
Wind, waves and wildlife are all found in abundance at Ocean Shore’s Damon Point!
The walk is self-guided (no-trail) and is approximately four miles around the entire peninsula.

Alternatively, an abandoned road leads to the center of the vegetated area. It can be hard to see unless you are on top of it, but I assure you it’s there. This makes travel into the peninsula’s heart far easier, and less environmentally intrusive. (Aside from the road’s very being there of course)
The interior is mostly beach grass and Scotch Broom with a few hardier native species sprinkled around for good measure. There are small marshes and channels interspersed as well, so watch your step.
Beachcombing will undoubtedly turn up lots of driftwood, shells, agates and other interesting odds and ends.
Many parts of the surf zone have a deep relief change resulting in dramatic waves when conditions are right. Surf’s up dood!
Currently (as of 2015) there exists a driftwood beach shack at the southern end, which can make a great place to get out of the wind and have a picnic.
On clear days Damon Point offers views of the Olympics, Westport and even Mt.Rainier.
WILDLIFE
This place is a bird watchers paradise!

Many species of sea and shorebirds frequent the area such as the ‘Near-threatened’ Snowy Plover.
Streaked Horned Lark are a threatened species which use the point for nesting, for this reason the DNR has erected signs around the perimeter of the peninsula’s vegetated center closing the area off to wanderers from March 1st- September 15th.
Staying out during this time isn’t just a courtesy, it’s the law.
Probably the most famous avian visitors to Damon Point are the Snowy Owls, which can occasionally congregate on the windswept spit in the winter months. This in turn can attract throngs of bird watchers, which serves to attract bird watcher watchers, and the watchers who watch them. Lots of watching going on here.

Seriously. It happens…maybe.
Deer, if you didn’t notice on the drive in, are found in ridiculous numbers on the Ocean Shores peninsula, and the Scotch Broom forest of Damon Point is no exception.
HISTORY
As mentioned before, at one time a road spanned into the heart of the park, but has since been destroyed by raging storms. You can still walk the remains of it to the Ye olde abandoned parking area. Oooh scary!
In the early 1960s the S.S. Catala served as a “Boatel” in Ocean Shores, before being run ashore at Damon Point by the New Year’s Day Storm of ’65.
There it languished until the 1980’s, when a girl fell through the ship’s deteriorated deck, breaking her back. The resulting lawsuit forced the state to cut the wreck apart and bury it.

In the 1990’s the wreck was exhumed by winter storms, with subsequent storms revealing more and more of the wreckage.
In 2006, a hiker noticed oil leaking from the badly rusted hull. In response, the state department of ecology remediated the site, ultimately removing 34,500 gallons of heavy fuel oil and all traces of the S.S. Catala.
CONSIDERATIONS
Dog walking is a popular activity at Damon Point, but please keep your dog on a leash, and especially out of the vegetated swaths of the park.
Ground nesting birds and dogs don’t mix.
Unfortunately garbage is abundant. Bottles, derelict fishing gear, shoes, socks, the kitchen sink… There is a lot washed up from the Pacific and from years of careless visitors.

If you think ahead, do a good thing and bring a garbage bag to pack out some of the crap.
You’ll probably notice that the garbage cans onsite are often overflowing with floatsam and jetsam, so take the trash with you.
Ask a local business to use their dumpster, they’ll likely oblige and appreciate your hard work.
Storm watching can be a fun activity for some of us, but bear in mind that high tide and high surf can easily send breakers right across the point. After all, in this article alone they have already beached a boat and destroyed a road!
You could be sent across along with them…
GETTING THERE
Find your way to Ocean Shores, WA.
Enter Ocean Shores via the fabulous 1960’s era white stone gateway. This is Point Brown Avenue.
Simply follow it south until you see the scary derelict hotel, then look for parking.
RED TAPE
No pass required for parking!
The park is Day-use only, dawn to dusk.
The only other red tape is the annual March 1st-September 15th travel ban through the park’s interior areas to protect threatened nesting sites.
PACKITINPACKITOUT!
…and of course, Happy Trails!
