Tag: Belfair State Park

  • New to North Mason? Belfair State Park Is Your Front-Door Gateway to Washington’s Saltwater Trail

    New to North Mason? Belfair State Park Is Your Front-Door Gateway to Washington’s Saltwater Trail




    If you just moved to North Mason County, you may have driven past the brown sign for Belfair State Park without realizing what it actually offers. Here’s the short version: a 65-acre state park sits at the southern end of Hood Canal’s Great Bend, with 3,720 feet of saltwater shoreline, a restored estuary, ADA-accessible day-use facilities, and a campsite reserved exclusively for paddlers as part of a National Recreation Trail that stretches all the way to the San Juan Islands.

    Most new residents take a year or two to discover this. Treat this article as a shortcut.

    What the Cascadia Marine Trail Actually Is

    The Cascadia Marine Trail (CMT) is a National Recreation Trail managed by the Washington Water Trails Association in partnership with Washington State Parks. It strings together more than 55 shoreline campsites along the inland marine waters of Washington — Puget Sound, Hood Canal, the Strait of Juan de Fuca, the San Juans — and it is reserved for human-powered and wind-powered watercraft. Kayaks. Canoes. Stand-up paddleboards. Sailing dinghies that can be muscled to a beach.

    You cannot drive to a CMT site. That is the whole point. The trail exists to give paddlers a multi-day route through Washington’s marine waters with low-cost, designated places to camp along the way. Belfair State Park’s CMT campsite — site 148 — is the trail’s southernmost stop on Hood Canal. From here, paddlers head north up the canal toward Twanoh, Potlatch, and Hoodsport, then connect to the broader trail.

    What the State Park Offers Day-Trippers

    You don’t have to be a paddler to use the park. The day-use side has:

    • 3,720 feet of saltwater shoreline along the southern Hood Canal Great Bend
    • A historic tidal swimming pool that warms up in summer
    • Picnic areas, ADA-accessible restrooms, coin-operated showers
    • Trails through restored saltmarsh between Big Mission Creek and Little Mission Creek
    • A drive-in campground (separate from the paddler-only CMT site)

    You need a Washington Discover Pass for vehicle parking — $10 day or $30 annual. If you live in Mason County and plan to visit any of the state’s parks more than three times a year, the annual pass pays for itself by your fourth visit.

    The History You’ll See on the Shoreline

    One of the things that makes Belfair State Park genuinely interesting — versus just scenic — is that you can read its history on the ground.

    Between 1952 and 1960, the original tidal marsh was graded, filled, and channelized to make room for parking, a swimming hole, and a more conventional state-park experience. Both Mission Creeks were straightened. A tidal gate was built. About 67,000 cubic yards of fill went in. Saltmarsh function was largely lost.

    Starting in the 2010s, Washington State Parks and the Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group began undoing the damage. According to project records published by the Pacific Northwest Salmon Center, the project has restored approximately 8.1 acres of estuarine wetlands and removed 2,700 feet of rip-rap shoreline armoring. Walking the shoreline today, you can see tidal channels reforming, reed grass spreading into the shallows, and the creeks meandering closer to their original courses. It’s an active, visible piece of restoration ecology — the kind of thing you can show visiting family and explain in two minutes.

    Long before any of that, this stretch of shoreline was a Skokomish gathering and harvesting place. The cultural history is older than the park, older than the state. Worth carrying with you when you visit.

    Your First Three Visits, in Order

    If you’re new to North Mason and want to actually use this park rather than just drive past it, here’s a starting sequence:

    1. Day-use afternoon. Pack a picnic, walk the saltmarsh trails, watch the tide, leave by sunset.
    2. Borrowed-kayak morning. If a friend has a kayak — or you can rent from North Shore Hood Canal Kayaks at 3959 NE North Shore Road in Belfair (call ahead, no walk-ins) — paddle the protected water near the saltmarsh on a calm morning.
    3. Pair it with Tahuya Forest. Spend a Saturday split between the park in the morning and Tahuya State Forest in the afternoon. That’s two of North Mason’s signature outdoor places in one day.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Belfair State Park free?

    Day-use parking requires a Washington Discover Pass — $10 per day or $30 per year, per vehicle. Camping fees are charged separately at the park’s self-registration. The $12 Cascadia Marine Trail site is paddler-only and cannot be reached by car.

    Where exactly is Belfair State Park?

    The park is on NE Beck Road in Belfair, just off SR-300, at the southern end of Hood Canal’s Great Bend in Mason County, Washington. From the SR-3 / SR-300 junction in downtown Belfair, it’s a short drive west along the canal.

    Can I camp at Belfair State Park without a kayak?

    Yes — the park has a separate drive-in campground for car campers. The Cascadia Marine Trail campsite (site 148) is reserved exclusively for paddlers and wind-powered watercraft and cannot be accessed by vehicle.

    What is Hood Canal’s Great Bend?

    The Great Bend is the sharp curve where Hood Canal turns east before its long northern reach. Belfair State Park sits at the southern end of this curve. The geometry of the bend creates protected paddling water and gives the area a distinct fjord-like character.

    Are there restaurants near Belfair State Park?

    Downtown Belfair is a short drive away and offers a range of casual restaurants, coffee shops, and a Saturday market. For waterfront dining, restaurants along North Shore Road and SR-106 east of the park provide additional options. Plan ahead for weekend evenings — seating fills.

    Can I see salmon at Belfair State Park?

    The estuary restoration is rebuilding juvenile salmon habitat in Big and Little Mission Creeks. Best viewing is from the boardwalk and shoreline trails during outgoing tides in summer and fall. Adult salmon return to nearby Hood Canal streams; the park itself is primarily juvenile-rearing habitat.

    This is a new-resident orientation companion to our Cascadia Marine Trail / Belfair State Park spring 2026 guide. For more North Mason orientation, see our Tahuya State Forest newcomer’s guide.

  • North Mason Families: How to Take Kids Kayaking from Belfair State Park This Spring

    North Mason Families: How to Take Kids Kayaking from Belfair State Park This Spring




    For North Mason families wondering whether their kids are ready to kayak Hood Canal: the south end of the canal — your end — is where Washington’s beginner paddlers learn. Belfair State Park’s protected shoreline at the Great Bend is genuinely forgiving, the day-use beach is ADA-accessible, and the launch is twenty minutes from most Belfair driveways. Here’s how to plan a first family paddle this spring without making the rookie mistakes that ruin the trip.

    Why the Great Bend Is the Right Training Water

    Hood Canal is technically a fjord, and the southern reach where Belfair State Park sits is its sharpest curve — the Great Bend. The geometry breaks up Pacific swells before they reach you and gives the south end a dependably calmer surface than the open canal further north. For families with kids who have never been in a sit-on-top or tandem before, that matters more than any other factor.

    You still need to plan around afternoon wind. South-southwesterlies build through the day. Launch early, plan a short loop, and be back on land before lunch on your first outing. If your kids ask “can we keep going?” — perfect. End on a high note, not a wet exhausted note.

    The Family Day-Use Plan

    The simplest first trip looks like this:

    1. Buy a Washington Discover Pass ahead of time ($10 day, $30 annual) so you are not fumbling at the park entrance with kids in the car.
    2. Arrive at Belfair State Park before 9 a.m. Tide and wind both behave best in the morning.
    3. Set up a base camp in the day-use area. The park has 65 acres, restrooms, and a swimming-friendly tidal pool kids love when paddling is done.
    4. Launch from the beach. Stay within easy sight of your beach blanket. Paddle west toward the saltmarsh restoration zone — that’s where the water is calmest.
    5. Be off the water before any sustained breeze starts ruffling whitecaps. If you see whitecaps from the beach, you’re already late.

    The $12 paddler-only Cascadia Marine Trail campsite — site 148 — is not the right move for a first family outing. Save it for when your kids have a few day paddles under them and want the real experience.

    What to Bring (The Honest List)

    Hood Canal water is cold year-round. Even in July, immersion is a hypothermia risk. The non-negotiables for paddling with kids:

    • Properly fitted PFDs for every person, including parents. A child’s PFD must be sized for their weight; an adult PFD on a kid is a drowning hazard. Most PFDs have weight ranges printed on the inside.
    • A change of warm clothes per person, in a dry bag, on shore. If anyone goes in, you want fleece and a jacket waiting.
    • Sunscreen and hats. Glare off Hood Canal multiplies sun exposure.
    • Water, snacks, a whistle on each PFD.
    • The marine forecast checked within the hour — the South Hood Canal area on the National Weather Service site.

    Renting vs. Buying

    For a family’s first outing, renting makes sense. North Shore Hood Canal Kayaks at 3959 NE North Shore Road in Belfair operates by appointment — call ahead, no walk-ins. Tandem sit-on-top kayaks are the most family-forgiving option. Skip closed-cockpit sea kayaks until your kids have practiced wet exits.

    Some Hood Canal vacation rentals along North Shore Road include kayaks as part of the property package, which can simplify logistics if you have visitors staying with you.

    Pair the Paddle with a Tahuya Forest Day

    One of the underrated North Mason family weekends is paddling Belfair State Park in the morning and exploring Tahuya State Forest in the afternoon. The forest is 3.5 miles from Belfair and offers family-friendly trails plus picnic areas. Two kinds of nature in one day, both within the same county, both free or near-free with the Discover Pass you already bought.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How young can a child go kayaking on Hood Canal?

    There is no legal minimum, but practically, kids should be able to follow safety instructions, sit still in a tandem for 20–30 minutes, and tolerate a properly fitted child PFD. Most outfitters will rent to families with children as young as 4 or 5 in tandem boats with an adult — but the call belongs to the parent. If a child is afraid of water or unable to sit still, wait a year.

    Do kids need their own Discover Pass?

    No. The Discover Pass is per vehicle, not per person. One $10 day pass covers everyone arriving in the same car. If you visit Washington state parks more than three times a year, the $30 annual pass pays for itself.

    Is the water at Belfair State Park warm enough to swim in?

    The park’s tidal swimming hole — created by the historic tidal gate — does warm up in summer afternoons and is a popular spot for families. The open canal stays cold (50s to low 60s°F) year-round. If your kids end up in the open water unexpectedly, treat it as a cold-water situation and get them dry and warm immediately.

    What’s the closest restroom to the launch beach?

    Belfair State Park has ADA-accessible restrooms and coin-operated showers in the main day-use area, a short walk from the launch beach. There are no facilities on the saltmarsh side.

    What if the wind picks up while we’re on the water?

    Turn back immediately and stay close to shore. Hood Canal wind builds fast and the southerly fetch from the Great Bend can push small craft surprisingly far. If you cannot make headway, paddle to the nearest beach and walk back to your launch point along the shore. The park’s 3,720 feet of saltwater shoreline gives you a long landing zone.

    This is a family-focused companion to our Cascadia Marine Trail / Belfair State Park spring 2026 guide. For Tahuya Forest plans, see our family trail access guide.

  • Visiting Hood Canal This Summer? Here’s What’s Confirmed for Belfair State Park and Marine Area 12

    Visiting Hood Canal This Summer? Here’s What’s Confirmed for Belfair State Park and Marine Area 12

    Belfair, WA — If you’re planning a Hood Canal trip to Belfair this summer — whether it’s a Seattle weekend, a Tacoma family run, or a longer Pacific Northwest itinerary — here’s the cleanest read on what’s confirmed and what’s still pending as of May 3, 2026. The headline: lock in crab and camping now; treat the Belfair State Park shellfish opener as “watch the WDFW page” until officially posted.

    What’s Confirmed

    Marine Area 12 Dungeness crab opens 6 a.m. June 16, 2026, runs through September 5, harvest Thursdays through Mondays. Daily limit: five male, hard-shell, 6¼-inch minimum carapace, recorded on your Puget Sound catch record card. You’ll need a Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) shellfish/seaweed license and the Puget Sound crab catch record card. Visitor licenses are sold online at wdfw.wa.gov.

    Belfair State Park camping reservations are open for all three loops — Main, Beach, and Tree — through washington.goingtocamp.com or (888) 226-7688. The park has 90 standard sites, 41 full-hookup sites, two primitive sites, and one marine trail site on 3,720 feet of Hood Canal shoreline at 1002 NE Beck Road. Beach Loop is the closest to the water and accommodates RVs up to 60 feet. Tree Loop (May-Sept only) is the cheapest but limited to vehicles 18 feet and under. Memorial Day, July 4, and Labor Day are essentially gone; book August now if it’s on your list.

    Theler Wetlands is open today. Mary E. Theler Wetlands Nature Preserve at 600 NE Roessel Road in Belfair offers more than three miles of accessible trails through 139 acres of salt marsh and Union River estuary. Free, dawn to dusk, ADA-accessible boardwalk. May is peak shorebird migration on Hood Canal — if your visit is May or early June, this is the highest-value low-effort stop.

    What’s Pending

    The 2026 Belfair State Park clam, mussel, and oyster opener has not yet been published to the official WDFW Belfair beach page (wdfw.wa.gov/places-to-go/shellfish-beaches/270470). The page still shows Aug 1 – Sept 30, 2025 as the most recent posted season. If you’re booking a trip specifically for shellfish, build a flexible window (late July through September is the historical pattern at Belfair) and watch the WDFW page in May and June for the official 2026 announcement.

    The Visitor Rule You Must Know: WDFW + DOH

    Two parallel approvals govern every Hood Canal harvest. The WDFW season must be open, and the Washington Department of Health (DOH) health approval for the beach must be active. Either can be closed with little notice for biotoxin, vibrio, or water-quality reasons. The DOH Shellfish Safety hotline is 1-800-562-5632 and the DOH interactive map updates in real time. Run both checks within 24 hours of any planned harvest. Visitors who skip this step get tickets — or worse, get sick.

    Practical Logistics for the Belfair Trip

    Belfair sits at the south end of Hood Canal, roughly two hours from Seattle via SR-3 through Gorst, or about 75 minutes from Tacoma via SR-16 and SR-3. The town center has gas, groceries, and a handful of restaurants; expect basic services, not a tourism strip. The Belfair State Park beach is mostly soft mud at the tideline — waterproof boots are non-negotiable for any harvest trip. Standard Puget Sound daily shellfish limits when the beach is open are 18 oysters, 10 clams, and 10 mussels per harvester, with kids 15 and under harvesting free without a license.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Do I need a Washington fishing license to crab on Hood Canal?

    Yes. You need a WDFW shellfish/seaweed license plus the Puget Sound crab catch record card. Both are sold online at wdfw.wa.gov. Daily limit in Marine Area 12 is five male Dungeness, hard-shell, 6¼-inch minimum carapace.

    How do I book a Belfair State Park campsite?

    Reserve at washington.goingtocamp.com or call (888) 226-7688. Three loops: Main (year-round, mix of hookup and standard), Beach (year-round, full hookups, up to 60 ft RVs), Tree (May-Sept, vehicles 18 ft and under, no hookups).

    Is Belfair State Park shellfish season definitely open in summer 2026?

    The 2026 opener has not yet been posted to the official WDFW Belfair beach page as of May 3, 2026. Build a flexible visit window (late July through September is the historical pattern) and check wdfw.wa.gov/places-to-go/shellfish-beaches/270470 weekly through May and June for the official date.

    How far is Belfair State Park from Seattle?

    Roughly two hours via I-5 south, SR-16 across the Tacoma Narrows Bridge, then SR-3 through Gorst to Belfair. The park is at 1002 NE Beck Road, about three miles west of the Belfair town center.

    Related coverage: Tahuya River Preserve Reaches 190 Acres · Original Hood Canal summer planner

  • North Mason Families: How to Plan Around an Unconfirmed Belfair State Park Shellfish Opener

    North Mason Families: How to Plan Around an Unconfirmed Belfair State Park Shellfish Opener

    Belfair, WA — If you’re a North Mason parent or grandparent, summer planning runs on shellfish dates the way it runs on school calendars. As of May 3, 2026, here’s the part nobody is saying out loud: the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) has not yet posted the Belfair State Park 2026 clam, mussel, and oyster opener on its official beach page. The most recent published season on wdfw.wa.gov/places-to-go/shellfish-beaches/270470 is still Aug 1 – Sept 30, 2025.

    That’s not a reason to skip planning. It’s a reason to plan smarter.

    What You Can Lock In Today

    Marine Area 12 Dungeness crab is confirmed. The recreational opener is 6 a.m. on June 16, 2026, running through September 5, with harvest allowed Thursdays through Mondays each week. Five male Dungeness daily, hard-shell, 6¼-inch minimum carapace. The south end of the Canal near Belfair, Union, and Tahuya tends to fish well early in the season — that first Father’s Day weekend is on the table this year.

    Belfair State Park camping is reservable now. Three loops, 90 standard sites, 41 full-hookup sites, plus the seasonal Tree Loop (May-Sept, vehicles 18 ft and under, no hookups). Book at washington.goingtocamp.com or (888) 226-7688. Memorial Day weekend is essentially gone already; July 4 weekend is going fast. If grandparents are visiting in August, treat the booking as urgent this week.

    Theler Wetlands is open right now. 600 NE Roessel Road, dawn to dusk, free, 139 acres, more than three miles of trails, ADA-accessible boardwalk, peak spring migration in May. For families with younger kids, this is the cheapest and lowest-friction Hood Canal day in your toolkit.

    What to Do About the Unposted Shellfish Date

    Two practical moves. First, bookmark the WDFW “Find a Beach” tool and the Belfair beach page directly. WDFW typically updates beach pages a few weeks before openers. The 2025 season opened August 1 — planning a soft window of late July through September keeps you flexible without committing to specific dates. Second, learn the dual-check habit before opening day arrives: WDFW season status PLUS Washington Department of Health beach approval. The DOH Shellfish Safety hotline is 1-800-562-5632, and the DOH interactive map shows real-time health status. Both have to be green for the trip to count.

    Family-Specific Reminders

    Kids 15 and under harvest free without a WDFW license — bring them. The Belfair flats are mostly soft mud at the tideline, so waterproof boots are non-negotiable for everyone. Standard Puget Sound daily limits when the beach is open: 18 oysters, 10 clams, 10 mussels per harvester. The Belfair beach is best known for oysters specifically. If you’re building a multigenerational summer plan, the realistic anchor right now is: confirmed crab June 16, confirmed camping (book now), Theler today, and shellfish “watch the WDFW page weekly starting in mid-June.”

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Has WDFW announced the Belfair State Park 2026 shellfish opener?

    Not as of May 3, 2026. The official Belfair beach page on wdfw.wa.gov shows the 2025 season (Aug 1 – Sept 30, 2025) as the most recent published season. Check the page weekly through May and June for the 2026 announcement.

    Can my kids harvest at Belfair State Park without a license?

    Yes — children 15 and under harvest shellfish free without a WDFW license, when the beach is open under both WDFW season and DOH health approval. They count toward the family limit only on their own catch, not the adult bag.

    Which Belfair State Park camping loop is best for families?

    The Beach Loop has full hookups and immediate beach access for kids. The Main Loop is open year-round and offers a mix of hookup and standard sites. The Tree Loop is the cheapest but limited to vehicles 18 feet and under with no hookups, and is May-September only.

    Where can we go on Hood Canal today, before shellfish season opens?

    Theler Wetlands at 600 NE Roessel Road in Belfair is open dawn to dusk, free, with three-plus miles of trails through 139 acres of salt marsh and the Union River estuary. May is peak migration. The Tahuya River Preserve and Belfair State Park’s day-use shoreline are also open for hiking and beach-walking outside harvest seasons.

    More from Belfair Bugle: Tahuya River Preserve Reaches 190 Acres · Original Hood Canal summer planner

  • Hood Canal Summer 2026 in Belfair: What’s Verified, What’s Pending, and How to Plan Smart

    Hood Canal Summer 2026 in Belfair: What’s Verified, What’s Pending, and How to Plan Smart

    Belfair, WA — Summer 2026 is taking shape on Hood Canal, and the picture for North Mason families and Hood Canal property owners is sharper in some places than others. As of May 3, 2026, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) has formally announced the Marine Area 12 Dungeness crab opener, but the Belfair State Park clam, mussel, and oyster opener has not yet been published to the WDFW Belfair beach page. Here’s what you can put on your calendar today — and what to keep watching.

    Marine Area 12 Crab: Confirmed for June 16 – Sept 5, 2026

    The verified anchor of the summer is crab. WDFW has confirmed the Hood Canal recreational Dungeness season for Marine Area 12 (which covers the Hood Canal stretch our community fishes most) opens at 6 a.m. on Tuesday, June 16, 2026, and runs through Saturday, September 5, 2026. As in prior years, harvest is allowed Thursdays through Mondays each week — closed Tuesdays and Wednesdays. The daily limit remains five male Dungeness in hard-shell condition, with a minimum carapace width of 6¼ inches, recorded immediately on your Puget Sound catch record card.

    One important nuance specific to Hood Canal: the area north of Ayock Point follows a different schedule, and the area south of Ayock Point has had abundance issues that have driven recent winter closures. The summer recreational opener applies to Marine Area 12 broadly, but check the WDFW Hood Canal crab page before you set pots near Belfair, Union, or Tahuya so you’re fishing the right stretch under the right rule.

    Belfair State Park Shellfish: 2026 Dates Not Yet Posted

    Belfair State Park’s clam, mussel, and oyster harvest is the centerpiece of the south Hood Canal shellfish year for most North Mason families — 3,720 feet of shoreline at 1002 NE Beck Road, mostly known for oysters, with some of the most productive south-end mud flats on the Canal. As of this morning, however, the WDFW Belfair State Park beach page (wdfw.wa.gov/places-to-go/shellfish-beaches/270470) still shows the most recent published season as Aug 1 – Sept 30, 2025 only. The 2026 opener date has not yet been posted to that official page.

    If you’ve seen earlier dates circulating, treat them as preliminary until WDFW updates the Belfair beach page or issues a press release. The honest framing for now: the 2026 Belfair State Park shellfish opener is expected this summer, exact date pending. Add the WDFW “Find a Beach” tool to your bookmarks and check it the week you plan to harvest. Standard Puget Sound daily limits when the beach does open are 18 oysters, 10 clams, and 10 mussels per harvester, with kids 15 and under harvesting free without a license.

    The WDFW + DOH Dual-Check Rule (This One Is Non-Negotiable)

    Hood Canal’s shellfish year runs on two parallel approvals: the WDFW season must be open, AND the Washington Department of Health (DOH) health approval for that beach must be active. Either one can close a beach with little notice. Biotoxin closures, vibrio advisories, and seasonal water-quality flags can shut harvest down even when the WDFW calendar says open. The DOH Shellfish Safety hotline is 1-800-562-5632, and the DOH interactive map shows real-time beach health status for every approved beach on Hood Canal. Check both sources within 24 hours of any harvest trip — this is the rule every Belfair-area harvester learns once and never forgets.

    Belfair State Park Camping: All Three Loops in Play This Summer

    For families combining a beach day with a weekend on the water, Belfair State Park’s campground is the closest in. The park runs three loops totaling 90 standard sites, 41 full-hookup sites, two primitive sites, and one marine trail site:

    • Main Loop — year-round reservable: 15 full-hookup sites, 34 standard sites, three primitive sites.
    • Beach Loop — year-round reservable, full hookups, fits RVs/trailers up to 60 feet, immediate beach access.
    • Tree Loop — May through September only, vehicles 18 feet and under, no hookups.

    Reservations through washington.goingtocamp.com or (888) 226-7688. Summer weekends — especially Memorial Day, July 4, and Labor Day — fill months out. If your trip is August or later, book this week.

    The Free Option Right Now: Theler Wetlands

    You don’t have to wait for shellfish dates to use Hood Canal in May. The Mary E. Theler Wetlands Nature Preserve at 600 NE Roessel Road off SR-3 in Belfair offers more than three miles of accessible trails through 139 acres of salt marsh and Union River estuary. May is peak migration on the Canal — shorebirds, herons, songbirds, and the start of summer waterfowl. Trails are free, open dawn to dusk, and the main boardwalk is ADA accessible. The Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group (HCSEG), which manages the Theler Nature Center, is in the middle of a longer restoration of the facility — check pnwsalmoncenter.org for community program announcements.

    Why This Matters for North Mason

    Hood Canal’s summer recreation calendar isn’t a tourism brochure for North Mason — it’s the working schedule that families plan dinners around, that grandparents drive in for, that property owners build their summer guest list against. When the WDFW page hasn’t posted the Belfair opener yet, the right move isn’t to guess; it’s to lock down what’s confirmed (crab June 16, camping reservations now, Theler today) and stay ready for the rest. We’ll update this page the moment WDFW publishes the Belfair State Park 2026 dates.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    When does Marine Area 12 Dungeness crab open in summer 2026?

    Marine Area 12 (Hood Canal) recreational Dungeness opens at 6 a.m. on June 16, 2026, and runs through September 5, 2026, with harvest allowed Thursdays through Mondays each week. Daily limit: five male, hard-shell, 6¼-inch minimum carapace.

    When does Belfair State Park shellfish season open in 2026?

    The 2026 opener has not yet been published to the official WDFW Belfair State Park beach page as of May 3, 2026. The 2025 season ran August 1 through September 30. Check the WDFW “Find a Beach” tool and the WDFW Belfair page (wdfw.wa.gov/places-to-go/shellfish-beaches/270470) for the official 2026 announcement.

    Do I need both a WDFW license and a DOH health approval to harvest at Belfair State Park?

    Yes. The WDFW shellfish/seaweed season must be open AND the DOH health status must be approved for the beach you’re harvesting. Either can close a beach with little notice. The DOH Shellfish Safety hotline is 1-800-562-5632 and the DOH interactive map updates in real time.

    How do I reserve a campsite at Belfair State Park?

    Reserve at washington.goingtocamp.com or call (888) 226-7688. Belfair State Park has three loops (Main, Beach, Tree) totaling 90 standard sites, 41 full-hookup sites, two primitive sites, and one marine trail site. Tree Loop is May-September only and limited to vehicles 18 feet and under.

    Where is Belfair State Park?

    Belfair State Park sits on 3,720 feet of Hood Canal shoreline at 1002 NE Beck Road, Belfair, WA 98528, at the south end of the Canal. The park is roughly three miles west of the Belfair town center off SR-300.

    Is the Theler Wetlands open right now?

    Yes. Mary E. Theler Wetlands Nature Preserve at 600 NE Roessel Road in Belfair is open dawn to dusk year-round. Trails are free, more than three miles total, and the main boardwalk is ADA accessible. May is peak spring migration on Hood Canal.

    Related coverage: Tahuya River Preserve Reaches 190 Acres · Hood Canal Property Owners: Tahuya River Preserve and Water Quality · Original Belfair Bugle Hood Canal summer planner

  • Hood Canal Shellfish Season Is Coming: Your Belfair Summer Outdoor Planner for 2026

    Hood Canal Shellfish Season Is Coming: Your Belfair Summer Outdoor Planner for 2026

    If you’ve been waiting for Hood Canal’s legendary shellfish season to kick off, now is the time to start planning. Summer 2026 brings a fresh lineup of outdoor opportunities for our North Mason community — from the tide flats at Belfair State Park to the deeper waters of Marine Area 12, the Canal is waking up.

    Belfair State Park Shellfish Season Opens July 15

    Mark your calendars: the clam, mussel, and oyster season at Belfair State Park’s Hood Canal tide flats opens July 15, 2026, and runs through December 31. According to the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW), this year’s opening comes two weeks earlier than originally scheduled — a welcome change for the families who make annual pilgrimages to the park’s famously productive mud flats at the south end of the Canal.

    Belfair State Park sits on 3,720 feet of Hood Canal shoreline at 1002 NE Beck Road, Belfair WA 98528. The beach is known for oysters in particular, though portions near the tideline are soft mud, so waterproof boots are non-negotiable. Harvesters need both a valid WDFW shellfish/seaweed license and a current Department of Health (DOH) beach approval to take anything home. Check the WDFW “Find a Beach” tool at wdfw.wa.gov before you go — health closures can happen with little notice.

    Standard Puget Sound daily limits apply: 18 oysters, 10 clams, and 10 mussels per person. Children 15 and under harvest free without a license.

    Dungeness Crab Season: Summer 2026 in Marine Area 12

    For crabbers, WDFW has confirmed that Hood Canal’s Marine Area 12 recreational Dungeness crab season will open in summer 2026 — exact dates to be announced. Watch the WDFW crab seasons page at wdfw.wa.gov/fishing/shellfishing-regulations/crab for the opening announcement, which typically drops a few weeks before day one.

    The standard Hood Canal setup: five male Dungeness, hard-shell, 6¼-inch minimum carapace width, recorded immediately on your catch record card. Crabbing has historically run Thursdays through Mondays in this marine area. The south end of the Canal near Belfair and Union tends to fish well early in the season.

    Belfair State Park Camping: All Loops Open Mid-May

    Planning to combine a shellfish trip with a weekend on the water? Belfair State Park’s full campground opens all loops by mid-May. The park offers 184 mixed-use sites — including 41 full hookup sites and 8 cabins — spread across three loops on the Canal shoreline. The Tree Loop (tents and rigs under 18 feet) is the most popular and fills fast.

    Book at washington.goingtocamp.com or call 1-888-226-7688. Summer weekends typically fill months in advance, so check availability now if you haven’t already.

    Theler Wetlands: Free Spring Birding Right Now

    While the shellfish season is still weeks away, the trails are open today. The Mary E. Theler Wetlands Nature Preserve off SR-3 in Belfair, located at 600 NE Roessel Rd, offers more than three miles of accessible trails through 139 acres of salt marsh and estuary. May is peak migration season on Hood Canal — shorebirds, herons, and songbirds work the Union River estuary. The trails are free, open dawn to dusk, and the main boardwalk sections are ADA accessible.

    The Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group (HCSEG), which manages the Theler Nature Center, is restoring the facility with plans to reopen interpretive community programs. Check pnwsalmoncenter.org for upcoming event announcements.

    Before You Harvest

    Shellfish closures can happen any time based on water quality. Always verify both the WDFW season status and the DOH health approval before harvesting at any beach. The DOH Shellfish Safety hotline is 1-800-562-5632. Same rule applies to every beach on Hood Canal — no exceptions.

    The Canal belongs to all of us. Harvest within limits, pack out your gear, and leave the tide flats better than you found them.

    Related Coverage from Belfair Bugle

    This summer planner has been expanded into a verified 2026 cluster:

  • Hood Canal Shellfish Season Opens with New 2026 Rules — Tahuya Trail Closure and What’s Coming This Summer

    Hood Canal Shellfish Season Opens with New 2026 Rules — Tahuya Trail Closure and What’s Coming This Summer

    Spring is here and so is shellfish season along Hood Canal! If you’re heading out to dig clams or harvest oysters, take note of the new 2026 rules that kicked in April 1 — the minimum size for cockles is now 2½ inches, and geoduck limits have dropped to one per person per day. Potlatch State Park’s clam, mussel, and oyster season is open through May 31, so grab your shellfish license and your Discover Pass and get out there.

    Over at Tahuya State Forest, heads up that portions of the Howell Lake Loop Trail remain temporarily closed due to a washed-out bridge. Plenty of other trails are open for ORV riding, mountain biking, and hiking — just stick to marked routes and remember your Discover Pass.

    Looking ahead, the Theler Wetlands trail system is getting a major upgrade this summer. Construction begins on a new pedestrian boardwalk in the footprint of the removed levees, fully reconnecting the estuary trail loop. And Belfair State Park’s Tree Loop campground opens for reservations May 15 — start planning those summer weekends on the water.

    • Shellfish 2026 Rule Changes (April 1): Cockle minimum size 2½ inches; geoduck limit 1/person/day
    • Potlatch State Park shellfish season: Open through May 31
    • Tahuya Howell Lake Loop: Partial closure — bridge washout; other trails open
    • Theler Wetlands boardwalk: Construction starting summer 2026
    • Belfair State Park Tree Loop: Reservations open May 15
  • Outdoor Recreation Update: New Shellfish Rules, Potlatch Season & Trail Alerts — Belfair Bugle

    Outdoor Recreation Update: New Shellfish Rules, Potlatch Season & Trail Alerts — Belfair Bugle

    Spring is here and so is shellfish season along Hood Canal. If you’re heading out to dig clams or harvest oysters, take note of the new 2026 rules that kicked in April 1 — the minimum size for cockles is now 2½ inches, and geoduck limits have dropped to one per person per day. Potlatch State Park’s clam, mussel, and oyster season is open through May 31, so grab your shellfish license and your Discover Pass and get out there.

    Meanwhile over at Tahuya State Forest, heads up that portions of the Howell Lake Loop Trail remain temporarily closed due to a washed-out bridge. Plenty of other trails are open for ORV riding, mountain biking, and hiking — just stick to marked routes and remember your Discover Pass.

    Looking ahead, the Theler Wetlands trail system is getting a major upgrade this summer. Construction begins on a new pedestrian boardwalk in the footprint of the removed levees, fully reconnecting the estuary trail loop. And Belfair State Park’s Tree Loop campground opens for reservations May 15 — start planning those summer weekends on the water.

    Key Outdoor Updates This Week

    • Shellfish rules: New 2026 WDFW regulations effective April 1 — cockle minimum 2½ inches, geoduck limit 1 per person/day
    • Potlatch State Park: Shellfish season open April 1–May 31 (clams, mussels, oysters)
    • Tahuya State Forest: Howell Lake Loop Trail partially closed — washed-out bridge. Other trails remain open.
    • Theler Wetlands: New pedestrian boardwalk construction coming summer 2026, reconnecting the full estuary loop
    • Belfair State Park: Tree Loop campground reservations open May 15

    Sources: WDFW Shellfish Regulations, WDFW Potlatch Beach Page, Trailforks Tahuya, AllTrails, WA State Parks, HCSEG Theler Restoration Project