Dosewallips River Road — Washington Trails Association

Trails for everyone, forever

Home Go Hiking Hiking Guide Dosewallips River Road

Dosewallips River Road

Olympic Peninsula > Hood Canal
47.7413, -123.0474 Map & Directions
Length
13.0 miles, roundtrip
Elevation Gain
1,200 feet
Highest Point
1,550 feet
Calculated Difficulty About Calculated Difficulty
Moderate/Hard

The trail is closed from Dose Meadows to Hayden Pass until further notice due to the Low Divide Fire.

  • Established campsites
  • Good for kids
  • Mountain views
  • Old growth
  • Rivers
  • Waterfalls
  • Wildflowers/Meadows
  • Wildlife

Parking Pass/Entry Fee

None
Saved to My Backpack

The Dosewallips River Road is the gateway to the eastern Olympic Mountains and it penetrates one of the deepest canyons in Olympic National Park. Now closed to vehicles, the old road bed allows hikers to explore true wilderness at a gentle grade. Backpackers, peak baggers, and horseback riders take advantage of the easy access to the trails beyond the road's end. Continue reading

Rating
4.15 out of 5

(20 votes) Log in to rate

Hiking Dosewallips River Road

The Dosewallips River Road is the gateway to the eastern Olympic Mountains and it penetrates one of the deepest canyons in Olympic National Park. Now closed to vehicles, the old road bed allows hikers to explore true wilderness at a gentle grade. Backpackers, peak baggers, and horseback riders take advantage of the easy access to the trails beyond the road's end.

The hike starts by crossing the gravelly stream bed just beyond the parking area and descending to the decommissioned Dose Road. Water may run high early in the season, so use caution when crossing. The Tunnel Creek Trail appears shortly on the right, climbing steeply into the Buckhorn Wilderness.

At mile 1 is the former road washout, where a massive chunk of hillside fell into the river and took the road with it. Hikers may be able to go left along the river if the way is clear and appears safe. Horses and bicycles, however, should follow the switchbacks over the hilltop. This path is wide and graded, although it does add about 100 feet of elevation each way.

Just beyond the washout, the valley bottom narrows as the sidewalls start to close in. Conditions become noticeably cool and wet. Luxuriant mosses carpet the river rocks and limbs of bigleaf maples. The scene is completed with licorice ferns and vanilla leaf, reminiscent of the Olympics rainforest valleys.

At 2.7 miles is the sign and lefthand turn for Elkhorn Campground, which is now closed to camping. Elk are occasionally seen grazing the nearby understory. Owls add their somber call to the roar of the rushing river in the nighttime canyon.

Beyond the campground, the Dose Road now begins to climb the toe of the valley sidewall. This is the steepest stretch, gaining almost 400 feet over the next mile. The road bed is a nursery for alder, hemlock, and madrona saplings, although the way is generally clear and wide.

At 4.0 miles, high above the canyon, the river can still be heard thundering below. Soon the canopy opens up and the road enters an area burned by the 2009 Constance fire. Views ahead are dominated by tall, forested ridges and high peaks. Blackened logs lay like spent matchsticks upon the foreground slopes.

The road crosses the boundary of Olympic National Park at 4.9 miles where an old, orange gate stands open. The former welcome sign was destroyed by the fire, but another sign survived, and should be considered the turnaround point for parties with dogs, which are not allowed in the park.

The roar of Constance Creek can soon be heard as the road swings around the bend of a side canyon. On the western bank of the thunderous torrent is the unsigned Lake Constance trailhead, a route that should be shunned by those with a fear of heights.

Just beyond the Constance Creek side canyon the road reenters old forest and drops to a view of an impressive cataract of the Dose River. After one last uphill slog the road looks onto a now more subdued, meandering river bordered by gravel bars and groves of alder.

Campsites soon appear on the left and a hitching post marks the campground loop, the end of the road, at 6.5 miles. A decommissioned ranger station sits at the main Dosewallips trailhead. The campground makes for a convenient base camp for those interested in day hikes around the area. Campers enjoy the ample room at each site, food lockers for safe and dry storage, and the whispering of the forest crown under a starry night sky.

Access Note

Bikes and dogs are allowed up to the ranger station at Dosewallips Campground, but not beyond (past the wilderness boundary).

Toilet Information

  • No toilet at trailhead

More information about toilets

WTA worked here in 2023, 2022, 2021, 2020, 2019, 2015, 2013 and 2012!

Hike Description Written by
Wes Partch, WTA Correspondent

Dosewallips River Road

Map & Directions

Trailhead
Co-ordinates: 47.7413, -123.0474 Open in Google Maps

Before You Go

The trail is closed from Dose Meadows to Hayden Pass until further notice due to the Low Divide Fire.

See weather forecast

Parking Pass/Entry Fee

None

WTA Pro Tip: Save a copy of our directions before you leave! App-based driving directions aren't always accurate and data connections may be unreliable as you drive to the trailhead.

Getting There

From Quilcene, drive south on Highway 101 for 11 miles to Brinnon, turning right at milepost 306 onto Dosewallips Road.

From Shelton, drive north on US 101 for 41 miles and turn left, 1 mile beyond Dosewallips State Park.

Proceed 8.5 miles to the new vehicle road end. Parking is on the roadside and can be backed up considerably. No toilets available.

More Hike Details

Trailhead

Olympic Peninsula > Hood Canal

Dosewallips River (#98)

Olympic National Forest, Hood Canal Ranger District

Guidebooks & Maps

Day Hiking: Olympic Peninsula (Romano - Mountaineers Books)

Green Trails Olympic Mountains East No. 168S

Custom Correct the Brothers–Mount Anderson

Buy the Green Trails Olympic Mountains East No. 168S map

You can improve or add to this guidebook entry!

Dosewallips River Road

277 Trip Reports

Hiked here recently?

Submit a trip report!
 
Trip Reports