
This seven-day mountaineering expedition challenges returning students to advance their outdoor leadership, teamwork, and technical backcountry skills while summiting Glacier Peak.
Throughout the week, participants will develop an understanding in snow travel, glacier navigation, route finding, and alpine camping while deepening their understanding of group dynamics and decision-making in high mountain environments. The course emphasizes resilience, communication, and self-reliance as students take on greater leadership responsibilities each day.
The 2026 Advanced Wilderness Leadership Course will explore Glacier Peak and its surrounding wilderness, including smaller summits and glacial valleys. Participants will gain hands-on experience with mountaineering techniques while studying the natural and cultural history of Washington’s high alpine ecosystems.
We provide all technical and personal gear, including mountaineering boots, ice axes, and crampons if notified 4 weeks ahead of time. All meals are included from lunch on the first day to lunch on the last day. Transportation is provided from the meet location in Fife and back.



Challenging: Around 11,000 feet of elevation gain and loss, 7 days, 35 miles on steep, uneven trails.
7 days
July 6-July 12
You must have completed the Wilderness Leadership Course or an equivalent outdoor leadership experience to be eligible for the Advanced WLC. Please contact Lorelei at lorelei@sahaleoutdoors.org to learn more about course application.
Includes gear rental, food, transportation, and all entrance fees, permits, and passes.
25% of the total trip cost is due at sign-up, with the remainder due one month before the trip date. You are welcome to pay in installments, contact trips@sahaleoutdoors.org to set up a payment plan.
Our mission is to make outdoor recreation accessible to all. If you cannot afford the total trip cost, request sliding scale pricing here:




“As a small sovereign nation of American Indians, the Sauk-Suiattle Indian Tribe, shares the belief of all our tribal nations,
that the Earth is our Mother and that the Creator resides beyond the skies and within our own beings.
While we strive to protect our Mother Earth, so does she shelter us in so many ways from harm.”
The Sauk-Suiattle Indian people have lived under the gaze of Whitehorse Mountain for many generations: as Fishermen, Gatherers and Hunters in the region of Sauk Prairie and near the present-day towns Darrington, Marblemount and Rockport, WA. In the early days, we were known as the Sah-ku-me-hu.
We were canoe people, plying the swift waters of the Sauk, Suiattle, Stillaguamish, Cascade and Skagit Rivers in our river canoes. Though our homelands were in the foothills of the North Cascades, we often traveled downriver to Puget Sound. There we harvested saltwater fish, shellfish, and other foods not available in the mountains. We frequently voyaged in large seagoing canoes.
We also traveled over the mountains to gather food, herbs and other necessities. We became skilled horsemen, trading with tribes from Eastern Washington. Our free roaming horses grazed among our relatives there.
We became a landless people, but continued to live in scattered groups close to our traditional homelands. Though many of our tribal members left the area or joined other neighboring tribes during our exodus, we maintained our tribal government, our social structure, our identity, and most importantly, our hope for the future.
~From sauk-suiattle.com