Sol Duc Falls. Sol Duc Falls is one of the largest and most beautiful waterfalls in Olympic National Park, seen here from a bridge that crosses the canyon just below the falls. Surrounding the falls is an old-growth forest of hemlocks and douglas firs, some of which are three hundred years in age.
Old growth forest of douglas firs and hemlocks, with forest floor carpeted in ferns and mosses. Sol Duc Springs.
Marymere Falls drops 90 feet through an old-growth forest of Douglas firs, near Lake Crescent.
Kalaloch Lodge sits atop bluffs overlooking the Kalaloch River and Pacific Ocean.
Sunset over the Pacific, Kalaloch Beach.
Ruby Beach, sunset lights up the trees along the beach.
Ruby Beach, sunset.
Ruby Beach and its famous seastack, blurry ocean waves, sunset.
A small waterfall tumbles through old growth forest of douglas firs and hemlocks. Sol Duc Springs.
Log cabin on the trail to Sol Duc Falls.
Douglas squirrel, a common rodent in coniferous forests in western North American, eats a mushroom, Hoh rainforest.
Kalaloch Lodge sits atop bluffs overlooking the Kalaloch River and Pacific Ocean.
Enormous driftwood logs stack up on the wide flat sand beaches at Kalaloch.
Evening beach fire.
Water flows past beach cobblestones, blur.
Foggy morning.
Surfer pills are small beach stones eroded into smooth small round shapes.
Lake Quinalt Lodge.
Logging companies have clear cut this forest near Lake Quinalt, leaving wreckage in their wake.
Trees, morning light and mist.