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Marlette flume trail
Marlette flume trail






marlette flume trail

Sand Harbor also has a pavilion used for outdoor music and theater, including the Lake Tahoe Shakespeare Festival held each year in July and August. The sand is clean, and the water clear and shallow, though always cool. Such is the popularity that the entrance is often closed by mid morning, once the parking lots fill up. At busy times the place resembles a beach in southern California - fine golden sands sprinkled with dozens of brightly colored umbrellas, lifeguards keeping watch from observation platforms, and hundreds of people enjoying the scenery. Entry fees (2020) are $10 per vehicle, or $2 for people on bicycles. Lake Tahoe Nevada State Park has lakeside access at Hidden Beach, where short trails lead to a sandy section of the shoreline, and at Memorial Point, a slightly elevated overlook, but by far the most popular is Sand Harbor, probably the best beach on Lake Tahoe. Most trails in the park are also open to mountain bikes and horses. Other paths include a section of the Tahoe Rim Trail (which traverses close to the high point of the mountains and so has the best views), and the Chimney Beach to North Canyon Trail, a lesser-used, 5 mile route that descends precipitously from a ridge just south of Marlette Lake to a hidden beach beside Lake Tahoe. The Marlette Flume Trail runs alongside the waterway for nearly 5 miles, while the Red House Flume Trail follows a continuation channel further into the hills, on the east side of a 4,000 foot long tunnel. Like Spooner, Marlette was created to supply water to the logging industry, sending water northwards via a long flume starting just below the dam. Marlette Lake is 5 miles from the park entrance, along the dirt North Canyon Road or the parallel (slightly steeper) North Canyon Trail. In the park, the second most visited location (after Spooner Lake) is the larger Marlette Lake, set in a wooded valley at 7,823 feet, and also artificial, formed by a dam across Marlette Creek - another small drainage that drops down steeply to Lake Tahoe. All other trails in the state park are rather longer, climbing far into the forested hills above Lake Tahoe (known as the Marlette-Hobart backcountry), and offering good, long distance views, though the landscapes lack the stark granite scenery of the southwest (the Desolation Wilderness), which is the premier hiking destination in the Tahoe area. A two mile trail loops all around the perimeter, partly through pine/aspen woodland, in other places right along the grassy shoreline. The reservoir is not particularly scenic, being shallow, muddy at the edges, and completely surrounded by trees and bushes, without any mountain peaks in view. The short entrance road to Spooner Lake branches off NV 28 half a mile northwest of Spooner Junction, passes the fee station (2020 fees $10 per vehicle) and ends at an extensive parking area beside the lake, which was created in 1924 by construction of a dam across a small creek.








Marlette flume trail