Miller Peninsula
Miller Peninsula State Park is a 2,800-acre day-use park on Washington’s scenic Olympus Peninsula. This park property has miles of hiking trails through lush coastal forest with views of Discovery Bay and the Strait of Juan De Fuca.
Parks that have a beach
Miller Peninsula State Park is a 2,800-acre day-use park on Washington’s scenic Olympus Peninsula. This park property has miles of hiking trails through lush coastal forest with views of Discovery Bay and the Strait of Juan De Fuca.
Oyhut State Park Ocean Beach Access provides parking and restrooms a short walk from the sandy beaches near Ocean Shores at the end of State Route 115.
Ocean City Ocean Beach Access is located on the Long Beach Peninsula north of Ocean City State Park. Ocean City OBA features parking and restroom facilities as well as access to a sandy Pacific beach.
North Jetty Ocean Beach Access is located in Ocean Shores at the entrance to Gray’s Harbor. From this beach, visitors can view south across the harbor entrance towards Westport Light State Park.
Westport Light State Park is a 212-acre day-use park on the shore of the Pacific Ocean. The park offers a panoramic view of the sea. The historic Westport Lighthouse is adjacent to the park. A concrete boardwalk traverses the primary dune, connecting this park with Westhaven State Park, 1.3 miles
Wenatchee Confluence State Park is a 197-acre year-round camping park at the confluence of the Wenatchee and Columbia rivers. Situated at the edge of town, the park has two personalities. The North Confluence is urban and recreational, while the South Confluence is a wetland natural area. Muskrat and beaver may
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Twin Harbors Beach State Park is a 172-acre camping park on the Pacific coast, four miles south of Westhaven. The area allows opportunities for nature study and seaside activity along the ocean shore, and the chance to lie in the sand and soak up the sun in one of the
Twanoh State Park, situated on the shoreline of Hood Canal, features one of the warmest saltwater beaches in Washington state. This is because Hood Canal is one of the warmest saltwater bodies in Puget Sound. The 182-acre marine, camping park has 3,167 feet of saltwater shoreline. The name of the
Tolmie State Park is a 105-acre marine day-use park with 1,800 feet of saltwater shoreline on Puget Sound. This forested park is on Nisqually Beach, a few miles from Olympia, the state’s capital city. The park offers a variety of beachside activities and an underwater park that contains an artificial