With spring light stretching long over Hood Canal and morning winds still soft, May is one of the best months to put a paddle in the water at Belfair’s doorstep. Belfair State Park sits at the southern end of Hood Canal’s Great Bend — where the canal curves before widening toward its northern reaches — and serves as the southernmost launch point on the Cascadia Marine Trail, a network of more than 55 shoreline campsites for sea kayakers, canoeists, and stand-up paddlers threading through Washington’s inland sea from Puget Sound to the San Juan Islands.
If you’ve been thinking about a night on the water, this is the weekend.
Your Starting Point: CMT Site 148
The Cascadia Marine Trail campsite at Belfair State Park is site 148, located just west of Little Mission Creek at the edge of the park’s 3,720 feet of Hood Canal shoreline. It’s reserved exclusively for paddlers and wind-powered watercraft — no car campers, no reservations. Show up by water, claim it first-come first-served, and it’s yours for $12 a night for up to eight people, with space for four or five tents, a fire ring, and ADA restrooms and coin-operated showers a short walk away.
From site 148, the canal opens to the west toward Dewatto and north toward Hoodsport, with the protected waters of the Great Bend giving beginners a forgiving environment and experienced paddlers a gateway to longer CMT legs.
Know Before You Launch
Hood Canal behaves like a fjord — which, geologically, it is. That shape channels afternoon winds up from the south. Most May mornings offer glassy conditions; plan to be off exposed water or sheltered in a cove by early afternoon if the forecast calls for wind. Check the National Weather Service forecast for the Hood Canal area before you go.
No Kayak? North Shore Hood Canal Kayaks Has You
If you don’t own a kayak or SUP, North Shore Hood Canal Kayaks operates by appointment out of 3959 NE North Shore Rd, Belfair. Call (360) 473-9289 to check availability — they offer kayak and SUP rentals and ask that you call ahead rather than walk in.
The Estuary Is Healing
Worth slowing down for: Washington State Parks has been actively restoring the historic saltmarsh at Belfair State Park. Armoring has been removed from the lower reach of Big Mission Creek, and fill and riprap have been pulled from the shoreline to return the creek to a more natural course. Paddling slowly along the park’s edge, you can watch the estuary zone between the two Mission Creek mouths beginning to look like itself again — reed grass reclaiming the shallows, tidal channels reforming.
The Skokomish people used this shoreline as a gathering and harvesting place long before the park existed. The restoration work is returning some of that ecological function — one more reason to move slowly and look closely when you’re on this stretch of water.
One Practical Note
A Washington State Discover Pass is required for day use. Shellfish beds exist in the park’s tidelands, but check WDFW’s current beach status at wdfw.wa.gov/places-to-go/shellfish-beaches before harvesting — beds can be closed seasonally for biotoxin monitoring.
Related Expansion Coverage
- Core paddler guide: Paddle the Cascadia Marine Trail from Belfair: Mason County’s Spring 2026 Hood Canal Kayaking Guide
- Families: North Mason Families: How to Take Kids Kayaking from Belfair State Park This Spring
- New residents: New to North Mason? Belfair State Park Is Your Front-Door Gateway to Washington’s Saltwater Trail
- Business owners: What the Cascadia Marine Trail Means for Belfair Lodging, Rental, and Tourism Businesses

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