Olympic National Park

10 Top Places to Visit in Olympic National Park

Whether you're hiking, camping, boating, or all the above—these are the must-visit places for your trip's itinerary.

By Allison Williams July 22, 2011 Published in the August 2011 issue of Seattle Met

Olympic national park image lb00jf

1OZETTE

Camping, hiking, boating
Dedicated souls make the roundabout drive out to this lake, separated from the Pacific by a sliver of land that’s become a favorite of archeologists. The hike up the coast to even-more-remote Shi Shi Beach is beautiful, but it’s no mere stroll in the sand. Expect a combination of boardwalks, headland detours, and tidal crossings.

 2RIALTO BEACH

Camping, hiking, boating
The park’s middle coastal outpost hugs the community of La Push, the westernmost in the contiguous United States. South of Mora campground are the not-so-­creatively named First, Second, and Third Beaches, each lined with bleached driftwood, while to the north are the more descriptive Split Rock and Hole-in-the-Wall sea arch.

3KALALOCH

Camping, hiking
Drive right up to and camp on the sandy beach in the most convenient of the park’s 73 coastline miles. Kalaloch Campground takes reservations, or you can book at the nearby wooden-shingle lodge. Up the road are Ruby Beach’s photogenic headlands, rocks with flat tops like mesas. 

4HOH RAIN FOREST

Camping, hiking
A dozen feet of rain fall each year in the Hoh Valley, where ferns line the forest floor and mosses hang from the thick canopy. Mountaineers attempting to summit the park’s highest point, Mount Olympus, start their ascent up the 7,980-foot peak from here.

5LAKE QUINAULT

Camping, hiking, boating
The lake itself is half in the national park and half out, but fully surrounded by the Quinault Rain Forest. A day hike leads to the historic Kestner Homestead, while backpackers flock to the waterfalls of the Enchanted Valley. Many of the park’s arboreal giants are here, including the record-size Sitka spruce and Quinault big cedar.

6SOL DUC

Camping, hiking
Salmon runs, a hot springs resort, and a misty multipronged waterfall sit inside the Sol Duc Valley. Backpackers embark for the popular alpine meadows of the High Divide Loop trail, which boast the park’s best views of Mount Olympus.

 7LAKE CRESCENT

Camping, hiking, boating

Local legend claims the blue-green lake just west of Port Angeles is bottomless. The rustic Log Cabin Resort and dirt roads line the north end of the lake, while Highway 101 skirts the south shore. Boaters have paddled from the sprawling Lake Crescent Lodge since 1916, which now sits next door to the educational Olympic Park Institute campus.

8ELWHA

Camping, hiking, boating
While the Elwha’s dams come down (see The Elwha’s Last Dam Summer), this spur up the river’s valley will be subject to road closures. Whitewater rafting trips will still tackle the class two-plus rapids on the Elwha River, but hikes through the crumbling historic homesteads and to the distant Olympic Hot Springs will require lengthy, difficult detours.

9HURRICANE RIDGE

Hiking
In summer, films and exhibits inside the park’s most panoramic visitor center are a break from the jaw-­dropping view outside of alpine meadows and a crescent of peaks. Come winter it’s a congenial scene of skiers and snow­shoers from the local community.

10STAIRCASE

Camping, hiking
The eastern side’s only large park entrance is in a fire-prone area, where groves of Douglas firs line the North Fork of the Skokomish River. A campground sits just inside park boundaries, while outside the populated Lake Cushman is dotted with private homes. 


Updated November 22, 2011. In the Lake Quinault item, the Kestner Homestead was misspelled as Kester.

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