108

1 person found this report helpful

 

Trail is in great condition for December. We have been staying at at a Doswalups State Park cabin. This is a great hike that is just down the road from the state park. The Olympic area is always beautiful any time of the year. It's a little steep heading down to the river but not to bad.

1 person found this report helpful

 

Trail is in great condition for December. We have been staying at at a Doswalups State Park cabin. This is a great hike that is just down the road from the state park. The Olympic area is always beautiful any time of the year. It's a little steep heading down to the river but not to bad.

4 photos
hikingwithlittledogs
Outstanding Trip Reporter
900
Beware of: road conditions
  • Hiked with a dog

10 people found this report helpful

 

The road to the Ranger Hole trail is all paved. You will find a vault toilet about 50 feet down the trail. 
We actually drove right past this TH and headed to Murhut Falls for the first hike. The road is passable with lots of potholes. My daughter followed us in her little civic and didn’t give me any dirty looks, so that means the road wasn’t that bad. 
No toilet at the Murhut Falls TH. The trail is in great shape. Very smooth. The elevation is very mild. It’s a quick hike to the falls and boy are they pretty! The trail ends at a bench looking at the falls. If you’re agile, you can climb down a steep trail to the water and feel the mist. This is such a short trail, be sure to have some other trails in your pocket to make the trip worth your time. 
The dirt road between the Murhut TH and Ranger Hole TH is only about 3-4 miles but it took us 20 minutes dodging potholes. 
The cabin at the Ranger Hole TH looks nice. Apparently you can rent it from the Forest Service. The trail is flat and nice until it drops down to the river, where all the elevation change happens at once. Still easy and our 14 year old pug was able to make it in her own. 
Very mossy and beautiful. 

 

Amazing and short. Not stroller friendly. Getting down to the water is a small scramble but amazing views if you choose not to. Bathrooms at parking site.

Moby
WTA Member
50
  • Wildflowers blooming

3 people found this report helpful

 

Reports of how bad the Duckabush Road (and most every other FS gravel road in the east Olympics!) has deteriorated persuaded Herself and I to instead explore Ranger Hole, Interrorem Cabin, and the Nature Trail. Trailhead had room for 5 more cars at 11 AM on a Sunday; we did note one car parked in a cleared area across the street (trying to avoid the need for a Forest Pass?). The sturdy picnic table (and even sturdier Interrorem Cabin) are in plain sight, but you have to start your hike before you see the vault toilet that justifies the "Fee Area" designation.

The Nature Loop is pleasant; the signs give some interesting history (rangers made $17 a week when the cabin was built) but some of the small "plant ID" signs seem to have lost their signage, leaving only the support. So we guessed: you know, "tree"; "bigger tree"; "flowering shrub"; "fern".

The trail to the ranger's fishing hole on the Duckabush River is in good shape, with its mild up and slightly steeper down to the river. The recent dry conditions make the downhill a bit slippery, given all the dust. Love my hiking poles! We took a few pictures at the exposed rocks above the churning river, but the nice water-level spot was occupied by three anglers (you seriously took a picture of that 4-inch fish??) and two dogs, so there was no room for others. That worked out OK, as one of the dogs was off-leash and quite territorial, bounding up to bark at us despite his owner's request to return. Many dog owners have an inaccurate sense of how trained their dog actually is. That's when I LOVE my trekking poles, because point out, they discourage those little barking snappers. We decided to head back and lunch elsewhere.

Amateur tip: we headed back north up 101 5 minutes to the day use area (Hood Canal side) of Dosewallips State Park and had a relaxing, shady lunch. I didn't realize that the Dosewallips River runs right along the edge of this area, and this time of year the near side is shallow enough for safe water play for young and old alike (and PLENTY were taking advantage of it). Keep it in mind, if not as a destination, then as a travel "rest stop" for wading, splashing, and eliminating the effects of "car coma".