Olympic National Park

Glossary entry with information about Olympic National Park.

Keep up on what we're posting

Sign up here to get occasional newsletters, a weekly digest of new content and a monthly digest of upcoming events. Want to customize? Sign up here instead.

Share This
« Back to Glossary Index
This is a glossary entry and here both because we like to curate information and also because our glossary gathers information from our website and links to relevant information on our pages. It's "PNWWiki" because it's always in-process. We may link to new resources, auto-link to existing content on our site, edit in reponse to visitors, or add info from sources like Wikipedia.

For now, if you'd like to suggest an edit for this entry leave a comment and we'll consider it, we may allow some logged-in users to directly edit entries in the future.
0
(0)

Olympic National Park is one of three National Parks in Washington State. It’s located in the Northwest corner of the state and features an array of habitats — most notably beautiful coastlines and areas of temperate rainforest such as the Hoh Rainforest. Because we live a short drive away, it’s one of the parks we’ve spent more time in — but not enough. We’ll add more to this entry as we visit more in the future.

Olympic National Park facts

  • The park consists of mountainous, alpine areas, coastline and rainforest to the West, and to the east drier forests and meadows to the East.
  • It covers 1442 square miles of land.
  • Because of the difference in zones, here, weather may be different at various places within the park. Please check the NPS website for road conditions before you go.
  • Camping is available at many sites in the park. Most are on a reservation system from Recreation.gov and Summer spots fill up early! I’ve camped within the park later in the fall and normally-full hookup spots in late October were mostly wide open. But note that you’re subject to very wet weather at that time of year!
  • Pets are only welcome on certain trails in the park. You can find out which ones here.

Location

Below is the location of Olympic National Park. Please do not use the location below for GPS directions, it’s just the park location. As we add more locations and resources here, we’ll likely add another map with park entrances as well as our favorite things to do in the park.

If you have a map pin you’d like to add, you can add a map location here.

November 11, 2024

Olympic National Park

November 11, 2024

Olympic National Park

This is an Olympic National Park location map page. Note that it's for the park in general -- the part has many entrances; please do not use this pin as a GPS location marker to get to the park.

Olympic National Park is located on the Olympic Peninsula of Washington State and is a wonderful area featuring coastlines, rainforests, and lots of outdoor recreational opportunities.
84VRR92W+R7
Port Angeles
98362
Categories:

Routes

Spruce Railroad Trail Tunnel by Lake Crescent in Olympic National Park
This is a short tunnel on the Spruce Railroad Trail that runs alongside Lake Crescent in Olympic National Park.

While we’ve done some hiking and cycling in the park, we’ve not recorded our routes there and while we’ve biked nearby, it’s outside of the park bounds (though we REALLY want to ride our bikes to Olympic Hot Springs next Summer).

If we post any routes in the park, we’ll post them here.

If you have a route you’d like to add you can add a route here.

Photos

Below are photos that we, or visitors, have taken in Olympic National Park.

If you’re interested in adding an image to this gallery, you must be registered and logged in to access the photo upload form below this gallery

This content has been restricted to logged-in users only. Please login to view this content.

Books and Guides

Below are some recommended guides and maps for visiting the park.

Sale
Olympic National Park Map (National Geographic Trails Illustrated Map, 216)
  • Scale: 1 : 100000
  • Folded Dimensions: 4.25 x 9.25 in
  • Waterproof: yes
  • Recommended Use: hiking, backpacking in Washington
  • National Geographic Maps (Author)
Sale
Moon Olympic Peninsula: With Olympic National Park: Coastal Getaways, Rainforests & Waterfalls, Hiking & Camping (Travel Guide)
  • Burlingame, Jeff (Author)
  • English (Publication Language)
  • 264 Pages – 02/06/2024 (Publication Date) – Moon Travel (Publisher)
Hiking Olympic National Park: A Guide to the Park’s Greatest Hiking Adventures (Regional Hiking Series)
  • Hiking Olympic Np 3rd
  • Molvar, Erik (Author)
  • English (Publication Language)
  • 288 Pages – 07/01/2015 (Publication Date) – Falcon Guides (Publisher)
Sale
Hiking Olympic National Park: A Guide to the Park’s Greatest Hiking Adventures (Regional Hiking Series)
  • Molvar, Erik (Author)
  • English (Publication Language)
  • 288 Pages – 05/15/2022 (Publication Date) – Falcon Guides (Publisher)
Sale
Day Hiking Olympic Peninsula, 2nd Edition: National Park / Coastal Beaches / Southwest Washington
  • Romano, Craig (Author)
  • English (Publication Language)
  • 384 Pages – 11/04/2016 (Publication Date) – Mountaineers Books (Publisher)
Sale
Best Easy Day Hiking Guide and Trail Map Bundle: Olympic National Park (Best Easy Day Hikes Series)
  • Molvar, Erik (Author)
  • English (Publication Language)
  • 120 Pages – 08/15/2022 (Publication Date) – Falcon Guides (Publisher)

Questions and Answers

Below is a forum for asking (and answering) questions, you can also find it on our forums page. If you have an answer to a posted question, please feel free to post your answer.

Olympic National Pa...
 
Share:
Notifications
Clear all

Olympic National Park Question and Answer Forum

Q&A format forum for the glossary section for Olympic National Park. Please feel free to post a related question here -- we can't promise we can answer all of them but we'll try or we'll post our question to the community. If you see a question here that you have an answer for, please feel free to answer it!

No topics were found here

Share:

Wikipedia and List of On and Off-Site Related Resources

When available, we import some Wikipedia information to supplement terms. If available, you’ll find that below followed by a list of on and offsite related articles and automatically linked articles on our website that mention this term. Note that you’ll need to scroll down below the Wikipedia stuff to find the related content list. We hope to change this in the future.

Rate This

How many cups of hot coffee does this deserve?

This post got 0 mugs out of 0 votes.

No votes so far! Be the first to rate it.

We are so sorry that you found this post like a weak cup of swill!

Leave some feedback about why.

Let us know why you gave this post a low rating. We may or may not share your feedback with the post's author. If you want to leave public feedback, leave a comment.

You might also be interested in...

Olympic National Park is a national park of the United States located in Washington, on the Olympic Peninsula. The park has four regions: the Pacific coastline, alpine areas, the west-side temperate rainforest, and the forests of the drier east side. Within the park there are three distinct ecosystems, including subalpine forest and wildflower meadow, temperate forest, and the rugged Pacific coast.

Olympic National Park
Cedar Creek and Abbey Island from Ruby Beach
Map showing the location of Olympic National Park
Map showing the location of Olympic National Park
Location in Washington
Map showing the location of Olympic National Park
Map showing the location of Olympic National Park
Location in the United States
LocationJefferson, Clallam, Mason, and Grays Harbor counties, Washington, United States
Nearest cityPort Angeles
Coordinates47°58′10″N 123°29′55″W / 47.96935°N 123.49856°W / 47.96935; -123.49856
Area922,650 acres (3,733.8 km2)
EstablishedJune 29, 1938
Visitors2,432,972 (in 2022)
Governing bodyNational Park Service
WebsiteOlympic National Park
CriteriaNatural: vii, ix
Reference151
Inscription1981 (5th Session)

President Theodore Roosevelt originally designated the park as Mount Olympus National Monument on March 2, 1909. The monument was re-designated a national park by Congress and President Franklin D. Roosevelt on June 29, 1938. In 1976, Olympic National Park was designated by UNESCO as an International Biosphere Reserve, and in 1981 as a World Heritage Site. In 1988, Congress designated 95 percent of the park (1,370 square miles (3,500 km2)) as the Olympic Wilderness, which was renamed Daniel J. Evans Wilderness in honor of the former Washington state Governor and U.S. Senator Daniel J. Evans in 2017. During his tenure in the Senate, Evans co-sponsored the 1988 bill that created the state's wilderness areas. It is the largest wilderness area in Washington.

Rate this Term

Click on a coffee cup to rate it.

Rate This

How many cups of hot coffee does this deserve?

This post got 0 mugs out of 0 votes.

No votes so far! Be the first to rate it.

We are so sorry that you found this post like a weak cup of swill!

Leave some feedback about why.

Let us know why you gave this post a low rating. We may or may not share your feedback with the post's author. If you want to leave public feedback, leave a comment.

Term first added by:

Cheryl

By: Cheryl

Typically seen: drinking coffee, blogging, reading, riding a bike, or holding a camera.

website: https://www.pnwbeyond.com

View my profile

Subscribe to email newsletters

Get notified of new content. "Whatever" will subscribe you to random newsletters with content we think you might like, and the other options are digests will ALL content within a specific time period. Want to customize your choices? Sign up here.








« Back to Glossary Index
×