Mount Rainier National Park
Just For Kids
MOUNT RAINIER
A Walk in the Woods
Walk the Trail of the Shadows at Longmire or the Hot Springs Trail at Ohanapecosh. These and other short nature trails have self-guiding booklets or interpretive trail exhibits and are great fun.
Campfire Program
In summer, kids can join a park naturalist for a guided walk or campfire program.
Visit a Nature Center
Check out the visitor centers at Paradise, Longmire and Ohanapecosh, which have touch tables and sound exhibits.
Go on a Photo Safari
Play with a point-and-shoot camera. Go on a photo "scavenger hunt" and take pictures of special flowers, glaciers, big trees and other park features. At home, use the photos to make a vacation scrapbook.
OLYMPIC
Junior Rangers
The Junior Ranger program has games and activities that help you learn about the park's plants and animals. Pick up a Junior Ranger booklet ($1 donation requested) at any visitor center or ranger station and complete the activities listed inside. Then a park ranger will sign you up as a Junior Ranger and give you a badge. Check at a visitor center or ranger station for more information.
Take a Hike
Many short nature trails have self-guiding booklets and are great fun. Hike the 0.75-mile Hall of Mosses Trail in the Hoh Rain Forest or the one-mile Quinault Loop Trail at Lake Quinault in the Olympic National Forest.
See, Hear and Touch
How would you like to hold a deer antler, feel a bit of animal fur or listen to a coyote howl? You can also dress as a ranger and visit a "mini" ranger station, solve giant puzzles, pretend you're a small salmon trying to reach the ocean or play computer games about the park. Spend some time in the Children's Discovery Room at the Olympic National Park Visitor Center in Port Angeles.
Walk with a Park Ranger
Get the real scoop on nature from an NPS ranger on a guided walk during the summer. On a forest walk, see if you can find a banana slug, a salamander or maybe even a Roosevelt elk! On a tide pool walk, you might get to see a sea star or watch an octopus turn different colors.
Mt. Rainier In Depth
- Mount Rainier National Park
- Activities & Programs
- Animals at Mt Rainier
- At Your Fingertips
- Camping at Mt Rainier
- Hiking Trails
- Human History
- In A Nutshell
- Just For Kids
- Land of Ice
- Lodging & Dining
- Mount Rainier History
- Mt Rainier Campgrounds
- Oh, Ranger!
- Preserving the Park
- Sights to See
- Walking at Hiking at Rainier
- Welcome to Mount Rainier
- Who's Who
- Mt. Rainier Map
- Mt. Rainier Photos
- Recent Mt. Rainier News
News from the Parks
July 3, 2008 - 9:38am
U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) today announced he will cosponsor bipartisan legislation to create a new source of funding for the Great Smoky Mountains National Park and other national parks across the country as part of the “Centennial Challenge” celebrating the 100th anniversary of the National Park System in 2016. “The Centennial Challenge could bring up to $4 million to the Smokies – the country’s most visited national park – and will go a long way toward improving park facilities, aiding conservation efforts, and helping build upon the excellent visitor services already offered. This 4th of July, I can’t think of a better way to celebrate our country’s birthday than backing legislation that will aid efforts to preserve and celebrate our national parks, one of America’s greatest treasures.”
July 3, 2008 - 9:35am
City officials and business leaders here Wednesday warned that a federal proposal to relax air quality standards for the nation's national parks will ultimately be bad for business. Simply put, they said during a news conference at the entrance to Zion National Park, lower air standards being proposed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency will hurt this gateway city economically if fewer tourists visit the park. "Air pollution could damage the stars, vistas and clean air we enjoy," Springdale Mayor Pat Cluff said. "Some places deserve to be preserved and it is my responsibility to preserve [the park] for those who come here."
July 2, 2008 - 9:57am
Millions of years ago, northeastern Utah was a hot spot for dinosaurs. Today, people travel to the Dinosaur National Monument located on the borders of Colorado and Utah to see the leftover dinosaur bones. Visitors can see as many as 1,500 Jurassic-era fossils exposed on the cliff face of the Douglass Quarry.
July 2, 2008 - 9:56am
The red spindly rock formations that make up the views at Bryce Canyon National Park are called hoodoos. Geologists say they were formed by erosion, but Kevin Poe, chief of interpretation at Bryce, shares his take on the Paiute legend about hoodoos.
July 2, 2008 - 9:55am
Environmentalists have been issuing dire warnings about the deterioration of the Florida Everglades for years, saying these wetlands have to be restored in order to revive fragile ecosystems and increase scarce fresh water supplies. Over half of the Everglades are gone, irreversibly converted to urban or agricultural development. But this week, in an attempt to save what's left, the state of Florida announced a plan to buy nearly 200,000 acres of former wetlands from a sugar cane producer. Advocates say the plan is the largest restoration project in American history.
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