By Gregory Scruggs, The Seattle Times
While summer travel gets lots of love in Washington, the holiday season also brings time off work and school for many, making the end of the year a prime time to travel — beyond the usual rounds for family, friends, turkey and presents.
In fact, there are plenty of places to go in Washington this time of year. You can even avoid crowds if you know where to look.
If you still need a grand idea for a winter vacation, this travel guide will help you navigate where it’s high season in Washington — and take advantage of areas where it’s low season.
READ MORE: Mark your calendar: CP Holiday Train heads west to Alberta and B.C.
High season for snow country
Winter came early to the Cascades, with several feet of snow falling in the first week of November. While Mother Nature is unpredictable, it’s a safe bet that visits to snow country will be in full swing throughout the holiday season, whether for downhill skiing, snowboarding, cross-country skiing, snowshoeing, sledding or snow play.
Most of Western Washington lives closer to sea level, where snow is fleeting at best. That makes trips into the mountains to see the white stuff a very popular pastime. Sometimes too popular, as exemplified by complaints of overcrowding in recent winters. If you are planning to go to the snow on a weekend, or during the week between Christmas and New Year’s, be prepared if your first intended destination is full. Have a Plan B, like a less popular Sno-Park, or go in the afternoon, when some morning crowds have already left.
Leavenworth is an undeniable draw during the holiday season. This year will be the second season of Village of Lights: Christmastown. Instead of “flipping the switch” to turn on the lights every weekend, which drew unwieldy crowds around Christmases past, the Chelan County town’s holiday light display now stays on through February, to spread out crowds.
The official holiday festival runs to Dec. 24 and for the first time includes weekday programming as another way to beat the crowds.
The Leavenworth Chamber of Commerce advises visitors to arrive early on weekends, as parking does reach capacity, and to take advantage of the free Link bus that runs 11 a.m. to 7 p.m., seven days a week, to shuttle visitors from the park-and-ride lot behind Safeway into the heart of town.
Low season for city escapes
The rest of the world prefers visiting Cascadia’s big cities in the summer, when hotel rates jump through the roof in Seattle, Portland and Vancouver, B.C. Can’t imagine why.
READ MORE: 4 Ways to celebrate Christmas in Seattle this year
That aversion to dreary weather and early sunsets is your gain: Deals abound for visiting our neighbours to the north and south. Head up Interstate 5 or hop on the newly reopened Amtrak Cascades service and check out the Vancouver Christmas Market through Dec. 24.
For a B.C. take on holiday lights, summertime fave Capilano Suspension Bridge Park turns into Canyon Lights through Jan. 22, while the VanDusen Botanical Garden’s Festival of Lights runs through Jan. 2.
The Fairmont Pacific Rim is offering 15 per cent off stays through April 30 while the Coast Coal Harbour Vancouver Hotel has a 25 per cent discount for bookings made by Dec. 24 for stays through Dec. 30. Any hotel booked through stayvancouverhotels.com with promo code “Kingtut” gets you free tickets to National Geographic’s “Beyond King Tut: The Immersive Experience,” on display through Jan. 8 at the Vancouver Convention Centre.
READ MORE: Magical Lights by the Lake sets the holidays a-sparkle in Harrison
In the other direction, you’ll find Seattle’s sibling city to the south filled with holiday fare, including the Christmas Ship Parade (to Dec. 21), Oregon Zoo’s ZooLights (to Jan. 5) or Peacock Lane (Dec. 15 to 31). At The Benson, view the hotel’s 51st annual Gingerbread Masterpiece, on display through Dec. 30.
Low season for state parks
Washington State Parks are wonderful places to car camp, with destinations like Deception Pass rivaling some national parks. But sprinkled among the hundreds of campsites throughout the Washington State Park system are yurts, cabins and vacation homes.
These so-called roofed accommodations are much more appealing come winter than a soggy tent. While these accommodations are somewhat bare-bones, they nevertheless provide an affordable and peaceful way to spend time in the great outdoors outside the peak summer camping season.
According to data from Washington State Parks, occupancy rates last season from Dec. 1 to Jan. 31 ranged from a low of 23 per cent for the yurts at Seaquest State Park near the foot of Mount St. Helens (where, in winter, you can get as close as the Marble Mountain Sno-Park) to a high of 58 per cent for the vacation houses at Cape Disappointment, which include the assistant lightkeepers’ residences. (If that’s booked, try the steward’s house just upriver at Fort Columbia.) The ever-popular Cama Beach cabins, meanwhile, were just 26 per cent occupied last holiday season.
“There’s nothing like going out on a windy, rainy hike but knowing you can come back to a toasty cabin or yurt to dry out, sip a hot beverage under a blanket and play games with family and friends,” said Washington State Parks representative Meryl Lassen.
Ready to make getaway plans? Go to washington.goingtocamp.com.
High season for razor clamming
Why would anyone wander around in the dark on a cold, wet Pacific beach, much less thousands of people at the same time? To get their hands, and taste buds, on a razor clam. These delectable mollusks have enthralled renowned local chefs for preparations from soy sauce and sake to clam chowder.
The holiday season is normally smack in the middle of prime time for razor clams, with clam dig days sanctioned by the Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife. But there’s a big and disappointing caveat this season: marine toxins.
Shellfish managers test the razor clam population regularly before giving the green light to any coming clam digs and recently found unsafe levels of domoic acid. The department requires two tests taken 10 days apart that meet Department of Health guidelines before resuming the recreational clamming season. “There is no rhyme or reason behind these toxin outbreaks,” wrote WDFW’s Mark Yuasa via email. “Once it gets going, it should be gangbusters!”
Check wdfw.wa.gov/fishing regularly for updates on when razor clamming season reopens. When it does, try a guided razor clam outing at Iron Springs Resort or The Tokeland Hotel, where co-owner Zac Young will take guests out personally. If you know the basics but don’t have the gear, stay at Adrift Hotel in Long Beach, where you can rent clam digging equipment.
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