Sequim lavender valley with the Olympic Mountains beyond
3-Day Itinerary · Lavender at the Heart

An Olympic Peninsula Trip,
Anchored in Lavender

Start in the only valley in America that grows lavender like Provence, then let Sequim be your base for the wildest national park in the country. Three days, one rain-shadow valley, endless reasons to stay longer.

Most people race across the Olympic Peninsula on the way to somewhere else. The ones who know better make Sequim their home base — because no other town on the peninsula gives you fields of lavender at sunrise, glacier-capped mountains by afternoon, and old-growth rainforest by evening, all within an hour's drive. Here's a three-day loop that starts with what makes this corner of the world unique, and builds out from there.

Day One

The lavender valley

Begin where the region's identity begins. Twelve family farms sit within a fifteen-mile radius of downtown Sequim, most free to visit, all family-run. Spend the morning u-picking bundles and watching copper-still distillation; break for lavender lemonade and lunch; spend the afternoon at the most photogenic farms when the light goes gold. Build your loop with the trip planner so the farms group efficiently, or browse them on the farm map. If you're here July 17–19, this is also festival weekend.

The lavender is the reason you came. Everything else is the reason you'll come back.

Day Two

Hurricane Ridge & the Dungeness Spit

Forty-five minutes from the lavender fields, the road climbs to Hurricane Ridge in Olympic National Park — alpine meadows, wildflowers, and views across the Strait of Juan de Fuca to Canada. On the way back, walk the Dungeness Spit, the longest natural sand spit in the United States, with a lighthouse at the end and eagles overhead. Cap the day back in Sequim with dinner and one more golden-hour farm stroll.

Day Three

Lake Crescent & Sol Duc

Head west for the peninsula's wilder side: Lake Crescent, impossibly blue and glacier-carved, with the short hike to Marymere Falls; then soak at Sol Duc Hot Springs deep in the rainforest. It's a full day out and back, and Sequim's sunny, dry evenings are a welcome contrast when you return.

Why base yourself in Sequim

Sequim sits in the Olympic rain shadow — sixteen inches of rain a year, the sunniest spot in Western Washington — so your home base stays dry while the rest of the peninsula does what rainforests do. It's centrally located between the park entrances, it has the lavender no one else has, and its farm-stays and glamping put you to sleep in the fields. See where to stay in Sequim, then map your days in the planner.

Turn this into your trip

Pick your farms and days, get an efficient route, and email yourself the plan — free.

Open the trip planner →

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