Paddle the Cascadia Marine Trail from Belfair: Mason County’s Spring 2026 Hood Canal Kayaking Guide

Mason County Minute




Belfair, Mason County — The Cascadia Marine Trail begins, in a sense, in your backyard. Belfair State Park anchors the southern end of the trail, and for North Mason County paddlers in spring 2026, that means a 55-campsite, water-only trail system reaches all the way from the head of Hood Canal to the San Juan Islands — and you can step onto it from a launch you can drive to in twenty minutes.

This guide covers what’s actually open, what it costs, what to bring, and the local rules and history that shape paddling out of Belfair this season.

Cascadia Marine Trail Site 148, Plain English

The Cascadia Marine Trail (CMT) is a National Recreation Trail managed by the Washington Water Trails Association in partnership with Washington State Parks. It links more than 55 shoreline campsites along the inland marine waters of Washington and is reserved exclusively for human-powered and wind-powered watercraft — kayaks, canoes, sailing dinghies, stand-up paddleboards.

At Belfair State Park, the CMT campsite is site 148. As of January 1, 2019, Washington State Parks moved the marine trail spot from a more isolated location into the main campground, putting it closer to restrooms and showers while keeping it on the water. It sits just west of Little Mission Creek, on the park’s saltwater shoreline.

The rules are simple: arrive by water, claim the site first-come first-served, pay $12 per night for up to eight people, and leave it cleaner than you found it. No vehicle access. No reservations. Paddler honor system.

The Park Itself: 65 Acres, 3,720 Feet of Saltwater

Belfair State Park covers 65 acres at the southern end of Hood Canal’s Great Bend — the sharp curve where the canal turns east before its long northern reach. The park has 3,720 feet of saltwater shoreline, two freshwater creeks (Big Mission and Little Mission), tidelands, restored saltmarsh, and an ADA-accessible day-use area. A Washington Discover Pass ($10/day or $30/year) is required for day-use parking.

For paddlers based in or passing through Mason County, the south end of the canal offers some of the most protected paddling water in Washington. The Great Bend’s geometry — a long fjord turning back on itself — moderates Pacific swells and gives beginners a genuinely forgiving training ground.

Conditions: Why May Mornings, Not May Afternoons

Hood Canal is a fjord. Geologically and hydrologically, it behaves like one — narrow, deep, with topography that channels wind. In May, that means glassy mornings and brisk afternoons. South-southwesterlies build through the day and accelerate up the canal’s southern reach.

The local rule is unwritten but consistent: launch early, turn back by lunch unless you are confident in your reentry skills, and check the marine forecast for the South Hood Canal area on the National Weather Service site before you go. Tide tables matter too — Big Mission Creek’s mouth is shallow, and a low tide turns the launch zone into a mudflat.

If You Don’t Own a Kayak

Local rentals exist. North Shore Hood Canal Kayaks operates by appointment from 3959 NE North Shore Road in Belfair — call ahead rather than walking in, since they are not staffed for drop-ins. Vacation rental properties along the canal increasingly include kayaks and SUPs as part of the package; if you are renting a place for a long weekend, ask the host before booking.

For visitors who want a guided experience, several outfitters in nearby Hood Canal communities offer half-day and full-day tours; lodging directories on Explore Hood Canal compile current options.

The Estuary Is Coming Back

The shoreline you launch from is a restoration site, not a relic. Between 1952 and 1960, the original tidal marsh between the two Mission Creek mouths was graded, filled, and channelized. A tidal gate was installed to create a swimming hole. Both creeks were straightened. Decades of estuarine habitat were lost.

The Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group (HCSEG), partnered with Washington State Parks, has been undoing that. According to project records published by the Pacific Northwest Salmon Center, the project has restored approximately 8.1 acres of estuarine wetlands, removed 2,700 feet of rip-rap shoreline armoring, and removed roughly 67,000 cubic yards of fill — returning sinuosity to Big and Little Mission Creeks. On a quiet morning paddle, the results are visible: tidal channels reforming, reed grass spreading into the shallows, juvenile salmon habitat recovering.

Long before any of this — before the 1952 fill, before the park itself — this shoreline was a Skokomish gathering and harvesting place. The cultural history is older than the recreational one, and worth carrying with you when you launch.

One Last Note on Shellfish

Belfair State Park has tideland shellfish beds, but biotoxin closures and seasonal restrictions move week to week. Always check the current status on the WDFW shellfish beaches page before harvesting. A quick check costs nothing; a paralytic shellfish poisoning emergency-room visit costs everything.

Where Belfair Fits in the Larger Trail

From site 148, the CMT continues north up Hood Canal toward Twanoh, Potlatch, and Hoodsport, with additional sites threading toward Quilcene and Port Townsend before connecting to the Salish Sea network. Belfair is where the southern leg of a much larger Washington water trail begins. For Mason County paddlers, that’s a meaningful piece of geography: a National Recreation Trail with its southern doorstep here.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to camp at Cascadia Marine Trail site 148?

$12 per night for up to eight people, paid via the park’s self-registration system. The site is for human-powered or wind-powered watercraft only — you must arrive by water. There are no reservations; sites are first-come, first-served.

Do I need a Discover Pass to launch from Belfair State Park?

Yes — a Washington State Discover Pass is required for day-use vehicle parking. Day passes cost $10 and annual passes cost $30. Buy online at discoverpass.wa.gov or at park self-pay stations. Overnight campers’ fees include the pass for the duration of the stay.

Is Hood Canal safe for beginner kayakers?

The Great Bend’s protected geometry makes the south end of Hood Canal one of the more forgiving paddling environments in Washington — but afternoon winds build quickly, and the canal’s depth means cold-water immersion risk year-round. Beginners should launch early, stay close to shore, wear a properly fitted PFD, and bring extra layers. Always check the marine forecast for South Hood Canal before going.

What is the saltmarsh restoration at Belfair State Park?

Washington State Parks and the Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group have been restoring approximately 8.1 acres of estuarine wetlands at the park, removing 2,700 feet of rip-rap and roughly 67,000 cubic yards of fill that were placed between 1952 and 1960. The work is reopening Big and Little Mission Creek mouths to natural tidal flow and rebuilding juvenile salmon habitat.

Can I rent a kayak in Belfair?

Yes. North Shore Hood Canal Kayaks operates by appointment at 3959 NE North Shore Road in Belfair — call ahead, as they do not accept walk-ins. Several Hood Canal vacation rentals also include kayaks and stand-up paddleboards as part of the property package; ask your host before booking.

Where does the Cascadia Marine Trail go from Belfair?

From site 148, the trail continues north up Hood Canal toward Twanoh State Park, Potlatch, and Hoodsport, eventually connecting to the wider Salish Sea network of more than 55 paddler-only campsites stretching toward the San Juan Islands. Belfair is the trail’s southernmost campsite on the canal.

What should I bring on a first paddle from Belfair State Park?

At minimum: PFD, paddle leash, dry bag for keys and phone, layered clothing (fleece + windbreaker), water, snacks, marine forecast checked within the last hour, tide chart, and a float plan filed with someone on shore. Hood Canal is cold year-round; even on a warm day, immersion is a real risk.

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