Mount Rainier National Park
Sights to See
"Of all the fire mountains which, like beacons, once blazed along the Pacific Coast, Mount Rainier is the noblest."
— John Muir
The following sights are a sampling of the best Mount Rainier National Park has to offer.
Longmire
Enjoy the scenic, forested drive from Nisqually Entrance to Longmire, the park's oldest developed area. Located in the southwestern corner of the park, Longmire is the site of mineral springs found by James Longmire in 1883. He later built the park's first hotel, Longmire's Springs, on this spot.
Paradise
When Martha Longmire first saw Paradise Valley, she exclaimed, "Oh, what a Paradise!" Once you see its lush meadows carpeted in wildflowers, you will agree. Paradise sits more than a mile above sea level and averages 680 inches of snowfall annually. In the winter of 1971—1972, a record 1,122 inches fell here!
In a land brimming with mountain streams and alpine lakes, Narada Falls stands out as spectacular. Along the road between Longmire and Paradise, the falls are formed where the Paradise River cascades 168 feet off a ledge. Take the short but steep trail to the bottom of the Falls for a breath- taking view.
Radiating out from the summit like the spokes of a wheel, the glaciers of Mount Rainier are its crowning glory. Nisqually Glacier is the most accessi-ble and the most studied of Mount Rainier's 26 major glaciers. Its terminus is only about a mile from the Glacier View overlook on the road that leads from Nisqually to Paradise. The Nisqually Icefall is a jumble of truck-sized ice blocks poised in a slow- motion tumble down the glacier, sometimes moving as much as three feet a day.
Ohanapecosh
The Grove of the Patriarchs Trail showcases the old-growth forest in the southeastern corner of the park. Here, western red cedar, Douglas fir and western hemlock, some more than 1,000 years old, tower over the forest floor and the Ohanapecosh River.
Sunrise
The highest point in the park accessible by car, Sunrise is 6,400 feet in elevation. Located in the northeastern area of the park, it offers stunning vistas of the dormant volcanoes of the Cascades and Mounts Rainier, Baker and Adams. Mount Rainier rises above the tranquil subalpine meadows of Sunrise with the rocky summit of Little Tahoma Peak visible to the left. (American Indian legend says Little Tahoma [Takhoma] is the son of Mount Rainier and sits on her shoulder.) From Sunrise, watch clouds move in from the Pacific, bump into and spill over the mountaintop and cascade down Mount Rainier's eastern slope. You can see Emmons Glacier, the largest glacier in the contiguous United States, on Mount Rainier's eastern flank. It covers more than four square miles. Located on Mount Rainier's dry, east side, Sunrise receives much less moisture than Paradise and the difference is reflected in each of their vegetation. Subalpine vegetation is easily damaged. Stay on trails to avoid damaging these fragile meadows.
Carbon River
Sequestered in the northwest corner of the park, Carbon River is named for the coal deposits discovered nearby. Deep in the Carbon River Valley is the sole temperate rain forest in the park, produced by the combination of the area's abundant rainfall and mild weather. Explore the Carbon River Rainforest at the Carbon River Entrance or take a scenic drive to Mowich Lake. The unpaved road to the lake is usually passable by late June.
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
May 15, 2008 - 12:28pm
The National Park Service was fending off uncomfortable questions Wednesday after it waited 14 hours to tell the public that one of Northwest’s most popular parks was potentially tainted with poison. The Park Service and U.S. Park Police swooped into Fort Reno Park early Wednesday, moving out pedestrians and throwing up storm fences. Officials said satellite pictures from the U.S. Geological Survey revealed pockets of arsenic on the ground that were nearly twice federal safety standards. The park has been closed to visitors until the arsenic can be removed, officials said. There was no timetable for reopening. It took until 9 a.m. for federal officials to call the D.C. Department of Health. The D.C. fire department wasn’t notified until around 1 p.m., a spokesman told The Examiner.
May 15, 2008 - 12:27pm
A crowd of hundreds whooped, clapped and waved signs and American flags as one by one, about 100 World War II veterans from Simpsonville and across the Upstate descended the escalators on their return to Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport.The group, part of Honor Flight Simpsonville, returned May 7 from a daylong trip to Washington, D.C., where they visited the National World War II Memorial and other historic sites.Honor Flight Simpsonville, a project announced by the city of Simpsonville on Veterans Day last November, flew the veterans, guardians and a doctor on a chartered U.S. Airways flight to the nation's capital. The flight returned to Greenville at 7:45 p.m. after a day that started with a 9 a.m. flight and included visits to Arlington National Cemetery and the National Mall.
May 15, 2008 - 12:26pm
With a little bit of rap (about King George III, of all people: "He was a meany and we were so teeny"), a healthy but not overbearing dose of history and a whole lot of nerve, two recent college graduates are rattling the genteel world of Washington tour guides. Ben Hindman and Brody Davis are giving tours for free. Working only for tips, the two friends in bright orange caps are attracting tourists who find themselves on the National Mall knowing little more than that the really tall one has to do with Washington; the squat, columned one is where Forrest Gump liked to hang out; and the one with the dome is where the president lives, or something like that. "A lot of tourists really don't know anything about Washington or history," Hindman says. "We thought we could entertain people and get them interested in history at the same time."
May 15, 2008 - 12:25pm
The sea wall at the Jefferson Memorial has sunk almost a foot in places since the monument was built, and the rate seems to have increased in recent years, according to a year-long study commissioned by the National Park Service. As a result, the sea wall, in the Tidal Basin, should be reinforced with pilings driven through the mud flats and anchored in bedrock far below, a project that would probably cost more than $10 million, a Park Service spokesman said. Park Service officials said they would study the report and conduct further investigations before deciding on a course of action. The 32,000-ton memorial does not appear to be sinking. But the report urges continued monitoring of the 18-acre complex to understand what is happening in the ground. One engineer said that if nothing is done, the problems will worsen.
May 15, 2008 - 12:22pm
My friend Craig and I were nearing the end of our paddling excursion through Channel Islands National Park: a circumnavigation of Santa Rosa Island, followed by an open ocean sprint through pea soup fog to Santa Cruz Island, and an exploration of the natural wonders on that island’s craggy front side. We kayaked past volcanic sea stacks and configurations such as Profile Point, then paddled into the Dardanelles, where we ducked under triangular and keyhole-shaped arches. But it was the black mass that swarmed beneath Craig’s kayak at Potato Harbor that we remember most.We couldn’t have asked for cleaner paddling conditions: no swell or wind, and the water clarity mirrored the South Pacific. We’d paddled the entire front side of the largest island in the archipelago without a break, and decided to stretch our legs at Potato Harbor, the last protected cove before Scorpion Anchorage on the southeast end of the isle. As soon as our hulls scraped wet sand, that black mass appeared in the waist-deep water. A gazillion silverfish bonded into a giant baitball. Stiff-legged, Craig gently shoved his kayak back into the protected waters of Potato. Perhaps instantly drawn toward his multicolored vessel, the baitball swayed beneath him, a sort of aquatic ballet and another Channel Islands natural wonder within the ebb and flow of a draining tide.



