
In December 2025, a historic atmospheric river struck western Washington, pushing rivers across the region into dangerous flood stages. Snohomish County warned that the Snohomish, Skykomish, and Stillaguamish rivers could reach or exceed historic levels, and soon after, the North Fork of the Skykomish River again reshaped the upper valley.
For Garland Mineral Springs, the damage was heartbreaking. During our visit this week, we found that the old cabins were gone — destroyed by the floodwaters that swept through the property. What had once been a quiet remnant of Garland’s resort and camp years is now another chapter in the long struggle between this mountain place and the river that runs beside it.
Garland has always lived close to water. Its mineral springs made it famous. In the 1930s, visitors came for the hot mineral water, the lodge, cabins, stables, and pool. In 1953, Rev. Cameron Sharpe, Medora Sharpe, and Laura Mae Mooney purchased Garland for use as a youth camp and church conference center. But flood and fire have shaped its history before: a devastating flood in 1959 and the lodge fire in 1961 ended Garland’s operation as a resort.

The 2025 flood now joins that history.
The same river system also damaged Index-Galena Road. Snohomish County reported that floods in December damaged several sections of the road, including severe damage just past North Fork Skykomish River Bridge 499. The county closed the road between mileposts 10 and 14 for the winter, noting that the repair timeline was unknown. By March 2026, county officials estimated the repair cost for the washed-out section at about $900,000.
That road matters far beyond pavement. Index-Galena Road is the historic route into the North Fork valley — to Garland, Galena, private property, trailheads, and places like Blanca Lake. Washington Trails Association noted that the road had only reopened in 2023 after a 17-year closure from earlier flood damage, and that the new washout was in a different location. With the road out, access was pushed to the Beckler River Road detour, bypassing Index and making emergency access more difficult.
For the town of Index, floods like this are more than natural events. They affect daily life, access, tourism, safety, and the fragile economy of a small mountain town. When hikers, climbers, property owners, and families cannot reach the upper valley through Index, the loss is felt in town — at restaurants, shops, lodging, and in the simple rhythm of visitors passing through.
Garland Mineral Springs has survived many eras: resort, wartime use, church camp, family retreat, and private historic property. The 2025 flood took the cabins, but it did not take the story. If anything, it reminds us why Garland matters. It is not just a place on a map north of Index. It is a record of family, faith, recreation, mountain water, and the powerful forces that continue to shape the Skykomish Valley.
The river changed the land again. Now the work is to remember what stood there, document what remains, and preserve Garland’s story for the generations who still call it home.