Hood Canal North in May: What’s Biting, What’s Blooming, and Where to Go

Explore Olympic Peninsula

May on Hood Canal’s north shore has its own particular rhythm. The water is still cold enough to see your breath off the kayak in the morning, the rhododendrons are peaking in the forest clearings, and everyone with a shrimp pot has one question on their mind: is the season open? This week I’ve got answers on all of it — plus one of the most underrated state parks on the entire Olympic Peninsula that deserves a lot more foot traffic than it gets.

Let’s start with the news every Hood Canal angler is watching, then I’ll walk you through a spring park visit that’ll remind you why you moved to (or keep driving back to) this corner of Washington.

Hood Canal Spot Shrimp 2026: What You Need to Know Before You Launch

Here’s the hard truth first: Hood Canal is closed for spot shrimp harvest in 2026 due to low abundance. WDFW made the call based on population surveys, and while it’s disappointing for the many anglers who make this an annual tradition, it’s the right move for the long-term health of one of the Pacific Northwest’s most beloved shellfish species.

Spot shrimp are a Hood Canal icon. They’re larger, sweeter, and more delicate than anything you’ll find at a grocery store counter, and the Hood Canal fishery draws pot-setters from across the region every spring. When WDFW closes an area, it’s because the stock genuinely needs the rest. The same conservation ethic that makes the Quilcene Bay oyster harvest sustainable year after year applies here — restraint now means abundance later.

So what are your options for 2026? The broader Puget Sound shrimp season opens May 24 in several marine areas (check wdfw.wa.gov/fishing/shellfishing-regulations/shrimp/areas for area-by-area status). Rules across Puget Sound management areas include a daily limit of 10 pounds of all shrimp species combined, a maximum of 80 spot shrimp per person if open for spot shrimp, daylight-hours-only harvesting, and no more than two shrimp pots per person (four per boat). Before you trailer the boat anywhere, verify the current status for your specific target area on the WDFW site — additional dates can be added or removed as quota situations change through the season.

For Hood Canal North regulars, this is a good year to explore the non-shrimping highlights of the canal — of which there are plenty. The Brinnon ShrimpFest on Memorial Day weekend (May 23–25) is still happening and still celebrates the culture and community around Hood Canal spot shrimp even in a conservation year. Mark your calendar.

Scenic Beach State Park, Seabeck — May Is the Sweet Spot

If you’ve never made the turn off Newberry Hill Road toward Seabeck, add it to your list right now. Scenic Beach State Park sits on a quiet cove on Hood Canal’s west shore, and in May, it’s genuinely one of the most beautiful spots on the peninsula.

The park’s signature view is what draws people back: stand on the pebble beach at low tide and you’re looking straight across Hood Canal at the full Olympic Mountain ridgeline. On a clear May morning — and we get more of those than people expect — that panorama is jaw-dropping. The peaks are still carrying significant snow at elevation, which makes the contrast with the blooming rhododendrons in the park’s forest trails particularly dramatic this time of year.

The trail network here is well-groomed and manageable for most fitness levels. You’ll move through second-growth forest with a mix of Douglas fir, big-leaf maple, and those native rhododendrons that are in full flush right now. The trails eventually loop back to the beach, where the rocky shoreline rewards anyone who takes their time — look for sea stars, anemones, and the occasional harbor seal cruising the shallows.

One detail I always point out to first-timers: the historic Emel House sits right on the beach. It’s a beautifully preserved early-20th-century home that’s become a popular wedding venue, and even if there’s no event happening, it adds a real sense of place and history to a walk along the waterline. The park address is 9596 Scenic Beach Rd NW, Seabeck, WA 98380.

One practical note: clamming and oyster harvesting at Scenic Beach is currently closed due to a decline in shellfish populations in this specific area. Come for the views, the trails, and the forest — not the harvest.

Plan Your Visit

Scenic Beach State Park is open year-round. To reach it from Bremerton, head northwest on WY-3, turn left onto Newberry Hill Road, then follow Seabeck Highway NW until it transitions to Scenic Beach Road. The drive takes about 30 minutes from Bremerton and 90 minutes from Tacoma via the Narrows Bridge. Parking is available in the main day-use lot. Bring layers — even on a sunny May afternoon the breeze off Hood Canal can be brisk. Reservations for camping can be made through Washington State Parks at parks.wa.gov.

If you’re combining this with a shrimp research trip, WDFW’s area-by-area shrimp status page is the authoritative source: wdfw.wa.gov/fishing/shellfishing-regulations/shrimp/areas. Check it the morning you plan to go — conditions and quota statuses can change mid-season.

Hood Canal North rewards the curious traveler who takes the less-obvious road. Seabeck is that road. Go find it.

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