Most of the pass is inside the
Hatcher Pass East Special Management Area, which encompasses of wilderness.
Summit Lake State Recreation Site is a small alpine park with a shallow
cirque lake and excellent views. The park is a favorite launch site for
paragliders. at Hatcher Pass Activities that can be enjoyed in the Hatcher Pass area include Nordic skiing, downhill skiing, mountain climbing, white water kayaking, rock climbing, mountain biking, paragliding, berry picking, gold mining, hiking, kite-flying, snowboarding, wildlife viewing and back country camping. Hatcher Pass Road is a good paved biking trail until Mile 17, where the road changes to gravel.
Mountain biking The Gold Mint Trail provides miles of technical, rocky, gently-climbing mountain bike riding alongside the Little Susitna River. The "16 Mile" trail is a steep downhill, 2-mile long (3 km) bike trail with of drop that was built in 2013, in between switchbacks of the Hatcher Pass road, starting at mile 16 of the Hatcher Pass Road. At Government Peak Recreational Area, a few miles (several km) south of Hatcher Pass, there are in three loops of singletrack, bermed, flow-style bike trails.
Skiing The area has a rich skiing heritage. Historic photos show miners recreating on skis. In the 1930s, Anchorage skiers were bused to the Fishhook Inn to use the rope tow there. In 2005 the Mat-Su Borough extended the electric grid and built a short access road to the proposed site of a base lodge. In 2020, after 40 years of proposals from locals, a downhill ski area known as
Skeetawk was built in the area, allowing access to Hatcher Pass for novice skiers for the first time. The first lift, a triple chair, was installed the same year, with plans to expand further. The pass is one of the most popular road-accessible backcountry skiing areas in the state. Usually, it is the first urban-accessible area of Alaska to get skiable snow in the fall. The backcountry alpine skiing season generally extends from late September to late April. Groomed skate and diagonal skiing trails winding amongst historical mining facilities in the high alpine area near the Hatcher Pass Lodge and the museum have a season that typically extends from October to April. The first 10 kilometers of a Nordic ski area in the forests and glades at
Government Peak Recreation Area at the base of
Government Peak were opened in December 2012, and a chalet was built in 2013. Additional trails and trail lighting are scheduled to be installed in 2016.
Snowmachines are prohibited within large areas of the Hatcher Pass State Management Area that are frequented by skiers. There are several backcountry huts in the area; a wilderness loop can be traveled over the mountain passes and glaciers linking these huts. ==References==