finding skillsand you want something differenttaking you away from the crowds in the national parks this could well be worth considering. But knowing the route is the very tricky part, so do your homework.