Port Townsend National Parks/Forests
Recreation > National Parks
Around Port Townsend are the land and water that make up the geography
of the Olympic Peninsula and much of it is managed by Olympic National
Park and Olympic National Forest. The protected Wilderness Areas are accessible
as well.
Olympic National Park is also a well-deserved World Heritage Site
for it's pristine condition and spectacular features. These include
the only temperate rain forest in the lower 48 states, alpine peaks
like Olympus and Constance and the dramatic Pacific coast.
We are proud of our natural environment, and encourage the wise and
considerate use of it. Take only photos, leave only footprints. Please
pack out your garbage and dog refuse.
Know of local recreational information that would be helpful?
Tell us about it through the Feedback
Form.
| National
Lands |
| Olympic National Forest - View
Web Site
Olympic Peninsula, WA. Quilcene, Hood Canal, Soleduck
and Quinault Ranger Districts. Wilderness Areas.
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| Olympic National Park - View
Web Site Visitor Center (360)-565-3130
General Info: (360)-565-3000
Wilderness Infomation Center Trail Information: (360)-565-3100
TTY 1-800-833-6388
A World Heritage site. Temperate rainforest, Pacific Coast, coastal
mountain range.
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| Protection
Island National Wildlife Refuge
Approximately 400 acres, is 1.8 miles long and 0.6
miles across. Maximum elevation is about 210 feet
and it receives only 10 inches of rain per year. Managed
by the U. S. Fish & Wildlife Service it's part of
the Northwest Maritime Complex of refuges and was
established in 1982 by President Reagan. The island
provides nesting habitat to some 72% of the seabirds
in Puget Sound including tufted puffins, rhinocerous
auklets, pelagic cormorants, glaucous winged gulls,
and more. A large population of harbor seals use the
beaches as haul-out and pupping habitat, and elephant
seals often use the beaches for molting. Bald eagle
sightings often number a dozen to 20 on any given
day, especially when seals are pupping and seabirds
hatcing. First named Isle de Carrasco by Manuel Quimper
in 1790, later proclaimed Protection Island by George
Vancouver in 1972 for it's location at the mouth of
Discovery Bay. After commercial development efforts
failed in the late 60's and early 70's, it became
the Zella M. Schultz Seabird Sanctuary in 1975. Due
to it's current protected status, a 200 yard sea buffer,
and 2,000 foot air buffer is in place to avoid disturbing
the sensitive wildlife. |
| Recreation
Passes of the Northwest
You'll need a NW Forest Pass to recreate at any of the Olympic
Peninsula area trailheads. Which pass you need depends on how
long you'll be staying or how often you'll making trips, but you
can figure that out here. These work in Washington and Oregon.
TheWashington and Oregon Recreation Pass is the full deal for
all places, including USDA Forest Service, National Park, Bureau
of Land Management, Corp of Engineer and WA & OR State Parks.
Daily passes are between $2 and $10. All passes are available
to purchase
online or at local stores like Sport
Townsend and Swain's
General Store.
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