Slab Camp Trail

Quick Facts:
Location: Buckhorn Wilderness
Land Agency: Olympic National Forest
Roundtrip: 5.6 miles
Elevation Gain: 1,100 feet
Green Trails Map: Olympic Mountains East 168SX
Recommended Guidebook: Day Hiking Olympic Peninsula 2nd edition (Mountaineers Books)
Contact: Hood Canal District, Quilcene Olympic National Forest
Access: From Sequim, head west 2.5 miles on US 101 turning left onto the Taylor Cut-off Road just after crossing the Dungeness River. In 2.6 miles, bear right onto Lost Mountain Road. In another 2.6 miles turn left onto FR 2870. In one mile bear right onto FR 2875 and continue for 3.5 mile to Slab Camp and trailhead.
Good to know: Kid-friendly, dog-friendly, backpacking opportunities, exceptional rhododendrons, old-growth, wilderness rules apply, practice Leave No Trace principles
From a 2,500-foot saddle between Deer Ridge and Ned Hill, the Slab Camp Creek Trail begins a delightful descent into the Gray Wolf River Valley. Immediately enter the Buckhorn Wilderness and wind your way through a thick forest of second growth hemlock. Much of this area succumbed to major fires early in the 20th century.
After a nice stretch of level walking, the trail begins to drop. Through an open forest lined with an understory of rhododendrons, salal and Oregon grape, sneak peeks of surrounding ridges hovering over the valley below. After about 1.5 miles, the grade eases as it comes along Slab Camp Creek. Big old trees appear; survivors of the past fires.
With the Gray Wolf River now audible, the trail makes a final, somewhat steep drop to the valley floor. Cross cascading Slab Camp Creek on a good bridge before emerging onto the rich bottomland of towering cedars known as Duncan Flat. Here a scattering of campsites along the tumbling and thundering Gray Wolf River make good lunch spots.
A little beyond the flats the trail crosses the Gray Wolf River on a sturdy iron beamed bridge, flown in and constructed in 2005. A quarter mile beyond the bridge, the Slab Camp Creek Trail ends at the Gray Wolf River Trail. Continue up this trail for lonely wandering. Although much of the trail between Camp Tony and the national park boundary is on a slope high above the river, the country is wild and beautiful.
Slab Camp is one of 136 featured hikes in my bestselling Day Hiking Olympic Peninsula Book 2nd edition. For more details on this hike and others, pick up a copy of this book—the number one selling and most trusted guidebook on hiking in the Olympics—today!

For information on where to stay and on other things to do on the Olympic Peninsula, check out Northwest TripFinder
