Address: 1370 Old Fort Townsend Rd, Port Townsend, WA 98368, USA
Phone: +13603853595
Sunday: 8AM–9PM
Monday: 8AM–9PM
Tuesday: 8AM–9PM
Wednesday: 8AM–9PM
Thursday: 8AM–9PM
Friday: 8AM–9PM
Saturday: 8AM–9PM
Brandy Williams (Brandy Williams Author)
Lots of parking for day use, great bathrooms. Beautiful nature trails with native plants. A row of camper sites looking over the water, tent campsites in the trees are a little small. Really a beautiful park.
Jamie Waller
Fun park with plenty of history. Highlight was exploring the empty turret towers and battery.
Megan Yesaci
This park was very nice. The bad first: Due to the burn ban (despite the rain) we couldn't have a fire. Understandable and we knew about this before booking. Bring your propane fire pits! The bathrooms and showers were also under construction at the upper camp, which was unfortunate as we were tent camping and there was no alerts about this at all. I am disabled and we selected a campsite near the bathrooms specifically for my needs. 3 Porta-potties are available and well maintained. The showers are PAY TO USE in the lower campsite, which you will have to use as the upper showers are not available. $1 per 6 minutes. The sites in the upper camp are very small. We had to shift our table around and the only spot that fit our tent was on an incline. The other spots were about as small. The good: The hiking/walking/biking trails here are among the nicest and best maintained I have seen! They were extremely quiet (other than 2 teenage girls blasting a radio on one path) and the leaves were begging to drop and turn. It was visually beautiful, and all the historic buildings are great to explore. It was not crowded at all, we had most areas to ourselves. There are some really beautiful vistas! The park management keeps the park EXTREMELY clean. And I do mean extremely! I did not see a SINGLE piece of trash anywhere in the park, at any time during our stay of 3 days. I did see park management cleaning up, sweeping, etc multiple times. Our campsite (space 78) has a little trail directly from the spot to the 2 walking trails in the back. Very convenient access. We were able to see lots of birds (and even got to hear the bird-song of a rare species of tree bird) and heard hawks, owls, seagulls, and song birds. We also spotted some seals just off shore and got to experience and watch a family of river otters hunting and eating fish. There are lots of deer in the park at this time with fawns. They will allow you to get within a few feet of them. Please don't pet them! We were treated to two packs of coyotes singing for about 4-5 minutes each. A very lovely experience. This was a great park for our stay and I would recommend it to anyone! It's very well priced, clean, and beautiful. Call ahead to check on bathroom/amenities.
Kelsey H
Loved this camp ground! We were in a great location by the bathroom and water. The way the campgrounds are placed felt private with the tall trees. There were people near us but it didn't feel like it. We went on the botany walk that's a little over a mile. It takes you through the woods woods different plants are marked with descriptions. It was very nice. Towards the end of the botany walk there is a viewpoint to the water. Loved the history behind this campground, there were lots of signposts with info on it. Overall this was my favorite campground we stayed at on our trip.
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They have up to 40 feet in space per spot. Its first come first served @Joy Puhrmann
I'm pretty sure they do. It's usually a quarter for 2 or 3 minutes.
Via Washington state park website to reserve for camping
It's a state park, so no.
I do believe that they do.👍 I hope you all have a wonderful time!
I believe it is just closed to camping.
Yes one shower in men's room and one in women's...you must get tokens from the Rangers though, quarters will not work
Yes
You can reserve regular campsites. Hiker biker sites are first come first served.
I lean towards saying no at Old Fort Townsend concerning hook ups.Definately call.
All campers must pay for their campsite. Your campsite payment allows you access to the park without a discovery pass. If you do not have a discovery pass and are not camping at the park, you will need to pay for a discovery day pass, typically $10. A discovery pass pays for itself if you go to state parks more than 4 times a year.
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