Tag: Pacific Northwest travel

  • For Snohomish County Business Owners and Aerospace Suppliers: How the New Paine Field-Portland Nonstop Changes the Math on Pacific Northwest Travel

    For Snohomish County Business Owners and Aerospace Suppliers: How the New Paine Field-Portland Nonstop Changes the Math on Pacific Northwest Travel

    If you run or work for a business based in Snohomish County — and your travel patterns include Portland, the broader Alaska network out of PDX, or any of the Texas/Tennessee/Florida cities Alaska routes through Portland — Alaska Airlines’ June 10, 2026 launch of daily nonstop service between Paine Field (PAE) and Portland International (PDX) is a meaningful structural change to how you book travel. This is the business-traveler view.

    The same-day Portland trip is back

    Without a PAE-PDX nonstop, the Snohomish County professional flying to Portland for a same-day meeting has had three options: drive (4-6 hours each way), connect through SeaTac (90-minute drive plus a Seattle-Portland flight plus rideshare on the other end), or fly out the night before. None of those preserves a full day of meetings.

    The June 10 nonstop reshapes the day. A morning departure out of PAE, ground transportation to a downtown Portland or close-in Beaverton meeting, working day, and evening return into Everett — all without burning a hotel night and without giving SeaTac three hours of your morning.

    Why this is specifically big for the Paine Field aerospace cluster

    Snohomish County’s aerospace economy is anchored by Boeing’s Everett widebody factory (737 North Line, 767/KC-46, 777/777X) and supported by suppliers and MRO operations clustered around Paine Field — Aviation Technical Services and dozens of others. Many of those companies have customers, partners, and corporate functions in Portland and the broader Alaska Airlines connection bank. PDX is also a meaningful aerospace city in its own right (Boeing has a Portland-area machining presence, and the Pacific Northwest aerospace supplier base extends well into Oregon).

    For supplier executives whose normal travel mix includes Portland-area machining shops, OEM suppliers in the Willamette Valley, or onward connections through PDX to Texas and the Gulf Coast aerospace corridor, the new nonstop is the first time Paine Field is the right airport for that travel pattern.

    The connection bank — what PDX actually opens up

    Portland is one of Alaska’s hub-style operations. The PDX bank includes one-stop service from PAE to cities including Houston, Nashville, Orlando, Dallas, Bozeman, Spokane, and Austin — destinations that previously required either a SeaTac drive or two stops out of Paine Field. For Snohomish County companies with Texas energy clients, Tennessee distribution, Florida customer presence, or any Mountain West footprint, the connection routing through PDX after June 10 will often beat the SEA-via-drive routing on total door-to-door time.

    What this means for the wider PAE schedule

    With Portland added, Paine Field hits 13 daily commercial departures across nine nonstop destinations — the busiest schedule the terminal has run since opening in March 2019. For business travelers, the practical effect is a more reliable backup schedule. A missed morning flight no longer means waiting until tomorrow; the next options out are within hours, not days.

    For Snohomish County businesses thinking about whether to standardize on PAE for routine travel rather than treating it as an opportunistic alternative, the June schedule is the first time the math works for a full corporate travel policy.

    The ground operation that makes this work

    Paine Field’s commercial terminal is operated by Propeller Airports. The terminal experience — small footprint, walk-to-gate, no remote parking shuttle, no inter-terminal transit — is structurally faster than SeaTac for any traveler who lives or works north of Lynnwood. For business travelers building a corporate booking pattern around PAE, the time savings compound across every trip.

    Snohomish County itself owns the airport; Propeller operates the commercial terminal under a long-term arrangement.

    What to do with this between now and June 10

    • Audit your current Portland and PDX-connection travel. Identify the trips that have been routing through SeaTac and price them through PAE-PDX after June 10.
    • Talk to your travel manager about an updated PAE-preferred policy. The 13-departure schedule changes which trips are routinely bookable from PAE versus which still need SeaTac.
    • For supplier-customer travel involving Portland-area aerospace operations, consider standing up a recurring booking pattern. The relaunched route is daily, which makes it usable for weekly cadences.
    • Watch for additional route announcements. The Portland addition is the first new destination announcement since Avelo joined PAE. Each addition tightens the case for the next one.

    Frequently asked questions for business travelers

    When does the Paine Field-Portland business route launch?

    June 10, 2026, with daily Alaska Airlines service. Tickets are available now at alaskaair.com.

    Is Portland a hub airport for Alaska?

    It is one of Alaska’s hub-style operations with a meaningful connection bank. The PDX bank opens efficient one-stop service from PAE to Houston, Nashville, Orlando, Dallas, Bozeman, Spokane, Austin, and other cities.

    How does PAE compare to SeaTac for Snohomish County business travelers?

    For travelers based in Everett or north Snohomish County, PAE saves roughly 60-90 minutes door-to-door versus SeaTac on every trip. The walk-to-gate terminal experience eliminates remote parking shuttles, monorail transfers, and most TSA wait time.

    How many daily departures will Paine Field have?

    13 daily commercial departures across nine nonstop destinations after the June 10 Portland launch. That is the busiest schedule the terminal has run since opening in March 2019.

    Should we update our corporate travel policy to prefer PAE?

    For Snohomish County-based teams whose travel mix includes Portland or Alaska’s PDX connection bank, the June 10 schedule is the first time PAE supports a full corporate booking pattern rather than an opportunistic alternative. Worth a policy review.

    Related Exploring Everett coverage

  • Day Trip from Seattle to Langus Riverfront Park and Spencer Island Everett: A 2026 Visitor’s Guide

    Day Trip from Seattle to Langus Riverfront Park and Spencer Island Everett: A 2026 Visitor’s Guide

    Day trip bottom line: Langus Riverfront Park and Spencer Island are 25–30 minutes north of Seattle via I-5 — a genuine half-day outdoors destination that most Puget Sound visitors don’t know exists. Flat trail, exceptional birdwatching, estuary wildlife. Bring a Discover Pass or $11.50 for day parking. No other admission.

    If you’re visiting the Seattle area for the FIFA World Cup, a weekend trip, or any reason that brings you to the Pacific Northwest, the Snohomish River Estuary north of Everett is one of the region’s most underrated outdoor destinations — and it’s closer to Seattle than most guides will tell you.

    The Drive From Seattle

    From downtown Seattle, Langus Riverfront Park is approximately 27 miles north on I-5 — roughly 30 minutes in off-peak traffic. Take the Marine View Drive exit north of Everett and follow Smith Island Road to the park entrance at 411 Smith Island Rd, Everett. Easier than driving to the Cascades. No mountain passes, no ferry.

    From the new Lynnwood City Center Link station, Community Transit connects to the Everett area. For visitors without a car, the combination of Link plus transit is an option — check Community Transit routes for current schedules.

    What You’re Going to See

    The Snohomish River Estuary is the largest wetland near an urban center on the West Coast — 1,400 acres where freshwater from the Cascades mixes with tidal Puget Sound. Spencer Island alone is 413 acres of managed wildlife habitat. More than 350 species of migratory birds have been recorded here. For comparison: most wildlife refuges in the Pacific Northwest are significantly harder to reach and offer less consistent wildlife viewing.

    Bald eagles, osprey, great blue herons, and a rotating cast of shorebirds and waterfowl are reliably present across all seasons. Spring and fall migration windows bring exceptional variety. Even a casual visitor with no birding background will see wildlife within minutes of crossing the Spencer Island bridge.

    The Trail

    The Langus River Front Trail is 3.0 miles of flat, paved path along the Snohomish River — accessible to walkers, joggers, and cyclists. It connects via bridge to the 1.7-mile Spencer Island southern loop on an elevated dike trail with open views across the estuary. Combined: approximately 4.7 miles, 2 to 3 hours at a relaxed pace with wildlife stops.

    No technical gear required. The trail is genuinely flat. Families with strollers can do the Langus section without difficulty.

    What to Bring, What to Pay

    Parking at Langus requires a Washington State Discover Pass ($30/year) or Vehicle Access Pass ($11.50/day). Available at the park kiosk or in advance at discoverpass.wa.gov. The trail and Spencer Island are free once you’ve handled parking.

    Binoculars significantly improve the Spencer Island experience. Water and snacks are essential — there are no services on Spencer Island. Layer up; estuary conditions can be windy regardless of season.

    Combining With Other Everett Stops

    Langus and Spencer Island pair naturally with Everett’s waterfront. Post-hike dining at Waterfront Place at the Port of Everett — with multiple restaurant options open along the marina — is a short drive from the park. The historic Port Gardner neighborhood and Rucker Hill walking tour adds an architectural dimension to the day.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How far is Langus Riverfront Park from Seattle?

    Approximately 27 miles north of downtown Seattle via I-5 — roughly 30 minutes in off-peak traffic. Take the Marine View Drive exit north of Everett and follow Smith Island Road to the park at 411 Smith Island Rd.

    Is Langus Riverfront Park worth visiting as a day trip?

    Yes. Spencer Island’s 413-acre estuary habitat with 350-plus migratory bird species is among the best wildlife-viewing sites in Puget Sound. Combined with the flat paved Langus trail and river access infrastructure, it’s a genuine half-day outdoors destination.

    What is the admission fee for Spencer Island?

    Spencer Island is free to enter. Parking at Langus Riverfront Park requires a Washington State Discover Pass ($30/year) or Vehicle Access Pass ($11.50/day).

    What is the best time of year to visit Langus and Spencer Island?

    Any season offers wildlife viewing. Spring (March–May) and fall (September–November) are peak migration windows with the highest bird variety. Winter brings overwintering waterfowl. Summer is popular for families and cyclists.

  • Langus Riverfront Park and Spencer Island: The Complete 2026 Guide to Everett’s 3-Mile Trail to a 413-Acre Wildlife Estuary

    Langus Riverfront Park and Spencer Island: The Complete 2026 Guide to Everett’s 3-Mile Trail to a 413-Acre Wildlife Estuary

    Quick guide: Langus Riverfront Park (411 Smith Island Rd, Everett) offers a 3-mile flat paved trail along the Snohomish River with a direct connection to Spencer Island — 413 acres of wildlife estuary and one of the best birding sites in the Puget Sound region. A Discover Pass or Vehicle Access Pass is required for parking. The trail is free and open year-round.

    Most Everett residents know the waterfront. Fewer know that a short drive to the north end of Smith Island puts you at one of the best outdoor destinations in Snohomish County — a flat paved trail along the Snohomish River estuary, a working boat launch, a fishing pier, and a bridge to a 413-acre wildlife refuge where 350 species of migratory birds pass through each year.

    Langus Riverfront Park and Spencer Island are Everett’s underrated outdoors combination. Here is the complete 2026 guide.

    Getting There

    Langus Riverfront Park is located at 411 Smith Island Rd, Everett, WA 98201. From I-5, take the Marine View Drive exit and follow Smith Island Road north. The park has three parking lots. At least one requires a Washington State Discover Pass ($30/year) or Vehicle Access Pass ($11.50/day). The trail and Spencer Island access are free once you park.

    The Langus Riverfront Trail

    The Langus River Front Trail is a 3.0-mile paved loop with roughly 32 feet of total elevation gain — effectively flat. The surface is wide enough for walkers, joggers, and cyclists to share without conflict. There are no technical sections, no significant hills, and no route-finding required. You follow the river and come back around.

    That accessibility is the point. For families with strollers, seniors, people rehabbing injuries, or anyone who wants a genuine nature experience without technical trail demands, Langus is one of the best options in Everett’s parks system. It runs along the Snohomish River estuary, where freshwater from the Cascades meets tidal influence from Puget Sound — producing the habitat conditions that make the wildlife here exceptional.

    The River Access Infrastructure

    Langus is not just a walking trail. It has real water-access infrastructure rarely found in urban parks:

    • Boat launch — functional for small watercraft and trailer boats launching onto the Snohomish River
    • Fishing pier — direct access to the Snohomish River; salmon runs pass through the estuary zone
    • Rowing dock and shell house — serving rowers and paddlers from the Everett Rowing Association and other groups

    The estuary zone at Langus is where freshwater and saltwater ecosystems overlap — a biological mixing zone that concentrates fish, birds, and mammals in ways a purely freshwater or purely marine habitat does not.

    Spencer Island: The Main Event

    Walk or ride to the end of the Langus trail and you reach the bridge to Spencer Island — 413 acres of estuary habitat managed jointly by Snohomish County Parks and the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. Spencer Island sits at the heart of the 1,400-acre Snohomish River Estuary, the largest wetland near an urban center on the West Coast.

    The southern loop on Spencer Island is approximately 1.7 miles. It runs along an elevated dike trail that puts you above the wetland with unobstructed views across the estuary. No technical skills required. Dogs are welcome on leash.

    What you can expect to see:

    • More than 350 species of migratory birds pass through the estuary; the Snohomish River Estuary is consistently rated among the best birding sites in the Puget Sound region
    • Bald eagles, osprey, and red-tailed hawks are regular year-round residents
    • Great blue herons reliably visible along the river edges in all seasons
    • Shorebirds and waterfowl — exceptional variety during spring and fall migration windows
    • Mammals including deer, coyote, and river otter throughout the island

    Best Times to Visit

    Spencer Island and Langus are worth visiting any time of year. The Snohomish River Estuary is a year-round habitat, not a seasonal destination. That said:

    Spring (March–May): Peak migration season brings exceptional shorebird and waterfowl variety. Migratory raptors moving through. Vegetation growth begins filling the estuary.

    Fall (September–November): Second peak migration window. Waterfowl numbers build through October. Salmon runs in the river draw eagles and other predators.

    Summer: Resident birds active. Nesting in progress — give nesting areas a wide berth. Popular season for families and cyclists.

    Winter: Quieter trail, excellent for solitude. Waterfowl overwintering in the estuary. Eagles visible along the river.

    The Combined Hike

    Langus trail (3.0 miles) plus Spencer Island southern loop (1.7 miles) equals approximately 4.7 miles total for the full combination. Plan for 2 to 3 hours depending on pace and how long you spend watching birds on Spencer Island’s dike trail. Bring water — there are no services on Spencer Island.

    What to Bring

    • Discover Pass or cash for the Vehicle Access Pass ($11.50/day)
    • Binoculars — essential for getting the most from Spencer Island
    • Water and snacks (no services once you leave the parking area)
    • Layers — the estuary is exposed; wind conditions vary significantly
    • Rain gear in any non-summer month

    Nearby Everett Destinations

    Langus pairs well with other north Everett destinations. The Lowell neighborhood sits along the Snohomish River to the east. The Port Gardner neighborhood — Everett’s second-oldest neighborhood and Rucker Hill — is a short drive to the west. The waterfront dining at Port of Everett’s Waterfront Place is accessible for a post-hike meal.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Where is Langus Riverfront Park in Everett?

    411 Smith Island Rd, Everett, WA 98201. From I-5, take the Marine View Drive exit and follow Smith Island Road north to the park entrance.

    Do I need a pass to visit Langus Riverfront Park?

    A Washington State Discover Pass ($30/year) or Vehicle Access Pass ($11.50/day) is required for parking at Langus Riverfront Park. The trail and Spencer Island are free to walk once you have parked.

    How long is the trail at Langus Riverfront Park?

    The Langus River Front Trail is a 3.0-mile flat paved loop with approximately 32 feet of elevation gain — effectively flat and accessible to walkers, joggers, cyclists, and strollers.

    What is Spencer Island?

    Spencer Island is a 413-acre wildlife estuary managed jointly by Snohomish County and the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, accessible by bridge from the end of the Langus trail. It sits within the 1,400-acre Snohomish River Estuary — the largest wetland near an urban center on the West Coast — with more than 350 species of migratory birds recorded.

    Is Langus Riverfront Park good for birdwatching?

    Yes. The Snohomish River Estuary is consistently rated among the best birding sites in Puget Sound. Bald eagles, osprey, great blue herons, and 350+ species of migratory birds make the area exceptional. Spring and fall migration windows offer peak variety.

    Can you fish at Langus Riverfront Park?

    Yes. Langus has a fishing pier with direct access to the Snohomish River, which has salmon runs through the estuary zone. A Washington State fishing license is required. A boat launch is also available for watercraft access.

    How far is the full Langus plus Spencer Island hike?

    Approximately 4.7 miles combining the Langus trail (3.0 miles) and Spencer Island southern loop (1.7 miles). Plan for 2 to 3 hours depending on pace and wildlife-watching stops.

  • Langus Riverfront Park and Spencer Island: Everett’s 3-Mile Paved Trail to a 400-Acre Wildlife Estuary

    Langus Riverfront Park and Spencer Island: Everett’s 3-Mile Paved Trail to a 400-Acre Wildlife Estuary

    Langus Riverfront Park (411 Smith Island Rd, Everett) offers a 3-mile paved trail along the Snohomish River, a fishing pier, a boat launch, and a paved path to Spencer Island — 400 acres of estuary wildlife habitat that’s among the best birdwatching spots in all of Puget Sound. A Discover Pass or Vehicle Access Pass is required for parking. The trail itself is free and open year-round.

    The Trail

    There’s a park on the north end of Everett that most people drive past without knowing it exists. Langus Riverfront Park sits just across the Snohomish River from the city proper, accessible via Smith Island Road, and it delivers more than its modest profile suggests: three miles of flat paved trail, serious water access infrastructure, and a bridge to one of the most ecologically rich wildlife areas in Snohomish County.

    The Langus River Front Trail is a 3.0-mile paved loop — flat (about 32 feet of elevation gain total), wide enough for walkers, joggers, and cyclists to share comfortably, and well-maintained throughout. No map required. You follow the river and come back around.

    For families with strollers, seniors, and anyone who wants a genuine outdoor experience without technical trail navigation, this is one of the most accessible options in Everett’s parks system. It also connects directly to Spencer Island — add roughly 1.7 miles for the southern loop if you’re making a full day of it.

    The River Access

    Langus isn’t just a walking trail. It has real infrastructure for people who want to get on the water:

    • Boat launch — functional for small watercraft and trailer boats
    • Fishing pier — directly on the Snohomish River
    • Rowing dock and shell house — serving rowers and paddlers
    • Three parking lots — at least one requires a Discover Pass or Washington State Vehicle Access Pass

    The river here is the Snohomish River estuary zone, where freshwater from the Cascades meets the tidal influence of Puget Sound. That mixing of freshwater and saltwater ecosystems is a big part of what makes the wildlife at Langus and Spencer Island so good.

    Spencer Island: The Main Event

    Walk or bike to the end of the Langus trail and you’ll reach the bridge to Spencer Island — 400 acres of estuary habitat managed jointly by Snohomish County and the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.

    Spencer Island is consistently rated among the best wildlife-watching spots in the Puget Sound region. What you’re likely to see on a typical visit:

    • Waterfowl and shorebirds — the estuary is prime habitat year-round; spring and fall migration add exceptional variety
    • Raptors — bald eagles, osprey, and red-tailed hawks are regular visitors
    • Great Blue Herons — reliably visible along the river edges
    • Deer, coyote, and river otter — mammals are common throughout the island

    The southern loop on Spencer Island is about 1.7 miles. It runs along an elevated dike trail — partially maintained by volunteers — that puts you above the wetland and gives you unobstructed sight lines in every direction. Birders know this spot.

    What’s Coming: The Spencer Island Restoration Project

    The Army Corps of Engineers, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, and Snohomish County are in the final design phase of the Spencer Island Unit Restoration Project, with updates expected in 2026. Projects of this type typically restore tidal flow, remove invasive vegetation, and improve habitat connectivity throughout the estuary.

    When complete, the restoration will benefit both wildlife populations and the visitor experience on Spencer Island. If you’re planning a trip in 2026, check snohomishcountywa.gov for any trail or access changes related to restoration work.

    Getting There

    Address: 411 Smith Island Rd, Everett, WA

    From Seattle/I-5 northbound: Take exit 195 and turn left onto East Marine View Drive. Continue about 1.2 miles to the ramp for Highway 529. Head north, cross the bridge, and turn right onto 28th Place NE. At the next intersection, turn right onto 35th Avenue NE. Continue to the stop sign and turn left onto Ross Avenue. Turn right onto Smith Island Road and follow it into the park.

    Parking: Three lots at the trailhead. At least one lot requires a Discover Pass or Washington State Vehicle Access Pass. Both are available at wsdot.wa.gov.

    Hours: Open year-round. No entrance fee for the trail.

    How Langus Fits Into Everett’s Parks System

    Langus fills a gap that Everett’s other signature parks don’t cover. Forest Park is the wooded, family-with-kids destination on the west side. Howarth Park is the Puget Sound beach access point. Thornton A. Sullivan Park at Silver Lake is the south Everett lakeside destination.

    Langus is different from all three: it’s a river estuary, it connects to a major wildlife reserve, and it has real water recreation infrastructure. If you want to actually see wildlife — not just green space — Langus and Spencer Island are your best local bet.

    The park sits in north Everett, adjacent to Riverside — Everett’s oldest neighborhood, platted in 1891 along this same stretch of the Snohomish River. A Langus visit pairs naturally with a walk through Riverside’s historic streets, or with a trip to Jetty Island (ferry runs seasonally from Everett Marina) for a full north Everett outdoor day.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does Langus Riverfront Park require a day pass or entrance fee?

    No entrance fee for the trail. One or more parking lots require a Discover Pass or Washington State Vehicle Access Pass.

    How do I get to Spencer Island from Langus?

    Follow the paved trail from the main parking area; it connects to the access road and then to the bridge to Spencer Island. The southern loop on Spencer Island adds about 1.7 miles.

    Is the trail paved the whole way?

    The Langus loop is fully paved. Spencer Island’s elevated dike trail is unpaved.

    What’s the best season to visit for birdwatching?

    Spring and fall migration seasons bring the widest variety of shorebirds and waterfowl. Winter brings waterfowl that stay all season. Summer is good for raptors and nesting activity.

    Can I launch a kayak or canoe here?

    Yes. The boat launch at Langus is functional for small watercraft.

    Is Langus dog-friendly?

    The trail is popular with dog walkers. Keep dogs on leash per standard Everett parks rules.

    What is the Spencer Island Restoration Project?

    The Army Corps of Engineers, WDFW, and Snohomish County are in final design on estuary habitat restoration for Spencer Island, with 2026 updates expected. Check snohomishcountywa.gov for current access information.

  • FIFA World Cup 2026 Seattle: Why Global Travelers Should Base in Everett

    FIFA World Cup 2026 Seattle: Why Global Travelers Should Base in Everett

    The 2026 FIFA World Cup brings international soccer to Seattle — and with it, hundreds of thousands of global travelers who will need places to stay, eat, explore, and remember. Seattle’s hotel market will be stretched. Smart travelers are already looking north. Everett, Washington is 25 miles from downtown Seattle, connected by Sounder commuter rail, and sitting on the edge of some of the most dramatic Pacific Northwest scenery on the continent. This is the guide for global travelers who want the World Cup experience without the Seattle price tag.

    Quick facts for international travelers: Seattle is hosting FIFA World Cup 2026 matches at Lumen Field. Everett is 30 minutes north by Sounder commuter rail. The Snohomish County/Everett area offers waterfront hotels, dining, and direct access to the Olympic Peninsula, North Cascades, and San Juan Islands — all within a 90-minute drive.

    Why Everett for FIFA World Cup 2026

    Lumen Field in Seattle is the match venue. But Seattle’s hotel inventory — concentrated in Capitol Hill, South Lake Union, and the waterfront — will be fully booked weeks before the first match. International travelers booking late will find rates at multiples of normal. Everett offers a genuine alternative: a working waterfront city with its own character, direct rail access to Seattle, and a base from which the entire Pacific Northwest is reachable.

    The Sounder North commuter rail runs between Everett and Seattle’s King Street Station. The trip takes approximately 50 minutes and deposits travelers two blocks from Pioneer Square and within a mile of Lumen Field. No rental car, no parking, no traffic. International travelers accustomed to European rail culture will find it a familiar experience.

    Getting from Seattle to Everett

    There are three practical options for match-day travel between Everett and Seattle:

    • Sounder North commuter rail — Direct service, King Street Station to Everett Station. Approximately 50 minutes. Sound Transit operates the line and fares are purchased via the ORCA card system, available at stations.
    • Interstate 5 by car or rideshare — 30 miles, 30–60 minutes depending on traffic. On match days, expect significant congestion southbound. Plan to arrive at least 3 hours before kickoff if driving.
    • Community Transit express bus — Swift bus rapid transit and express routes connect Everett to Seattle with stops at Lynnwood Transit Center, which connects to the Link Light Rail system into downtown Seattle.

    Where to Stay in Everett

    Everett’s hotel stock ranges from major chain properties near the interstate to boutique waterfront options near the marina. The waterfront district — along West Marine View Drive — puts travelers within walking distance of the Port of Everett, restaurants, and the Boxcar Park recreational area. For World Cup visitors, booking 3–6 months in advance is strongly recommended given regional demand.

    The Angel of the Winds Arena entertainment district anchors Everett’s downtown hospitality cluster. Hotels within walking distance of the arena and the Everett Station transit hub offer the most convenient base for rail-dependent travelers.

    Beyond the Match: What to Do in the Everett Area

    The Boeing Future of Flight

    The Boeing Future of Flight Aviation Center in Mukilteo, 10 miles south of Everett, houses the largest building by volume in the world — the Boeing 777X and 787 Dreamliner assembly facility. Tours run daily and offer a genuinely rare industrial experience unavailable anywhere else in the world. International visitors consistently rate it among the most memorable stops in the Pacific Northwest.

    Possession Sound and the Puget Sound Waterways

    Everett sits at the northern tip of Possession Sound, where the Snohomish River delta meets the inland sea of Puget Sound. Washington State Ferries connect Mukilteo (15 minutes from Everett) to Whidbey Island — the largest island in the contiguous United States — with crossings every 30 minutes. A day trip to Whidbey from Everett requires no car if you walk onto the ferry.

    Snohomish River Valley

    The town of Snohomish, 12 miles east of Everett, is a National Register historic district with antique shops, farm-to-table restaurants, and views across the agricultural valley toward the Cascade foothills. For international travelers expecting generic American strip-mall tourism, Snohomish is a reliable corrective.

    Everett as the Gateway to the Olympic Peninsula

    The Olympic Peninsula — home to Olympic National Park, the Hoh Rain Forest, Hurricane Ridge, and the Pacific coastline at Ruby Beach — is 90 minutes to two hours from Everett. The crossing involves the Kingston-Edmonds ferry (20 minutes south of Everett) or the Bainbridge Island ferry from downtown Seattle. World Cup visitors with a rest day between matches have enough time for a meaningful Olympic Peninsula experience: the Hoh Rain Forest and a stretch of Pacific coast can be done in a long day from Everett.

    For International Travelers: Practical Notes

    Washington State has no sales tax on groceries. Tipping is standard at restaurants (18–20%) and for ride services. The US dollar is the currency; credit cards are accepted nearly universally. Cellular coverage in Everett is strong across all major US carriers. The Everett waterfront and downtown core are walkable. Summers in Western Washington are mild — temperatures in July and August (the World Cup period) typically run 65–80°F (18–27°C) with low humidity and long daylight hours.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How far is Everett from FIFA World Cup 2026 matches in Seattle?

    Everett is approximately 25 miles north of Seattle’s Lumen Field. Sounder North commuter rail makes the trip in about 50 minutes. By car, the drive is 30–60 minutes depending on traffic.

    Is Everett worth visiting during the FIFA World Cup?

    Yes — Everett offers waterfront dining, ferry access to Whidbey Island and the Olympic Peninsula, the Boeing Future of Flight, and lower hotel rates than Seattle. It is a genuine base, not just an overflow option.

    Can I get to Seattle matches from Everett without a car?

    Yes. Sounder North rail connects Everett Station to Seattle’s King Street Station. Community Transit express buses connect to Lynnwood’s Link Light Rail station for an alternative route into downtown Seattle.

    What is the best area to stay in Everett for World Cup visitors?

    The waterfront district and downtown Everett near Everett Station offer the most convenient base for car-free travelers using Sounder rail to reach Seattle matches.



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  • Port Townsend: Victorian Heritage Festival Countdown & Fort Worden Spring Visit — April 2026

    Port Townsend: Victorian Heritage Festival Countdown & Fort Worden Spring Visit — April 2026

    Port Townsend is gearing up for one of the most distinctive weekends on the Olympic Peninsula — and this year, it comes with a milestone worth circling on your calendar.

    Victorian Heritage Festival Returns April 24–26

    The 30th annual Port Townsend Victorian Heritage Festival lands April 24–26, and this year it carries extra weight: Port Townsend is celebrating its 175th birthday.

    Headquartered at the Cotton Building on Water Street (607 Water St), the festival brings Victorian fashion shows, period dancing, historical education programs, and a special birthday proclamation for the city. If you have never wandered downtown Port Townsend surrounded by hundreds of people in full Victorian regalia, it is one of the most uniquely wonderful experiences on this entire peninsula.

    A practical tip: book your accommodations now. Port Townsend fills up fast for this one, and the inns near the water go first. The festival runs three full days, so plan for at least one overnight if you are coming from outside Jefferson County.

    Fort Worden State Park — Perfect Spring Timing

    If you have not made it out to Fort Worden State Park this spring yet, April is one of the best months to go. The crowds are still light, the tide pools along the beach are active with life, and the old concrete gun batteries jutting up from the bluffs look dramatic in that low spring light. It is the kind of place that feels like you have stepped into a different era.

    The campsite reservation season opened April 1 and runs through October 31. If you have never stayed in one of the historic Victorian officers’ quarters with the Strait of Juan de Fuca right outside your window, add it to the bucket list immediately.

    The Centrum Foundation has spring programming running at the park right now — check their calendar before you visit to catch a workshop, rehearsal, or open event.

    Fort Worden State Park is located at 200 Battery Way, Port Townsend. Day use is free with a Discover Pass.

    Plan Your Visit

    Port Townsend sits at the northeastern tip of the Olympic Peninsula, about a two-hour drive from Seattle via the Kingston or Bainbridge Island ferry. Mid-April through late April is one of the sweetest windows — mild weather, fewer crowds than summer, and the Victorian Festival as your anchor event. Whether you come for the history, the hiking, or just to see the town in full 19th-century costume, this is Port Townsend at its best.

  • Forks, Washington Isn’t Just the Twilight Town: A Local’s Guide to What It Actually Is

    Forks, Washington Isn’t Just the Twilight Town: A Local’s Guide to What It Actually Is

    Forks, Washington is a working timber town of about 3,800 people that doubles as the gateway to the Hoh Rainforest, La Push beaches, and the wildest stretch of the Olympic Peninsula. Yes, Twilight put it on the map. No, that’s not why you should go.

    If you’ve read anything about Forks in the last fifteen years, it probably opened with a vampire reference. Stephenie Meyer’s books and the movies that followed turned this remote logging town into a pop-culture pilgrimage site, and the local economy adapted — gift shops, themed motel rooms, a dedicated Forever Twilight in Forks festival every September. The town leaned into the moment, and good for them.

    But here’s what most travel guides miss: Forks was already a destination before Bella Swan ever drove past the Welcome sign. It’s the closest town to one of the only temperate rainforests in the contiguous United States. It’s the last reliable gas, groceries, and supplies before you head into some of the most remote terrain in the lower 48. And the locals — many of whom have logged these forests for three generations — have opinions about the Twilight thing that are funnier and more nuanced than any tour guide will tell you.

    This is what Forks actually is, from someone who’s been driving Highway 101 through it for years.

    The Quick Facts About Forks, Washington

    What it is: A small city in Clallam County on the western Olympic Peninsula, population roughly 3,800.

    Where it is: About 3.5 hours by car from Seattle, mostly via the Edmonds-Kingston ferry and Highway 101 west through Port Angeles.

    Why it matters: Forks is the practical basecamp for the western half of Olympic National Park — Hoh Rainforest, La Push, Rialto Beach, Lake Quinault, and the Quileute coastline are all within an hour’s drive.

    The famous fact: Forks averages about 120 inches of rain per year, which makes it the rainiest incorporated town in the contiguous 48 states.

    The Twilight thing: Yes, the books and movies are set here. No, almost nothing was actually filmed in Forks itself — the films were shot mostly in Oregon and British Columbia. The town owns the brand anyway, and that’s part of the charm.

    What Forks Is Actually Like

    Forks looks exactly like what it is: a working town that figured out how to also welcome visitors without losing its identity. The downtown is one main strip along Highway 101, maybe four blocks of walkable storefronts surrounded by motels, the timber museum, and the kind of practical businesses you find in any small Washington logging town — a feed store, a couple of mechanics, a Thriftway grocery, a couple of espresso drive-throughs.

    The local high school’s mascot is the Spartans, and there’s a sign on the way into town that reads “Home of the Spartans,” which locals will tell you very dryly is not “Home of the Vampires.” That joke gets made roughly a hundred times a day, and the locals have learned to smile through it.

    The economy used to be 90% timber. It’s now a mix: timber is still significant, tourism is significant (especially in the spring and summer), and a surprising amount of money flows through Forks because of its position as the last service town before the Olympic Coast. If you’re heading to La Push, the Hoh, or the southern beaches, you probably stopped in Forks. If you’re driving the full Olympic Peninsula loop, you definitely passed through.

    Why Forks Is Worth a Stop (Even If You Don’t Care About Twilight)

    1. It’s the Practical Gateway to the Hoh Rainforest

    The Hoh Rain Forest Visitor Center is about a 30-minute drive from downtown Forks via Upper Hoh Road. The Hoh is one of the few temperate rainforests left in the United States — moss-draped maples, Sitka spruce that have been growing for 500 years, ferns that grow as tall as a person. It receives 12 to 14 feet of rain per year, which is what makes it look like the set of a fantasy movie.

    If you’re staying in Forks, you can be standing under those trees within 45 minutes of waking up. Try doing that from Seattle.

    2. La Push and Rialto Beach Are 15 Minutes West

    Drive Highway 110 west from Forks for 15 minutes and you hit the Quileute Tribe’s land at La Push. First Beach, Second Beach, and Third Beach — yes, those are the actual names — are some of the most photogenic stretches of coastline on the West Coast. Massive sea stacks, driftwood logs the size of school buses, and tide pools at low tide. Rialto Beach, just to the north, is the famous one with the Hole-in-the-Wall arch you can hike to at low tide.

    This area is on tribal land, which means a few rules: respect signage about photography near cultural sites, pay any required tribal recreation passes, and shop local at Quileute-owned businesses if you can.

    3. Cape Flattery Is the Northwesternmost Point of the Contiguous US

    About 90 minutes northwest of Forks, on Makah tribal land in Neah Bay, is Cape Flattery — the literal end of the contiguous United States. It’s a 0.75-mile boardwalk hike to four observation decks looking out over sea caves, Tatoosh Island, and the Pacific. You’ll need a $10 Makah Recreation Pass, available at the Makah Tribal Center or local stores in Neah Bay. The Makah Cultural and Research Center is world-class and worth a couple of hours on its own.

    4. The Forks Timber Museum Is Better Than It Sounds

    Two floors of exhibits about the Pacific Northwest timber industry sounds like a yawn until you actually walk through it. You learn how the forests were logged before chainsaws (springboards driven into trees so a guy could stand on them and saw with a two-man crosscut). You learn how the industry collapsed in the 1990s with the spotted owl rulings and how the town survived it. There’s also a Twilight scavenger hunt for fans, because of course there is. About $5, takes 1-2 hours.

    5. Sully’s Drive-In Is a Real Forks Institution

    Open since 1945. Order at the window, eat in your car or at one of the picnic tables. The “Bella Burger” is on the menu, but the regular cheeseburger is what the locals get. It’s the kind of place where the same people have been working the grill for 20 years and they remember what you ordered last time you were through town.

    The Twilight Stuff (Yes, We Have to Talk About It)

    If you’re a fan, you’re going to do this anyway, so here’s the practical version:

    Almost nothing was actually filmed in Forks. The first Twilight movie was mostly shot in Oregon (the Cullen house is in Portland, the high school is in Kalama, Washington), and the sequels were filmed in British Columbia. What you can do in Forks is visit the book locations — the houses that inspired Bella’s house and the Cullens’ house, the actual high school (Forks High, real and operating), and the Welcome to Forks sign that opens the first movie.

    The Forks Chamber of Commerce will hand you a free self-guided Twilight map. Bella’s red truck (or one of several replicas) usually lives outside the visitor center for photo ops. The Forever Twilight in Forks Collection at the Rainforest Arts Center has actual costumes and props from the movies — small space, takes 15 minutes to walk through, worth it if you’re a fan.

    The annual Forever Twilight in Forks Festival runs the weekend closest to Bella’s birthday (September 13). It pulls in fans from around the world and turns into a four-day costume party, panel-discussion, vampire-werewolf-themed celebration. Lodging books out a year in advance.

    If you’re not a Twilight fan, all of the above can be skipped without losing anything important about the trip.

    Practical Stuff: What You Actually Need to Know

    Where to Stay

    Forks has a handful of solid motels — Pacific Inn, Olympic Suites, Forks Motel, Misty Valley Inn — all in the $100-180/night range depending on season. Several Twilight-themed rooms exist if that’s your thing. Vacation rentals on the edges of town tend to be better for groups. Booking 2-3 months out is fine outside of festival weekend; book a year out for September.

    Where to Eat

    Beyond Sully’s, the standouts are:

    • The Longhouse Cafe — Native cuisine, fry bread tacos, salmon. Worth going out of your way for.
    • Pacific Pizza — Solid pizza, owned by the Woodland Inns folks, will deliver to the inn rooms.
    • Blakeslee’s Bar and Grill — Where the locals drink. Burger and a beer, no pretensions.
    • A Shot in the Dark — Drive-through espresso, breakfast sandwiches, the morning routine for half the town.

    Gas, Groceries, Supplies

    This is the practical thing nobody tells you: fill up in Forks before heading west. Gas prices in Forks are higher than Port Angeles but lower than the Quinault gas station to the south. The Forks Thriftway is a real grocery store with everything you’d expect. The next reliable grocery west of Forks is essentially Aberdeen, three hours away. Cell coverage is reliable in town and on Highway 101 but spotty once you head into the Hoh or out to the coast.

    When to Go

    Locals will tell you the best time to visit Forks is October through May, when the rainforest is most alive and the trails are empty. That’s true if you don’t mind rain — and you should not mind rain, because Forks is the rainiest town in the contiguous US.

    If you want better odds of dry weather, mid-July through mid-September is your window. That’s also peak season, so book ahead. Shoulder seasons (May-June, late September) are the sweet spot: lower crowds, decent weather, everything open.

    How Long to Stay

    A day-trip from Port Angeles or Seattle is doable but you’ll feel rushed. Two nights in Forks lets you do the Hoh, La Push, and the in-town stuff without driving yourself ragged. Three nights and you can add Cape Flattery and a slower pace.

    How Forks Fits Into a Bigger Olympic Peninsula Trip

    If you’re doing the full Olympic Peninsula loop, the standard route is Port Angeles → Lake Crescent → Forks → Hoh Rainforest → La Push → Lake Quinault → Aberdeen and back. Forks sits roughly in the middle of that loop, which makes it a logical overnight or two.

    If you’re flying into Seattle and only have a long weekend, the most efficient version is: drive directly to Forks (via Edmonds ferry to Kingston, then west on 104 and 101), use Forks as basecamp for two nights, hit the Hoh and La Push, then drive back out via Port Angeles and Lake Crescent. That gets you the highlights without spending most of your trip in the car.

    The Bottom Line on Forks

    Forks isn’t a destination in the conventional sense. It’s a basecamp. It’s where you sleep and eat and refuel so that you can spend your daylight hours in the Hoh, on the beaches, or at Cape Flattery. The town itself is small, friendly, practical, and has more character than the Twilight reputation suggests.

    Don’t skip it. Use it.


    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Forks, Washington worth visiting?

    Yes, especially if you’re using it as a basecamp for the Hoh Rainforest, La Push beaches, or the western Olympic Peninsula. It’s small but well-equipped, with motels, restaurants, gas, and groceries. Skip it only if you’re doing a quick Lake Crescent and Hurricane Ridge day-trip from Port Angeles.

    How far is Forks, Washington from Seattle?

    About 3.5 hours by car. The fastest route is the Edmonds-Kingston ferry across Puget Sound, then west on Highway 104 to Highway 101, through Port Angeles, and west to Forks. The drive west of Lake Crescent is one of the most scenic stretches of road in Washington.

    Was Twilight actually filmed in Forks, Washington?

    No, almost nothing was filmed in Forks itself. The first Twilight movie was shot mostly in Oregon (the Cullen house is in Portland, Forks High School scenes were filmed at Kalama High School in Washington). The sequels were filmed in British Columbia. What you can visit in Forks are the real-world locations described in Stephenie Meyer’s books, plus the Forever Twilight in Forks Collection of actual costumes and props.

    How many days do you need in Forks, Washington?

    Two nights is the sweet spot for most travelers. That gives you a full day for the Hoh Rainforest and La Push beaches, plus time to explore Forks itself and either Cape Flattery or a tide pool morning. Three nights if you want to add Cape Flattery and slow down. One night is doable if you’re just passing through.

    Why does it rain so much in Forks, Washington?

    Forks sits on the windward side of the Olympic Mountains, where moist Pacific air gets pushed up the western slope and dumps massive amounts of rainfall — about 120 inches per year on average. This is what creates the temperate rainforest ecosystem of the Hoh and Quinault. Forks is the rainiest incorporated town in the contiguous United States.

    What is there to do in Forks besides Twilight?

    The Hoh Rainforest (30 min east), La Push beaches and Rialto Beach (15 min west), Cape Flattery on Makah tribal land (90 min northwest), the Forks Timber Museum, Sully’s Drive-In, the Quileute Cultural Center, fishing on the Bogachiel and Sol Duc rivers, and miles of hiking trails through Olympic National Park. The town is a basecamp for the western Olympic Peninsula.

    When is the Forever Twilight in Forks Festival?

    The festival runs the weekend closest to Bella Swan’s birthday (September 13) each year. The 2026 festival is scheduled for September 10-13. Lodging in Forks books out roughly a year in advance for festival weekend.

    What’s the closest airport to Forks, Washington?

    Sea-Tac International Airport in Seattle is the major airport, about 3.5 hours away by car including the ferry crossing. There’s also a small regional airport in Port Angeles (William R. Fairchild) for charter flights, but it has very limited commercial service.


    Visit our Exploring Olympic Peninsula Facebook page for daily updates from the road, current trail conditions, and seasonal recommendations across the Olympic Peninsula.



  • ONP Insider: Sol Duc Valley Is Open — Hot Springs, Old-Growth Falls & April Quiet Season — Exploring Olympic Peninsula

    ONP Insider: Sol Duc Valley Is Open — Hot Springs, Old-Growth Falls & April Quiet Season — Exploring Olympic Peninsula

    Sol Duc Valley is open — and April is one of the best-kept secrets for visiting Olympic National Park.

    Sol Duc Road reopened on March 24, and the Sol Duc Hot Springs Resort is running its spring season through May 20. That means you can hike to Sol Duc Falls — an easy 1.6-mile round trip through cathedral old-growth forest where the water is absolutely thundering this time of year — then soak your trail-tired muscles in the mineral hot springs pools, all before summer crowds arrive. Weekday visits in April are genuinely quiet. This is ONP without the chaos.

    Sol Duc Falls is one of the most spectacular waterfalls on the entire Olympic Peninsula. The trail winds through ancient old-growth Sitka spruce and western red cedar, and the falls split dramatically around a central rock island before plunging into a narrow gorge. In April, with snowmelt feeding the flow, it’s at full power.

    Insider tip: the Lover’s Lane Loop connects Sol Duc Falls back to the campground area for a longer old-growth ramble — a great way to stretch a half-day into a full one. Reservations for the hot springs pools are smart even on April weekends. Always verify road and facility status at NPS.gov/olym or call (360) 565-3131 before heading out, as mountain conditions can change quickly.

    Sol Duc Valley Current Conditions

    • Sol Duc Road: Open as of March 24, 2026 ✅
    • Sol Duc Hot Springs Resort: Open spring season March 20 – May 20 ✅
    • Sol Duc Falls Trail: Open — 1.6 miles RT, easy, old-growth forest. Waterfalls at peak spring flow.
    • Lover’s Lane Loop: Open — connects falls to campground for extended hike
    • Campground: Available via Recreation.gov

    Quick status notes on other ONP areas: Hurricane Ridge Road remains weather-dependent through April 30. Staircase is closed due to Bear Gulch Fire impacts. Mora Road/Rialto Beach has single-lane construction. Always check NPS.gov/olym for current conditions.

    Sources: NPS.gov/olym conditions page (updated April 4, 2026), Washington Trails Association trip reports, Sol Duc Hot Springs Resort