Olympic National Park

Olympic National Park

Only A Day

If you only have a day, you may want to choose one of two routes. Each will introduce you to two of the three "faces" of Olympic National Park: mountains, forest and coast. For a good introduction, begin your visit at the Olympic National Park Visitor Center in Port Angeles. 

To begin the first route, check on the weather at Hurricane Ridge. If it's fairly clear, take the 17-mile drive to the ridge where you'll have a commanding view from the "rooftop" of the park. A short walk from the visitor center and you can look north across the Strait of Juan de Fuca to Canada's Vancouver Island. 

Return to Port Angeles and take U.S. 101 West to Lake Crescent, a deep, glacier-carved, freshwater lake. 


The second route begins on the park's west side at the Hoh Rain Forest, off U.S. 101 via a 19-mile turnoff. Don't miss the 0.75-mile Hall of Mosses Trail for a quick introduction to the rain forest ecosystem. 

After visiting the forest, follow U.S. 101 South from its intersection with the rainforest road to an entirely different Olympic world—the coast. From Ruby Beach to Kalaloch, paths lead down to five different beaches. The northern beaches are the places to see sea stacks. At low tide, you'll discover the teeming marine life of the tide pools. In the summer, guided coastal ecology walks are offered by the National Park Service (check the park newspaper) starting at Beach 4, north of Kalaloch Lodge.