Olympic National Park is located in the U.S. state of Washington, in the far northwestern part of the state known as the Olympic Peninsula. U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt originally created Olympic National Monument in 1909 and after Congress voted to authorize a redesignation to National Park status, President Franklin Roosevelt signed the legislation in 1938. In 1976, Olympic National Park became an International Biosphere Reserve, and in 1981 it was designated a World Heritage Park. In 1988, almost all of the Olympic Peninsula was designated as the Olympic Wilderness, further enhancing the protection of the region.
While some beaches are luxurious sand, others are covered with difficult heavy rock and giant boulders. Brush, overgrowth, slippery footing, tides and rain forest weather all act to limit speed, even for strong hikers. Travel-time estimates should be doubled. It is notable that though the coastal strip is readily accessed (unlike the interior Olympics), there are typically very few folks beyond casual day-hiking distances. It is much more difficult terrain than it would seem.
The most popular piece of the coast is the Ozette Loop. The Park must run a registration and reservation program to control usage levels. From the trailhead at Lake Ozette, one leg of the trail is a boardwalk-enhanced path through near-primal coastal western redcedar-swamp. Once on the ocean, it is a few miles walk along choice aboriginal beach-habitat (no resident natives - an inactive branch of the Makah people of Neah Bay, not far to the north) to the other leg ... of boardwalk-enhanced path through conditions that would be brutally impossible for most people, without the elevate walkways. It is the boardwalks, and the select, benevolent beach-walk that make Ozette so popular.
There are thick groves of trees that march right up to the sand, which results in chunks of timber from fallen trees that litter the beach. The legendary Hoh River, toward the south end of the Strip, is substantially wild and discharges large amounts of naturally eroded timber and other drift, which then tends to move north, enriching the beaches. The removal of driftwood - logs, dead-heads, tops and root-wads from streams and beaches was a major domestication measure across North America: natural driftwood deposits form a commanding presence, biologically as well as visually, and the Strip gives a taste of the original condition ... but early beach-photos show astounding accumulations. Drift-material often comes from a considerable distance - the Columbia River formerly contributed huge amounts to the Northwest Pacific coasts.
Interestingly, the small coastal portion of Olympic isn't even connected to the much larger, main portion of the park. President Franklin D. Roosevelt had intended for them to be connected via a continuous strip of park land, but political forces decided otherwise.
When settlers began to appear, the use of the peninsula (as with much of the Pacific Northwest) shifted toward harvesting of timber, which began heavily in the late 1800s and early 1900s. There wasn't much dissent against the logging until the 1920s, when people got their first glimpses of the clear-cut hillsides where trees had been logged. (The 1920s saw an explosion of people's interest in the outdoors; this occurred because the automobile allowed people to tour previously-remote places like the Olympic Peninsula.)
The formal record of a proposal for a new national park on the Olympic Peninsula begins with the expeditions of well-known figures Lieutenant Joseph O'Neil and Judge James Wickersham, during the 1890s. These notables met in the Olympic wilderness while exploring, and subsequently combined their political efforts to have the area placed within some protected status. Following unsuccessful efforts in the Washington State Legislature in the early 1900s, President Theodore Roosevelt created Mount Olympus National Monument in 1909, primarily to protect the subalpine calving grounds and summer range of the Roosevelt elk herds native to the Olympics.
Public desire for preservation of some of the area grew until President Roosevelt declared ONP a national park in 1938. Even after ONP was declared a park, though, illegal logging continued in the park, and political battles continue to this day over the incredibly valuable timber contained within its boundaries. Logging continues on the Olympic Peninsula, but not within the park. A book detailing the history of the fight for ONP's timber is Olympic Battleground: The Power Politics of Timber Preservation by Carsten Lien.
A nearly unique feature of ONP is the opportunity for backpacking along the beach. The length of the coastline in the park is sufficient for multi-day trips, with the entire day spent walking along the beach. Although idyllic compared to toiling up a mountainside (Seven Lakes Basin is a notable example), one must be aware of the tide; at the narrowest parts of the beaches, high tide washes up to the cliffs behind, blocking passage. There are also several promontories that must be struggled over, using a combination of muddy steep trail and fixed ropes.
During winter, the popular viewpoint known as Hurricane Ridge offers alpine and nordic skiing opportunites. The Hurricane Ridge Winter Sports Club operates a not for profit alpine ski area which offers ski lessons, rentals, and inexpensive lift tickets. The small alpine area is serviced by two rope tows and one poma lift. Backcountry skiers often make their way down to the main Hurricane Ridge Road in order to hitchhike their way back to the top.
Archaeological sites in the United States | Geography of Washington | National Parks of the United States | World Heritage Sites in the United States
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