Tag: Washington state travel

  • Inside Boeing’s Future of Flight Tour in 2026: New Exhibits, Seven-Day Operations, and What’s Actually Worth the Ticket

    Inside Boeing’s Future of Flight Tour in 2026: New Exhibits, Seven-Day Operations, and What’s Actually Worth the Ticket

    Q: Is Boeing’s Future of Flight open every day in 2026?
    A: Yes. Boeing expanded its Future of Flight Aviation Center and the Everett factory tour to seven days a week, Monday through Sunday, 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., starting in early 2026. General admission tickets start at $14, and the add-on Everett factory tour starts at $42. New exhibits include a Wisk autonomous air taxi and a Boeing space-exploration engineering zone.

    The Everett Factory Tour Is Open More Than It’s Ever Been

    If you live in Everett and you’ve never actually taken the Future of Flight tour, you are not alone. It’s the thing you drive past on 526 and tell out-of-town family members to go see. That might be shifting in 2026.

    Boeing has expanded hours at the Future of Flight Aviation Center in Mukilteo and the Everett factory tour that runs out of it — from five days a week up to all seven, starting in early 2026. The center sits at 8415 Paine Field Boulevard, right at the south edge of the Boeing Everett factory, and it’s the only way the general public gets inside the world’s largest building by volume.

    The expanded schedule is a real change, not a press release. Tickets that used to require planning around a Wednesday-through-Sunday window now work for a Monday morning off. For a city whose economy runs on the factory 5,000 feet away, this is one of the easier ways to reconnect Everett residents with what the 42,000-person Boeing workforce is actually doing inside the building every day.

    What’s New at the Future of Flight in 2026

    Boeing added two significant new exhibit pieces at Future of Flight heading into 2026, both of which point at where the aerospace industry is headed, not just where it’s been.

    Wisk autonomous air taxi. Wisk Aero is Boeing’s all-electric, self-flying air taxi program. The Future of Flight gallery now includes a display model. If you’ve ever wondered what “urban air mobility” actually looks like on the ramp — as opposed to in a marketing video — this is your chance to see one at ground level. For Everett families, the display is notable precisely because Wisk is a bet on a category of flight that doesn’t yet exist at scale: short-hop electric air travel over metropolitan areas.

    Boeing space exploration zone. The new engineering zone highlights Boeing’s work beyond commercial jets — the Starliner crew capsule, space station hardware, and the deep-space engineering that happens at other Boeing sites but draws on the same broad engineering talent base that staffs Everett and the Puget Sound region. It’s a useful reminder that Boeing is more than the 737 MAX news cycle.

    These pieces join the existing Future of Flight staples: the photo-ready commercial engine displays, the kid-friendly flight simulator zone, the gallery of Boeing program history, and the balcony vantage over the 777/777X final assembly floor that is the actual reason most visitors are there.

    What the Factory Tour Actually Includes Right Now

    The factory tour itself is an 80-minute guided experience built around the Boeing Everett Factory balcony. In practical 2026 terms, here’s what that means:

    777 and 777X final assembly. Visitors see the 777 production line and — critically for anyone paying attention to Boeing’s 2026 news cycle — the 777X aircraft currently moving through production. Several 777X airframes, including the one destined for launch customer Lufthansa, have been on the factory floor this year as Boeing targets its first production-standard 777X flight from Paine Field in April. Whether a given tour happens to catch that specific airframe is luck of the draw, but the line is active and visible.

    767 line, in its final commercial chapter. The same factory floor that hosts the 777 line also hosts the 767 final assembly line, which is running through its last commercial 767-300F freighters for FedEx and UPS before pivoting to KC-46 tanker-only production in 2027. For anyone who wants to see a 45-year-old Everett program in its final year, the tour is currently one of the only legal, scheduled ways to do it.

    The 737 MAX North Line — eventually. The new 737 MAX North Line is targeting a midsummer 2026 activation in Everett. Once that line is active, it will be visible as part of the tour route. Boeing has already toured its CEO through the line and begun staff training. Tour routes are updated periodically as production configurations change.

    Practical Info for Everett Locals

    For residents who have never done the tour or who have done it once and forgotten the logistics, a short refresher:

    • Location: 8415 Paine Field Boulevard, Mukilteo, WA — about a 10-minute drive from downtown Everett.
    • Hours: Monday through Sunday, 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Closed on certain federal holidays.
    • General admission: From $14. Includes Future of Flight gallery and exhibits.
    • Add-on factory tour: From $42. Covers the 80-minute guided experience inside the factory.
    • Age minimum: The factory tour has a minimum age and height requirement. Check Boeing’s official Future of Flight site for the current rules before booking with kids.
    • Photos: Allowed in the Future of Flight gallery. Not allowed inside the factory itself — you’ll stow your phone at the tour’s start.
    • Parking: On-site, free for visitors. Large lot that is rarely full outside peak summer weekends.

    Why This Matters for Everett’s Tourism Story

    There’s a broader economic angle that’s easy to miss if you live here. The Future of Flight is one of the Everett region’s few nationally recognized tourism assets — an attraction that pulls visitors off I-5 who would otherwise drive past Everett on their way between Seattle and Vancouver. The expansion from five to seven operating days and the new exhibit investment signal that Boeing sees Future of Flight as something worth continuing to fund as a public-facing front door to its industrial base.

    For Everett’s hotel, restaurant, and retail operators along Broadway and the waterfront, a Future of Flight operating at seven-day capacity is a reliable, year-round volume of aerospace-curious day-trippers. Those visitors don’t just disappear after the tour — they eat lunch, grab coffee, and sometimes extend into an overnight. In a city that has been deliberately rebuilding its waterfront hospitality economy, every additional operating day at Paine Field Boulevard matters at the margin.

    And for the tens of thousands of aerospace workers whose families have never actually seen what the second shift builds, a weekend Future of Flight visit is now easier to schedule than it has been in years.

    What to Expect If You Haven’t Been Since 2023

    The Future of Flight reopened in October 2023 after a two-year COVID-era closure, with a revised tour script and updated route. Visitors returning in 2026 for the first time since that reopening will notice:

    • Expanded galleries with the new Wisk and space exhibits.
    • A tour route that reflects current production configurations, not the pre-closure era.
    • Extended weekly operating days.
    • Active 777X production visible on the floor, which was not the case during the earliest reopening months.

    If the last time you took the tour was pre-pandemic, this is a different experience — the tour script is different, the exhibits are different, and the active programs visible on the factory floor are different. It’s worth a second visit.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How much does the Boeing Everett factory tour cost?

    General admission to the Future of Flight Aviation Center starts at $14. The add-on guided factory tour starts at $42. Prices vary by age, group size, and package. Boeing’s official Future of Flight booking site has the current, full pricing.

    Is the Boeing factory tour open every day in 2026?

    Yes. Starting in early 2026, the Future of Flight Aviation Center and the Everett factory tour are open seven days a week, Monday through Sunday, 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. They close on certain federal holidays.

    What airplanes can I see on the Boeing Everett factory tour?

    The tour provides views of the 777 and 777X final assembly line, the 767 line (in its final commercial chapter through 2027), and — once the new 737 MAX North Line is operational later in 2026 — single-aisle 737 MAX production as well. Specific aircraft visible on any given tour depend on the production schedule that day.

    Can I take photos inside the Boeing Everett factory?

    No. Photography is not permitted inside the factory itself. You’ll stow phones and cameras at the start of the factory tour. Photography is allowed inside the Future of Flight gallery and exhibit areas.

    How old do you have to be to take the Boeing factory tour?

    The factory tour has a minimum age and height requirement set by Boeing for safety reasons. Check the current requirement on Boeing’s Future of Flight site before booking with young children, as the exact threshold is updated periodically.

    How long is the Everett factory tour?

    The guided factory tour portion is about 80 minutes. Allow at least two to three hours for the full Future of Flight visit if you want to explore the exhibits before or after the factory tour.

    Is the Future of Flight worth it if I live in Everett?

    For local residents who haven’t been since the 2023 reopening, the refreshed tour script, new Wisk and space-exploration exhibits, and the active 777X and upcoming 737 MAX North Line production all give longtime locals a reason to revisit. It’s also one of the most concrete ways to help visiting family understand what the 42,000-person Boeing Everett workforce actually builds.

  • Boating Into Waterfront Place: A 2026 Guide for Visiting Boaters at the Largest Public Marina on the West Coast

    Boating Into Waterfront Place: A 2026 Guide for Visiting Boaters at the Largest Public Marina on the West Coast

    Q: I’m bringing my boat to Everett. How does the Port of Everett Marina and Waterfront Place work for visiting boaters?

    A: The Port of Everett Marina is the largest public marina on the West Coast — 2,300 slips and 5,000 linear feet of guest moorage. Visiting boaters can use guest moorage on a daily or seasonal basis, with rates and reservations through the Port’s marina office. The marina has fuel, pump-out, restrooms, showers, and direct walking access to all Waterfront Place restaurants — including Tapped Public House’s rooftop, Marina Azul Cocina & Cantina (opening early spring 2026) for boat-to-deck dining, The Net Shed Fresh Fish Market for grab-and-go seafood, and Menchie’s at the Marina. Approach the marina through the north or south breakwater entrances; check in at the marina office for slip assignment. Plan a slow approach — the harbor is busy with commercial, fishing, and pleasure craft.

    Boating Into Waterfront Place: A 2026 Guide for Visiting Boaters at the Largest Public Marina on the West Coast

    The Port of Everett Marina is, by slip count, the largest public marina on the West Coast. 2,300 slips. 5,000 linear feet of guest moorage. Two basins, north and south, separated by a working commercial harbor and a Coast Guard cutter pier. The redevelopment that turned the surrounding land into Waterfront Place transformed what was already a functional boating destination into one with a real reason to dock and stay.

    This is the 2026 guide for visiting boaters — what to expect on approach, where to moor for which restaurant, fuel and service logistics, and how to make the most of a Waterfront Place visit from the water.

    The Marina, By the Numbers

    • 2,300 slips total across North and South Marina basins
    • 5,000 linear feet of guest moorage for visiting boats
    • Fuel dock with gas and diesel
    • Pump-out service available
    • Restrooms and showers at multiple dock locations
    • Direct walking access to all Waterfront Place tenants
    • Channel depth sufficient for most pleasure craft; verify draft for larger vessels

    Slip waitlists vary by size class — small slips often have shorter waits than 50+ foot slots. Guest moorage is generally available, especially weekday and shoulder-season; weekend summer moorage in peak season can fill, particularly during major regional events.

    Approach and Entry

    The marina is in Port Gardner Bay, just south of Jetty Island. Approach is from the south through the channel between Jetty Island and the Everett shoreline. The North Marina entrance is at the north end of the breakwater; the South Marina entrance is south of the commercial pier complex.

    Things to know on approach:

    • Working commercial harbor — expect to share the channel with cargo ships, fishing vessels, Coast Guard cutters, and Mukilteo–Everett water taxi traffic. Slow speeds and constant lookout.
    • Currents in Port Gardner can be substantial, particularly with tidal exchange. Check NOAA tides and currents before entry.
    • VHF Channel 16 monitored by the marina office; switch to working channel as directed for slip assignment.
    • Jetty Island sandbar shifts seasonally — stay in the marked channel.

    Checking In and Slip Assignment

    Visiting boaters should check in at the Port of Everett Marina Office on arrival. The office assigns guest moorage based on vessel size, intended length of stay, and current availability. Fees are paid at check-in. The Port’s website publishes current guest moorage rates.

    For longer stays or known arrival dates, calling or emailing ahead through the Port’s website to reserve guest moorage is recommended, particularly during peak summer weekends.

    Where to Moor for Which Restaurant

    Walking distances at the Port of Everett Marina are real — the property is large. If your priority is dinner at a specific restaurant, ask the marina office for a slip assignment closer to the relevant dock:

    For Marina Azul Cocina & Cantina (opening early spring 2026): Marina Azul has ground-floor space directly on the water with a deck designed for boat-to-deck dining. Slips closest to the Restaurant Row property are the highest-leverage assignment. The boat-up taco-and-paloma experience is the marketing pitch and is genuinely possible.

    For Tapped Public House rooftop deck: The Restaurant Row building is centrally located between the basins. Most guest moorage assignments will put you within a 5–10 minute walk to the rooftop entrance.

    For The Net Shed Fresh Fish Market & Kitchen: Ground floor of the Restaurant Row building. The market side is convenient for grab-and-go seafood you can take back to the boat for galley cooking.

    For Hotel Indigo / Bluewater Distilling: The hotel sits on the property with restaurant access at the ground floor. Convenient for boaters tying up overnight and using hotel amenities.

    For Pacific Coast Salmon Coalition gift shop: First-phase retail anchor; convenient stop for marine supplies and salmon-themed retail.

    Fuel and Pump-Out

    The Port of Everett Marina fuel dock has gas and diesel, with hours posted seasonally on the Port’s website. Pump-out service is available — coordinate timing with the marina office, especially during peak weekends.

    For boats needing maintenance during a stay, S3 Maritime is now operating at the marina with marine maintenance and repair services. The Port also has long-standing relationships with several boatyards in Snohomish County for haulouts and major work.

    Boating Through the Year at Waterfront Place

    April through June: Spring weekend traffic ramping. Tapped’s rooftop deck becomes the destination as soon as weather supports outdoor seating. Marina Azul opens this spring. Salmon and bottomfish opportunities in nearby waters.

    July through September: Peak season. Jetty Island free passenger ferry runs, drawing daytime visitor traffic. Mukilteo–Everett water taxi seasonal service. Best weather for guest moorage and outdoor dining.

    October through March: Slower season. Easier guest moorage availability. Indoor restaurant experiences shine. Storm-watching weather is real and can affect harbor entry; check forecasts.

    What’s Within Boat Range From the Marina

    For multi-day cruising itineraries, Waterfront Place fits naturally into Snohomish-area boating circuits:

    • Jetty Island — under a mile, walkable beach experience
    • Mukilteo — short hop, ferry terminal area, restaurants
    • Hat Island, Camano Island, Whidbey Island — day-cruising destinations within easy reach
    • Langley on Whidbey — popular weekend destination
    • Bellingham, San Juan Islands — extended cruise destinations to the north
    • Seattle Marinas — south to Shilshole, Elliott Bay, Bell Harbor

    Waterfront Place is increasingly the central refueling, restocking, and dining stop for North Sound and inside-passage cruising itineraries.

    What’s Different in 2026 Versus Past Years

    If you boated into the Port of Everett Marina before 2024, the dock-side experience is the same; the on-shore experience is dramatically different. Restaurant Row simply did not exist as a destination before December 2025. The marina was a transient stop or a slip you owned. Now the marina is a destination in its own right — the boat-to-deck dining experience at Marina Azul, the Tapped rooftop, and the casual walk-and-eat options have made overnight moorage at Everett a stronger choice for cruisers than it was even 12 months ago.

    Practical Notes

    • Cell coverage — solid throughout the marina property. WiFi available at most restaurants.
    • Provisioning — limited grocery directly at the marina; the Net Shed Fresh Fish Market handles seafood. Larger grocery runs require a 5–10 minute drive into Everett. Walking distance to downtown Everett core is roughly 15 minutes.
    • Trash and recycling — receptacles at multiple dock points throughout the marina.
    • Security — gated dock access for slip holders; guest moorage is in monitored areas.
    • Water and power at slips — standard marina utilities at most slips; verify amperage with marina office on check-in.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How big is the Port of Everett Marina?

    2,300 slips and 5,000 linear feet of guest moorage — the largest public marina on the West Coast.

    Can visiting boaters get guest moorage at the Port of Everett?

    Yes. Daily and seasonal guest moorage is available, with rates published on the Port’s website. Reservations are recommended for weekend summer arrivals.

    Is there a fuel dock at the Port of Everett Marina?

    Yes. The fuel dock has gas and diesel, with hours posted seasonally.

    Can I dock my boat and walk to Waterfront Place restaurants?

    Yes. All Waterfront Place tenants — Tapped Public House, Rustic Cork, The Net Shed, Menchie’s at the Marina, Marina Azul (opening early spring 2026), and the Bluewater Distilling restaurant at Hotel Indigo — are within walking distance of the marina docks.

    Which restaurant has direct boat-to-deck dining?

    Marina Azul Cocina & Cantina, opening early spring 2026, has ground-floor patio space directly on the water designed for boat-up dining.

    Is pump-out service available?

    Yes. Coordinate timing with the marina office.

    What VHF channel is the marina office on?

    VHF Channel 16 is monitored; the marina office will direct you to a working channel for slip assignment. Verify current procedure with the Port of Everett.

    What should I know about currents in Port Gardner Bay?

    Tidal exchange in Port Gardner can produce substantial currents. Check NOAA tides and currents before entry, particularly for low-power vessels.

    Are there overnight stay options on shore at Waterfront Place?

    Yes. Hotel Indigo Everett Waterfront is the only on-property hotel, with marina views and the Bluewater Distilling restaurant. Convenient for boaters wanting a night off the boat.

  • Visiting Everett’s Waterfront in Spring 2026: A One-Day Guide for the Restaurants, Marina, and Jetty Island

    Visiting Everett’s Waterfront in Spring 2026: A One-Day Guide for the Restaurants, Marina, and Jetty Island

    Q: How should I plan a day trip to Port of Everett’s Waterfront Place in spring 2026?

    A: Plan for a half-day minimum. The Port of Everett’s Waterfront Place opened multiple restaurants between December 2025 and March 2026 and now anchors a credible day-trip experience for visitors from Seattle, Bellingham, and across the I-5 corridor. The high-leverage day-trip plan: arrive by late morning, lunch at The Net Shed Fresh Fish Market & Kitchen or Marina Azul (when open), walk the marina and visit Pacific Coast Salmon Coalition, head to Jetty Island via the seasonal passenger ferry (May–early September), come back for happy hour on Tapped Public House’s rooftop deck, and finish with frozen yogurt at Menchie’s at the Marina. Park free in the lots adjacent to Restaurant Row. Total cost for two: roughly $80–$120 depending on drinks. From Seattle, plan 45 minutes by car or 50 minutes via Sounder North.

    Visiting Everett’s Waterfront in Spring 2026: A One-Day Guide for the Restaurants, Marina, and Jetty Island

    The Port of Everett’s Waterfront Place spent the back half of 2025 and the first quarter of 2026 quietly becoming a credible waterfront day-trip destination. The marina was always there — 2,300 slips, the largest public marina on the West Coast. What’s new is what’s around it. Tapped Public House opened March 2 with the largest open-air waterfront rooftop deck in Snohomish County. Rustic Cork and The Net Shed opened in December 2025. Menchie’s at the Marina cut its ribbon March 13, 2026. Marina Azul Cocina & Cantina is opening this spring. There is now enough at Waterfront Place to spend a full day.

    This guide walks through how to plan that day, in the order most visitors should do it.

    Getting There From Seattle, Bellingham, and Beyond

    From Seattle: 30 miles north on I-5 to exit 194 (Pacific Avenue), then west on Pacific Avenue until the road dead-ends at the marina. 45 minutes off-peak, 60–75 minutes during rush. Or take Sounder North from King Street Station to Everett Station (about 50 minutes), then Community Transit Route 7 or a 15-minute walk to the waterfront.

    From Bellingham: 80 miles south on I-5 to exit 194. About 90 minutes off-peak.

    From Eastside (Bellevue/Kirkland): WA-520 to I-5 north, then exit 194. About 50 minutes off-peak.

    By boat: Guest moorage is available at the Port of Everett Marina. Day-use moorage rates are published on the Port’s website. Approach: enter through the breakwater at the north or south end of the marina; check in at the marina office for assigned moorage.

    Parking

    Free parking is available at multiple surface lots adjacent to Restaurant Row and the marina. Lots are well-marked and within a 2-minute walk of any tenant on the property. Saturday afternoons in summer can fill up; aim to arrive before noon if you want a lot directly behind the Restaurant Row building.

    The High-Leverage Three-Hour Plan

    11:30 AM — Arrive and lunch. Start with The Net Shed Fresh Fish Market & Kitchen for a fast, fresh seafood lunch on the ground floor of the Restaurant Row building. The fish-and-chips and the chowder are the easy first-time orders. Or, when it opens this spring, Marina Azul Cocina & Cantina for tacos and a paloma on the deck directly on the water.

    12:30 PM — Walk the marina. Head south along the marina docks. The walk runs the length of the North Marina basin and into the South Marina, with views of every type of vessel from working fishing boats to high-end pleasure craft. Stop at the Pacific Coast Salmon Coalition gift shop for the salmon-conservation-themed retail and visitor information. The walk takes roughly 30–45 minutes round trip if you don’t stop, longer if you do.

    1:15 PM — Jetty Island ferry (May–early September only). The Port runs a free seasonal passenger ferry from the marina to Jetty Island, the Port’s day-use island sandbar in Possession Sound. Roundtrip rides are 5 minutes each way; the island has a lifeguard-staffed beach in summer, walking trails, and some of the best low-tide tide-pooling in the region. Plan 60–90 minutes on the island if you go.

    3:00 PM — Tapped Public House rooftop happy hour. Head to the rooftop deck of Tapped Public House on the second floor of the Restaurant Row building. Order a drink, take in the view across the marina and Possession Sound, and stay through golden hour if the weather cooperates. This is the showstopper experience at Waterfront Place.

    5:00 PM — Frozen yogurt and walk back. Finish at Menchie’s at the Marina, also on the second floor of the Restaurant Row building. The self-serve frozen yogurt with the rotating flavor wall and toppings bar is a strong way to wrap a sunny waterfront day with kids in tow. Then walk back to the parking lot.

    Variations: Swap Tapped for Rustic Cork Wine Bar if you’d prefer a wine-and-small-plates happy hour. Swap The Net Shed for Bluewater Distilling at Hotel Indigo if you want a sit-down lunch with cocktails.

    What to Know About Each Restaurant

    Tapped Public House. Gastropub menu, full bar, the largest open-air waterfront rooftop deck in Snohomish County. Showstopper view. Best for happy hour or sunset. Reservations recommended on weekends.

    Rustic Cork Wine Bar. Wine-forward program, curated by-the-glass list, small plates and Pacific Northwest food. Best for a quiet wine pairing or a date-night.

    The Net Shed Fresh Fish Market & Kitchen. Fresh fish counter and quick-service kitchen. Casual, walk-up. Best for fast lunch with the family or grabbing fish to take home.

    Menchie’s at the Marina. Self-serve frozen yogurt, pay by weight, rotating flavor wall and toppings bar. Best for after-walk dessert with kids. The first waterfront-facing Menchie’s in the Puget Sound region.

    Marina Azul Cocina & Cantina (opening early spring 2026). Refined Mexican menu, extensive sipping tequila and craft cocktail program. Direct waterfront patio with boat-to-table dining. Best for dinner. From the team behind Casa Azul in Woodinville and Agave Cocina in Issaquah.

    Bluewater Distilling at Hotel Indigo. Hotel restaurant with cocktail-forward bar program. Convenient if staying at Hotel Indigo or arriving by Sounder.

    Beyond Restaurant Row: Other Things at Waterfront Place

    • Hotel Indigo Everett Waterfront — only hotel on the property, with marina views and the Bluewater Distilling restaurant.
    • The Mukilteo–Everett water taxi — seasonal passenger ferry between Everett’s and Mukilteo’s waterfronts. Schedule and rates published seasonally on the Port’s website.
    • Marine services and S3 Maritime — for boaters needing maintenance or supplies.
    • Pacific Coast Salmon Coalition gift shop — salmon-conservation retail and visitor info.

    What’s Worth a Separate Trip

    If your day-trip plan is going well and you have time before driving home, these are within 5 minutes by car:

    • Hewitt Avenue restaurants and bars — Everett’s downtown core has rebuilt its restaurant scene over the last 24 months. Quick walk if you parked downtown.
    • Funko HQ — collectors detour for the Funko store.
    • Schack Art Center — downtown gallery and visiting exhibitions.
    • Howarth Park beach — Everett’s quieter beach park, 5 minutes south of downtown, with a pedestrian bridge over the BNSF tracks to a long Puget Sound beach.

    Best Day-Trip Days for Waterfront Place

    Best weather window: May through early October. Puget Sound waterfront is at its best in dry, longer-light months.

    Best day of week: Saturday for full energy, Sunday for slower pace, Friday afternoon for happy hour without the crowd.

    What to skip: January through March weekday lunches — quieter than the experience deserves. Wait for spring weekends.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How long should I plan to spend at the Port of Everett’s Waterfront Place?

    Half-day minimum to do justice to lunch, the marina walk, and one happy-hour or rooftop experience. Full day if including Jetty Island in season (May–early September).

    Is parking free at Waterfront Place?

    Yes. Free public parking is available in multiple surface lots adjacent to Restaurant Row and the marina.

    Can I take public transit to Waterfront Place from Seattle?

    Yes. Sounder North service from King Street Station to Everett Station (about 50 minutes), then Community Transit bus or a 15-minute walk to the waterfront. Sounder North runs limited weekday-only service; verify current schedule.

    When does the Jetty Island ferry run?

    Seasonally, typically May through early September. The ferry is free and runs from the Port of Everett Marina to Jetty Island, with crossings of about 5 minutes each way.

    Are the restaurants at Waterfront Place family-friendly?

    Most are. The Net Shed, Menchie’s at the Marina, Tapped’s main floor, and Marina Azul are all family-appropriate. Rustic Cork is more adult-oriented (wine bar focus). Tapped’s rooftop deck is 21+ in the bar area but family-friendly elsewhere; verify policy on visit.

    Can I bring my dog?

    Outdoor patios at several restaurants are dog-friendly with confirmation; verify with the specific tenant. The marina walking paths welcome leashed dogs. Jetty Island has restrictions during peak season.

    Where should I stay overnight if I want to extend my Waterfront Place visit?

    Hotel Indigo Everett Waterfront is the only hotel on the property and is the closest stay to the marina and Restaurant Row. Other Everett-area hotels are 5–15 minutes away by car.

    Is Waterfront Place still under construction?

    Active redevelopment continues — Marina Azul is opening this spring, the Port is recruiting a breakfast-and-brunch operator for one remaining Restaurant Row spot, and a flagship restaurant is being recruited for the last undeveloped parcel. The areas currently open are fully visit-ready.

  • New to Mason County? Your First Property Tax Bill Explained — April 30, 2026 Deadline

    New to Mason County? Your First Property Tax Bill Explained — April 30, 2026 Deadline

    Moving into a Mason County home means inheriting a property tax calendar that may look different from what newcomers are used to — especially if the last place you owned was outside Washington State. The first-half 2026 Mason County property tax payment is due Thursday, April 30, 2026, and new homeowners in Shelton, Belfair, Allyn, Union, Hoodsport, and the rest of the county need to know how the system works before that date. Here is the practical walkthrough for anyone paying a Mason County property tax bill for the first time.

    How Mason County Property Tax Differs From What You May Be Used To

    Washington State does not levy an income tax, which pushes more of the cost of local services — sheriff, roads, schools, public health, courts — onto property taxes than most other states. Mason County, like all 39 counties in Washington, collects property tax twice a year rather than monthly through an escrow account (although many mortgage servicers still escrow monthly and pay the county on your behalf twice a year). The key dates are:

    • April 30 — first-half payment due
    • October 31 — second-half payment due

    If your mortgage servicer escrows your taxes, the servicer pays these bills directly from your escrow account and you typically will not receive a payment notice from Mason County. If you own free and clear — or if you are a new buyer in a cash sale or a buyer whose lender does not escrow — the responsibility is entirely yours, and the Treasurer does not send reminders beyond the initial bill mailed earlier in the year.

    How to Confirm Whether You Owe Directly or Through Escrow

    New residents often ask: did I already pay this in closing? The answer depends on the closing date and the terms of the sale. A portion of the annual tax is usually prorated between buyer and seller at closing, but that proration only covers the days the seller owned the home — not the tax bill itself. If closing happened before April 30, the outstanding first-half bill is typically paid at or before closing. If closing happened after April 30, the first half has usually already been paid by the seller and the buyer’s first real bill is the October 31 second half.

    To know for sure, log into the Mason County Property Tax Inquiry at masoncountywa.gov or call the Treasurer’s Office at 360-427-9670, extension 484. You will need your parcel number or property address to look up the current status of the tax account. If the balance shows as paid, nothing is due. If the balance shows as unpaid, you owe it by April 30 regardless of anything else.

    How to Actually Pay It

    Mason County accepts three payment methods. Each works. Pick whichever fits the day you realize you owe.

    • Online through Point & Pay — Access from masoncountywa.gov. Accepts Visa, MasterCard, Discover, American Express, and E-checks. A 2.5% credit card fee applies ($2 minimum); E-check fees are typically lower for larger amounts.
    • By phone — Call Point & Pay at 1-855-331-3631. Same cards accepted as online. Visa Debit and E-Checks are not available through the phone system — use the web portal for those.
    • In person or by mail — Mason County Treasurer’s Office, 411 N. 5th Street, Shelton, WA. Mailed payments must be postmarked on or before April 30, 2026, to be on time. Make checks payable to the Mason County Treasurer and write the parcel number on the memo line.

    What Is on Your Mason County Property Tax Bill

    A Mason County property tax bill is not a single tax — it is a stack of levies from different taxing districts layered onto the property. A typical Mason County bill includes:

    • County general fund (sheriff, roads, courts, treasurer, assessor, auditor)
    • State school levy (Washington’s contribution to public education)
    • Local school district levy (e.g., North Mason School District if the property is in the Belfair–Allyn–Tahuya area, or Shelton School District, or the Hood Canal or Pioneer districts depending on address)
    • Fire district levy (which district depends on address)
    • Library district levy
    • Port district levy (Port of Shelton, Port of Allyn, Port of Hoodsport, etc.)
    • Hospital district or public utility district assessments where applicable
    • Conservation district fee

    All of this is rolled into the single “total due” number on the bill. Each district’s rate is set annually, which is why the tax bill can change from year to year even when the assessed value of the home is flat. For new residents trying to understand why a neighbor’s bill looks different, the answer is almost always a different combination of taxing districts — a home in the city of Shelton pays different levies than a home in unincorporated Mason County outside any city limit.

    The Other Civic Deadline Newcomers Should Know About

    New residents who live in the North Mason School District (Belfair, Allyn, Tahuya) also have a special election on April 28, 2026, on a replacement Educational Programs & Operations levy that the district has asked voters to approve. That’s a school-funding question on its own timeline — the April 28 ballot — separate from the April 30 tax-payment deadline. If you recently registered to vote at your new Mason County address, your ballot has already been mailed. For coverage of what’s on that ballot, see our report on the North Mason School District levy.

    If You Are New and Overwhelmed

    The single most useful phone call a new Mason County resident can make is to the Treasurer’s Office at 360-427-9670, extension 484. The staff there can pull up your parcel in seconds, tell you exactly how much you owe for the first half, whether any portion was paid at closing, whether your mortgage servicer is handling it, and what your options are if you need a payment plan. For a broader orientation to the county you just moved into, our guide on living in Mason County, Washington covers most of the other questions newcomers ask in their first year.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    I just moved to Mason County. Do I owe property tax by April 30?

    It depends on your closing date and whether your mortgage escrows taxes. If closing happened before April 30, 2026, the first-half tax is usually paid at closing or is in the buyer’s hands to pay by April 30. If closing happened after April 30, the first half has usually already been paid by the seller, and the next bill you owe is the October 31 second half. Call the Mason County Treasurer at 360-427-9670 extension 484 with your parcel number to confirm your specific status.

    Does my mortgage company pay my Mason County property tax?

    Possibly. If your mortgage includes an escrow account for taxes and insurance, the servicer collects a portion of your monthly payment and pays the Treasurer directly by April 30 and October 31. Check your most recent mortgage statement for an escrow account balance, or call your servicer. If you have no escrow account, the full responsibility for paying Mason County directly is yours.

    What if I didn’t get a property tax bill from Mason County?

    The Treasurer’s Office mails annual tax statements earlier in the year, but new residents who closed on a home mid-year often do not receive one because the mailing went to the prior owner or to the mortgage servicer’s address. A missing bill does not excuse the deadline. Look up your balance at masoncountywa.gov using your parcel number, or call the Treasurer at 360-427-9670 extension 484 to get the amount.

    Can I set up monthly property tax payments in Mason County?

    Mason County does not offer a standard monthly-installment program for property taxes in the way a mortgage servicer does. Washington state law authorizes two payments per year: half on April 30 and half on October 31. Taxpayers who cannot meet a deadline can contact the Treasurer’s Office at 360-427-9670 extension 475 to discuss a case-by-case payment plan. The most common “monthly” approach is to set up an escrow account voluntarily through your bank or to self-budget monthly and make the two large payments yourself.

    Why does my Mason County property tax bill have so many line items?

    Your bill is a stack of levies from every taxing district your property sits in — county general fund, state school levy, local school district, fire district, library district, port district, conservation district, and sometimes a hospital or PUD assessment. Each district sets its own rate annually. The “total” on the bill is the sum. Homes in different Mason County communities pay different totals because they sit in different combinations of districts, not because the county charges them more.


  • Mason County Senior Property Tax Exemption: Who Qualifies, How to Apply, and the April 30 Deadline

    Mason County Senior Property Tax Exemption: Who Qualifies, How to Apply, and the April 30 Deadline

    Mason County seniors who own their home and live in it full-time may be eligible for a Washington State property tax exemption that can substantially reduce the annual tax bill — but the exemption is not automatic, and the clock is ticking on the April 30, 2026, first-half payment deadline. This is what homeowners 61 and older in Shelton, Belfair, Allyn, Union, and every other Mason County community need to know about qualifying, applying, and what to do in the meantime.

    Who Qualifies for the Mason County Senior Property Tax Exemption

    Washington State’s senior citizen and disabled-person property tax exemption is administered at the county level. To qualify in Mason County, a homeowner generally must meet all of these conditions:

    • Age or disability — Be 61 years or older by December 31 of the year before the exemption takes effect, or be retired from regular employment because of a physical disability, or be a disabled veteran with an 80% or greater service-connected disability rating.
    • Ownership — Own the home as of December 31 of the qualifying year, and hold the title in the applicant’s name (or through a qualifying life estate or trust).
    • Primary residence — Live in the home as a primary residence for at least nine months of the year.
    • Income — Have a total household disposable income of $55,000 or less per year. Mason County’s income threshold was increased to $55,000 effective for the 2024 tax year and remains the qualifying ceiling for the current program.

    Income under the program includes Social Security, pensions, IRA distributions, wages, rental income, interest, and dividends. Some items can be deducted — for example, non-reimbursed medical expenses and certain long-term care costs — which means households that look over the threshold on paper may still qualify once deductions are applied.

    What the Exemption Actually Does to Your Tax Bill

    The exemption is tiered by income. At the lowest income tier, a qualifying senior’s property value is frozen at the level it was when they first qualified (preventing future increases from raising the tax bill) and a portion of regular levy taxes is removed. At higher income tiers within the $55,000 ceiling, the reduction is smaller but still meaningful. For many Mason County seniors on fixed incomes, the difference between qualifying and not qualifying can run into the hundreds or low thousands of dollars per year.

    The exemption does not apply to special assessments like fire district fees, local improvement districts, or conservation district fees. Those remain payable in full regardless of exemption status.

    How to Apply Through the Mason County Assessor

    Applications for the senior and disabled exemption go through the Mason County Assessor’s Office, not the Treasurer. This is an important distinction — the Treasurer collects taxes, but the Assessor determines who qualifies for the exemption that reduces those taxes in the first place.

    Questions and application packets are available at 360-427-9670, extension 491. Applicants need to provide:

    • Proof of age (birth certificate, driver’s license) or proof of disability (from Social Security, VA, or a physician)
    • Proof the home is the primary residence
    • Documentation of total household income — typically prior-year tax returns plus Social Security and pension statements

    First-time applicants should plan for the process to take several weeks after paperwork is received. Retroactive refunds may be available if it turns out the applicant has qualified for prior years and was unaware of the program.

    What to Do About the April 30, 2026, Deadline in the Meantime

    If a qualifying senior has not yet applied — or has applied but not yet been approved — the April 30 first-half property tax payment is still due at the full amount. Missing the deadline creates interest and penalties that accrue beginning May 1, 2026, and those charges are not waived retroactively even if the exemption is later granted.

    Mason County seniors who are close to the income threshold or think they may qualify should do two things right now: (1) pay the first-half bill by April 30 through any of the three available methods — in person at 411 N. 5th Street in Shelton, by mail postmarked on time, or online/by phone through Point & Pay at 1-855-331-3631; and (2) start the exemption application process through the Assessor so it is in place for the October 31 second-half bill and future years.

    For broader payment guidance on the April 30 deadline, see our complete Mason County property tax payment guide. For the full picture of how the county government works and how the Assessor and Treasurer fit together, see how Mason County government works.

    The Federal Deferral Program (Different From the Exemption)

    Washington State also runs a property tax deferral program for seniors and disabled residents, separate from the exemption. The deferral does not reduce the tax — it delays payment, with the deferred amount becoming a lien against the property that is collected when the property is sold or transferred. The deferral program is useful for residents whose income qualifies but who want to preserve liquidity in a given year rather than reduce the long-term cost. The Assessor’s Office can explain both options during the application conversation.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is the income limit for the Mason County senior property tax exemption in 2026?

    The current income threshold for the Mason County senior and disabled-person property tax exemption is $55,000 per year in total household disposable income. Mason County raised the limit from $40,000 to $55,000 effective for the 2024 tax year, and that threshold applies to the current program. Deductions for non-reimbursed medical expenses and long-term care costs can bring households under the ceiling even if gross income looks higher.

    How do I apply for the Mason County senior property tax exemption?

    Applications are filed with the Mason County Assessor’s Office, not the Treasurer. Call 360-427-9670 extension 491 to request an application packet. You will need to provide proof of age or disability, proof the home is your primary residence, and documentation of your total household income from the prior year. The application is not automatic and must be renewed periodically.

    Do I still have to pay the April 30 property tax bill if I’ve applied for the senior exemption?

    Yes. If your exemption has not yet been approved by April 30, 2026, you must pay the first-half property tax at the full billed amount. Interest begins accruing May 1 on any unpaid balance and is not waived even if the exemption is later granted. Once the exemption is approved, future bills reflect the reduction. Ask the Assessor’s Office whether you qualify for any retroactive refund for prior years you may have been eligible but unenrolled.

    What’s the difference between the senior exemption and the senior deferral in Mason County?

    The senior exemption reduces the amount of property tax owed for qualifying homeowners. The senior deferral program delays payment rather than reducing it — deferred amounts become a lien on the property that is paid when the property is sold or transferred. Both are administered through the Assessor’s Office. Seniors below the income threshold can generally choose either program based on their cash-flow needs.

    Does the Mason County exemption apply to all property taxes?

    No. The exemption applies to regular levy property taxes. It does not apply to special assessments such as fire district fees, local improvement districts, conservation district fees, or similar non-ad-valorem charges. Those continue to be billed and owed in full regardless of exemption status. The Treasurer’s Office can explain which portions of your specific bill are and are not subject to the exemption.


  • Mason County Property Tax Deadline April 30, 2026: Payment Options, Fees, and What Happens If You’re Late

    Mason County Property Tax Deadline April 30, 2026: Payment Options, Fees, and What Happens If You’re Late

    Mason County property owners have until Thursday, April 30, 2026, to pay the first half of their 2026 property taxes. The Mason County Treasurer’s Office has confirmed that delinquent charges begin Friday, May 1, 2026, and is urging anyone who can pay early to do so before last-minute mail and online backlogs create problems. Here is the complete payment guide for every property owner from Shelton to Dewatto — what you can pay, how you can pay, what it costs, and what happens if you miss the deadline.

    April 30 Is a Hard Deadline Under State Law

    Under Washington state law, property tax payments of $50 or more can be split into two halves: the first due on or before April 30 and the second due on or before October 31 of the same year. Payments under $50 must be paid in full by April 30. This is not a Mason County-specific rule — every county treasurer in the state enforces the same schedule — but Mason County Treasurer’s Office has reminded local taxpayers that mail delivery times through the USPS may be delayed, so payments should be mailed well ahead of the deadline.

    Payments postmarked on or before April 30 are considered on time. After that, interest and penalties accrue on the unpaid balance beginning May 1.

    Three Ways to Pay Your Mason County Property Tax

    The Mason County Treasurer’s Office offers three primary methods for the 2026 first-half payment.

    1. Pay in Person

    The Mason County Treasurer’s Office is located at 411 N. 5th Street, Shelton, WA. In-person payments accept cash, check, cashier’s check, money order, and credit or debit cards. Office hours are generally Monday through Friday during standard business hours; Mason County residents making the trip should call ahead to confirm hours on the day of payment.

    2. Pay by Mail

    Mail-in payments must be postmarked on or before April 30, 2026, to be considered on time. The Treasurer’s Office recommends mailing early — delivery windows through the USPS can stretch several business days, and a payment received after the deadline but postmarked on time is still credited as timely. Checks should be payable to the Mason County Treasurer and include the property account number or parcel number on the memo line.

    3. Pay Online or by Phone

    Mason County uses Point & Pay for online and telephone credit/debit card processing. The online portal is accessible from masoncountywa.gov, and the automated phone payment system can be reached at 1-855-331-3631. Accepted cards are Visa, MasterCard, Discover, and American Express. Visa Debit and E-Checks are not available over the phone but are available online.

    A processing fee applies to credit card payments: 2.5% of the amount due, with a $2.00 minimum. E-checks carry a flat fee that is generally lower than the card fee for larger payments; the exact amount is disclosed at checkout on the Point & Pay portal.

    What If You Can’t Pay the Full Amount by April 30?

    Mason County offers payment plan arrangements for taxpayers who cannot pay in full by the deadline. These are not advertised on the standard payment page — they are handled case-by-case through the Treasurer’s Office at 360-427-9670, extension 475. Interest generally continues to accrue on the unpaid balance during a payment plan, so contacting the office before April 30 typically produces a better outcome than waiting until after the deadline has passed.

    Senior and Disabled Property Tax Exemptions

    Mason County participates in Washington State’s senior citizen and disabled-person property tax exemption program. The program can reduce or freeze the taxable value of a primary residence for qualifying owners. Eligibility generally requires the applicant to be 61 years or older, or to be disabled, and to own and occupy the home as a primary residence. The income threshold for Mason County was raised to $55,000 per year effective for the 2024 tax year and remains the current qualifying ceiling for the program.

    The exemption is applied for through the Mason County Assessor’s Office, not the Treasurer, and does not happen automatically. Applicants must file paperwork and provide income documentation. Questions about qualification or how to apply can go to the Assessor’s Office at 360-427-9670, extension 491.

    What Happens If You’re Late

    Interest accrues on delinquent property taxes under state law. In Washington, unpaid first-half taxes accrue interest at 1% per month beginning May 1, and additional penalties compound as the tax remains unpaid. Extended delinquency can eventually place the property at risk of foreclosure, though that process plays out over multiple years and involves formal notice before any action. The Treasurer’s Office will work with property owners who contact them early; the worst outcomes almost always involve owners who do not reach out.

    Why the April 30 Deadline Matters to Every Mason County Community

    Property taxes fund the services that show up in every Mason County community from Shelton to Dewatto. That includes the Mason County Sheriff’s Office, county roads, district courts, public health, planning, and the county elections office that runs votes like the North Mason levy special election on April 28. A high percentage of first-half collections is what keeps those services funded through the summer months until the October 31 second-half deadline brings in the next major revenue cycle.

    For a broader look at how Mason County government departments interact with each other and with residents, see our guide on how Mason County government works. Property owners weighing how the North Mason School District levy on the same election cycle affects their tax bill can also consult our coverage on what the levy means for your tax bill.

    Key Contacts and Deadlines at a Glance

    • First-half property tax due: Thursday, April 30, 2026
    • Second-half property tax due: Saturday, October 31, 2026
    • Treasurer’s Office: 411 N. 5th Street, Shelton, WA
    • Treasurer general line: 360-427-9670, extension 484
    • Payment plans: 360-427-9670, extension 475
    • Senior/disabled exemption (Assessor): 360-427-9670, extension 491
    • Automated phone payment (Point & Pay): 1-855-331-3631
    • Online portal: masoncountywa.gov

    Frequently Asked Questions

    When is the Mason County property tax deadline in 2026?

    The first-half 2026 Mason County property tax payment is due Thursday, April 30, 2026. The second-half payment is due Friday, October 31, 2026. Payments postmarked on or before the deadline are considered on time. Delinquent charges begin accruing the day after the deadline.

    How do I pay my Mason County property tax online?

    Mason County uses Point & Pay to process online property tax payments. Access the portal from masoncountywa.gov and select the property tax payment link. Visa, MasterCard, Discover, and American Express cards are accepted, along with E-checks. A 2.5% fee ($2.00 minimum) applies to credit card transactions. You can also pay by phone at 1-855-331-3631 using the same system.

    Can I split my Mason County property tax into two payments?

    Yes. Under Washington state law, any Mason County property tax bill of $50 or more can be split into two halves. The first half is due April 30 and the second half is due October 31. Bills under $50 must be paid in full by April 30. You do not need to file a special request — half-payment is the default if your bill is $50 or more.

    What happens if I miss the April 30 Mason County property tax deadline?

    Interest and penalties begin accruing May 1 under Washington state law. Interest is charged at 1% per month on the unpaid balance. Extended delinquency eventually places the property at risk of foreclosure, though that process takes years and involves multiple formal notices. If you cannot pay in full, contact the Treasurer’s Office at 360-427-9670 extension 475 before the deadline to discuss payment plan options.

    Does Mason County have a senior property tax exemption?

    Yes. Mason County participates in Washington State’s senior citizen and disabled-person property tax exemption. Owners who are 61 or older or disabled, own and occupy a primary residence in Mason County, and have an annual household income of $55,000 or less may qualify. Applications go through the Mason County Assessor’s Office at 360-427-9670 extension 491. The exemption is not automatic — you must apply and provide income documentation.

    Can I set up a payment plan for Mason County property tax?

    Yes. Mason County Treasurer’s Office works with property owners who cannot pay the full amount by the deadline. Payment plans are arranged case-by-case. Contact the Treasurer’s Office at 360-427-9670 extension 475 to discuss options. Interest continues to accrue during a payment plan, so reaching out before April 30 typically produces a better outcome than waiting until after the deadline.

    Where is the Mason County Treasurer’s Office located?

    The Mason County Treasurer’s Office is located at 411 N. 5th Street, Shelton, WA. In-person payments accept cash, check, cashier’s check, money order, and credit or debit cards. Confirm office hours at 360-427-9670 extension 484 before visiting, especially close to the April 30 deadline when lines can be long.


  • Hood Canal South: Potlatch State Park Spring Shellfish Season & Hoodsport Ace & Lumber Grand Opening (April 2026)

    Hood Canal South: Potlatch State Park Spring Shellfish Season & Hoodsport Ace & Lumber Grand Opening (April 2026)

    Monday regional beat — Hood Canal South (Belfair, Union, Hoodsport, Potlatch, Skokomish). If you live on the Olympic Peninsula, these are the two things worth your attention along US Hwy 101 this week.

    Potlatch State Park: Spring Low Tides and an Open Shellfish Season

    Potlatch State Park — about 12 miles north of Shelton on US Hwy 101, just north of Skokomish tribal lands — sits on one of the more productive shellfish beaches in Hood Canal. The park runs 5,700 feet of saltwater shoreline with more than a mile of tidelands that drop away at low tide into the kind of gravel-and-mud flats the state built its clam reputation on.

    Here’s the part peninsula residents already know but visitors miss: the recreational shellfish season at Potlatch is open from April 1 through May 31, 2026, per the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. Clams, mussels, and oysters are all in play, assuming you’ve got a current shellfish license and you’re checking your limits.

    Two non-negotiables before you go:

    • Call the Washington Department of Health Shellfish Safety Hotline at 1-800-562-5632 (or check the DOH shellfish safety page) before you harvest. Biotoxin closures can flip a beach overnight, and Hood Canal is one of the areas watched closely.
    • Display a Discover Pass on your vehicle. Potlatch is a Washington State Park — day-use requires it, no exceptions.

    If you’ve never tidepooled this stretch, the window is narrow and the reward is big. Check your local tide table, pack a bucket and gloves, and plan to be down on the flats an hour before dead low. The Skokomish estuary is just to the south, and the wildlife traffic along that shoreline during a minus tide is worth the drive by itself.

    Hoodsport Ace & Lumber: Grand Opening Saturday, April 25

    If you’ve driven through Hoodsport in the last year, you’ve probably noticed a new hardware store quietly taking shape at 150 N Lake Cushman Road. That’s Hoodsport Ace & Lumber, and this Saturday — April 25, 2026 — is the official grand opening.

    Here’s what’s on the day:

    • Date: Saturday, April 25, 2026
    • Time: 8:00 AM to 4:00 PM (ribbon cutting at 8:00 AM sharp)
    • Location: 150 N Lake Cushman Road, Hoodsport, WA 98548
    • Cost: Free
    • What to expect: Hourly deals, giveaways, in-store specials

    The store has been operating informally for about a year while the team ironed things out, and management has flagged that an on-site rental center is coming later this year — a legitimately useful addition for Lake Cushman property owners who have, until now, been driving to Shelton or Belfair for weekend projects.

    For a small peninsula town like Hoodsport, a fully stocked hardware and lumber yard that isn’t a 30-minute drive changes the weekend math on almost every home project. If you live anywhere from Potlatch to Lake Cushman and you’ve been waiting for this one to officially open, Saturday is the day.

    Why This Week, Why Hood Canal South

    The Monday rotation focuses on Hood Canal South because it’s the stretch of 101 most people blow past on the way somewhere else — and it’s the stretch where the best peninsula intel tends to hide in plain sight. Shellfish season opening alongside a new hardware store in the same town is exactly the kind of weekend the south end quietly puts together without a press release.

    Next Monday’s Hood Canal South beat will likely circle back to Hama Hama Oyster Rama (the April 18-19 event) for a retrospective if anything newsworthy came out of it. For now — Potlatch tide tables and a Saturday ribbon cutting.

    Sources & Further Reading

  • South Coast & Grays Harbor Spring Guide: Razor Clams, Gray Whales & the Quinault Rain Forest

    South Coast & Grays Harbor Spring Guide: Razor Clams, Gray Whales & the Quinault Rain Forest

    There are three very good reasons to point your car toward Grays Harbor this spring.

    Razor Clamming at Twin Harbors & Mocrocks

    Twin Harbors and Mocrocks beaches are open for razor clamming — one of the most reliable and accessible clamming spots on the Washington coast, just south of Westport. Low tides in the morning make for prime digging conditions. Grab your license (the 2026–27 recreational fishing license is required starting April 1), a clam gun, and a bucket. Always verify current openings with WDFW before heading out, as schedules can shift based on marine biotoxin monitoring.

    Gray Whale Migration from Westport Light

    April is peak gray whale migration season on the Washington coast, running from March through early May. Westport is one of the best places in the state to watch them. Head to Westport Light State Park — the tallest lighthouse in Washington — and scan the horizon for spouts. On a calm spring day you might spot 10–25 whales, with surfacing every 5–15 minutes during peak hours. Charter whale watch trips run from the Westport Marina if you want to get closer to the action. Westport Light State Park is an official stop on the Washington Whale Trail.

    The Quinault Rain Forest in Spring

    The Quinault Rain Forest is in its most magical spring form right now. The cedar bogs along the Rain Forest Loop Trail are bursting with skunk cabbage in vivid gold and green, snowmelt is feeding the waterfalls, and the mosses are electric after months of winter rain. The Quinault Rain Forest Loop Trail is accessible — though some sections may have flooding, and returning via South Shore Road is an option if needed.

    Lake Quinault Lodge has been welcoming guests since 1926. It’s the kind of place that makes you want to stay for dinner and wake up to mist on the lake. Always check current road and trail conditions at NPS.gov/olym before heading into the backcountry.

    Plan Your Visit

    Grays Harbor doesn’t always get the spotlight, but in spring it’s putting on a show. The combination of razor clamming, whale watching, and old-growth rainforest hiking makes for one of the most diverse single-day itineraries on the Olympic Peninsula. Give yourself a full day — or better yet, a long weekend.

    Sources: WDFW, experiencewestport.com, westportwa.com, NPS.gov/olym, GraysHarborTalk, hikeoftheweek.com

  • Hood Canal North: Mt. Walker Spring Hike & Bald Eagle Kayaking in Brinnon — April 2026

    Hood Canal North: Mt. Walker Spring Hike & Bald Eagle Kayaking in Brinnon — April 2026

    April is the sweet spot for Mt. Walker. The gate on Forest Road 2730 reopened April 1st, the rhododendrons are budding up the slope near Quilcene, and you have a few weeks before the big May crowds arrive. It is 5 miles roundtrip with 2,050 feet of gain — this trail earns its views — but from the north summit you get an unreal look at Hood Canal and the Olympics stretching out beyond. Take US 101 south from Quilcene about 5 miles to just before milepost 300, then turn right on Mt. Walker Road. Go this week if you can. 🌿🏔️

    #HoodCanalNorth #MtWalker #OlympicPeninsula #HikingWashington #ExploreHoodCanal


    This is one of those Hood Canal North experiences people do not forget. Hood Canal Adventures in Brinnon runs Tide Pool Kayak Tours through the spring, and in mid-April you get a bonus: bald eagles are gathering in serious numbers along the canal. Some groups have spotted up to 100 in a single paddle. That is not a typo. 🦅

    Tours launch from Yelvick’s Beach in Brinnon, run about 2.5 hours, and are $105/person. Book with Christina at kayakbrinnon.com or call 360-301-6310 — spots fill fast on clear spring days.

    #BrinnonWA #HoodCanalNorth #KayakBrinnon #OlympicPeninsula #WashingtonWildlife #BaldEagle