Lake Crescent, Olympic National Park

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If you’ve spent a long day, driving past beaches and through rain forests, it could be easy to rush by Lake Crescent, on your way to a comfy hotel bed.  But you should make an effort to stop somewhere along the lake’s shore, to soak in this beautiful jewel of Olympic National Park.

Lake Crescent is a natural lake, though it was formed by a dam, of sorts.  Geologists believe a landslide formed the dam that allowed the lake to fill in, probably about 8,000 years ago.  The depth of the lake remains questionable — the park service puts it at 624 feet, though other measurements have suggested it’s at least 1,000 feet deep.  One thing is for certain: it’s deep blue, thanks to a lack of nitrogen which limits algae growth.

US 101 skirts the southern edge of the lake — oftentimes just a few feet away from the shoreline.  A restrictive speed limit will encourage you to slow down and enjoy the views from the road.

Stopping at the side of the highway can be a bit more challenging.  There are parking areas, but they never seem to be in the exact right spot for photographing the lake and surrounding mountains.  I managed to stop in a couple of spots. That might be Pyramid Mountain in the photo above (Pyramid Mountain is on the northern side of the lake, near its eastern end)…

… and this is probably Mount Storm King (which is on the south side of the water, near the lake’s eastern end — essentially across the water from Pyramid).

While Lake Crescent was beautiful, that comfortable bed in Port Angeles was luring me, and I had to leave the lake behind, without exploring any of its hiking trails or other recreational opportunities.

Here’s the time-lapse, dash-cam video of the drive along Lake Crescent, then on into Port Angeles, on US 101:

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