16
4 photos
  • Fall foliage

4 people found this report helpful

 

It was a perfect day for a hike in the forrest by the water. I was a partly cloudy day with cool tempatures. The fort was great and very relaxing. It is great for all ages and levels. You can hike by the water or in the forrest. Lots of great old growth trees, with a little fall colores coming in. 

1 person found this report helpful

 

Wow! How have I never been here during all my visits to Port Townsend.  Loved the trees and the solitude of the park. Explored the trails, the cemetery site, Torpedo Tower, hiker/biker camp and some geological eratics.

Would be fun to group camp at the Torpedo Tower!

TwoGrunts-Bonnie Rae
WTA Member
Outstanding Trip Reporter
100
  • Wildflowers blooming

3 people found this report helpful

 

Also visited Shine Tidelands State Park, Scenic Beach State Park and Mystery Bay State Park. See my day here .

4 photos
ehiker
Outstanding Trip Reporter
100
  • Wildflowers blooming

10 people found this report helpful

 

There are a few places that I've returned to because they are so fascinating and Fort Townsend is one of them. This is a medium sized park - there are about 5 -6 miles of trails, so it's a good destination for a half day stop. There are quite a few other places in a very short driving radius to explore for the rest of the day too - spend the morning here and the afternoon at Fort Flagler (like we did this time) Anderson Lake, Fort Worden & the town of Port Townsend, or Indian Island.

Now onto why to come here - it's the plants!! This little patch of forest has remained relatively untouched due to it's use as a small fort with a few gun emplacements. The forest beyond the bluff was left mostly alone and remains a tiny taste of coastal old growth. There are an abundance of rare plants, especially saprophytes (plants that do no use sunlight and chlorophyll, but rather live off of decaying organic matter) here, at least one that in all my wanderings, I've never found anywhere else - Hooker's ground cones. There are also a plethora of orchids, pine sap, ghost pipes (there were literally thousands of these just beginning to break the soil) and the elusive little gnome plant. Come here from around mid May- mid/late June, depending on the weather to see the show and enjoy the very quiet trails - even with the campground looking relatively full, the trails were deserted. Do treat it gently and do your best to not disturb the rare plants - some are right along the trails.

For the afternoon we went after a little more of the beach scene at Fort Flagler. We walked down the road towards the lighthouse taking the first little trail to the WWI rifle range. Though the map shows the trail as stopping, there is a boot path, slightly overgrown, to the beach beyond. Check on the tides first - there is a headland with a steep, sandy, eroding cliff- while it doesn't look like the high tide always cuts it off, it appears that it certainly can - then walk down the beach to the campground where the bluff descends to meet the beach. Right now there is a "shipwreck" (abandoned sailboat) to have a look at. Climb the back up the bluff on the appropriately named Bluff Trail, to return and check out the old fort,  with side trips if you wish into the old forest. Lots of opportunities to bird and wildlife watch here - many species of birds - including ravens and eagles and deer browsing around.

3 photos
ehiker
Outstanding Trip Reporter
100
Beware of: bugs
  • Wildflowers blooming

11 people found this report helpful

 
I chose this park without really knowing much about it - I was just looking on the map for something close to South Indian Island, so that we could get in a fairly full hiking day. Lucky, lucky me. This place was great. I'm a bit of an aficionado of botanical oddities and this park is packed full of saprophytes (parasitic plants that lack chlorophyll). It was a bit early for a lot of things - only a little pinesap was showing and the beginnings of a few orchids and ghost pipes, but there were Hooker's ground cones! I think I'll definitely want to go back, probably several times, in a week or two for the orchids and later too, as there's also supposed to be gnome plant, but that won't show itself until early summer at least. The trails are nice, generally wide and well graded and we only found one blow down that hadn't been cleared - it looked like it might be too big for Mr. Rangerman's saw… The trails are all pretty short, but they wind around and cover the park area well. Some are open to mt. biking, but we barely saw other hikers and didn't see any bikes at all. One section of old road bed had a virtual lake in it, but it appeared to have been that way for some time and there was a well established path at it's edge. We covered pretty much most of the hiking trails and some of the hiking/biking trails, which was easy to do without much backtracking. Even if you do backtrack some, the distances aren't long. The only problem was the aggressive mosquitos - bring your bug spray. I got myself pretty well sprayed and only got one bite when I was leaning over and my shirt came up a bit. My husband got a few in places he'd missed and stopping for more than a few seconds got a bit unbearable for him, as they were going right for his face.
4 photos
Bob and Barb
WTA Member
Outstanding Trip Reporter
1K
Beware of: trail conditions

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Because of the predicted wind storm today we didn't want to go on a higher elevation forest hike off the 2870, so we decided to go to Anderson Lake State Park which is one of the hikes in Craig Romano's book, Day Hiking Olympic Peninsula. However, when we reached the park entrance we found it was closed. We then decided to go to Fort Worden SP. On our way there we saw a sign for Fort Townsend Historical SP so decided to check it out. This is a 367-acre marine camping park with 3,960 feet of saltwater shoreline on Port Townsend Bay. The park has a rich military history which dates back to pioneer days. The 6.5 miles of well-marked trails travel through a beautiful forest area. There was a light rain when we began our hike, but the wind was not blowing too hard the first hour. The wind picked up after that and we heard a large tree fall near the area we were so we decided to return to the TH and out of the trees. There is a map of the trails at the day use parking area and we took a picture of this before starting our walk. The CG is closed until April 1. The park is open year round for day use. A Discover Pass is required.