Hoh Rainforest
Hoh Rainforest is one of the largest temperate rainforests in the U.S., located on the Olympic Peninsula in western Washington state. It encompasses of low elevation forest along the Hoh River, ranging from. The rainforest receives an average of of annual precipitation—among the rainiest places in the United States. The Hoh River valley was formed thousands of years ago by glaciers and is the ancestral home of the Hoh people.
Within Olympic National Park, the forest is protected from commercial exploitation. Between the park boundary and the Pacific Ocean, of river, much of the forest has been logged within the last century, although many pockets of forest remain. According to the National Park Service, in 2024 approximately 460,000 people visited the Hoh District, which includes the rainforest and its visitors center.
The protected portion of the forest includes the "One Square Inch of Silence", a monument to mark what it deems the "quietest place in the United States". It was placed in 2005 as part of a demonstration in favor of noise control.
History
On December 20, 2024, the Jefferson County government announced the closure of the Upper Hoh Road—the only vehicular access to the rainforest and visitors center—after flooding of the Hoh River had washed out portions of the road. The embankment separating the road from the Hoh River had been weakened by a major bomb cyclone a month earlier that eroded and saturated the soil. Portions of the road that had been damaged or destroyed in previous winter storms and floods had been repaired and reopened using emergency federal funding, but the mass layoffs and disruption to federal services beginning in early 2025 led to an uncertain timeline. Washington Governor Bob Ferguson announced in March 2025 that the state government would fund the majority of the estimated $650,000 in repairs to the Upper Hoh Road, with the remainder from more than 100 private donors. The state government's $623,000 portion was derived from an economic strategic reserve fund that includes unclaimed lottery prize money and requires a portion of the total cost to be covered by private contributions. The Upper Hoh Road was fully repaired by May 5 and reopened to traffic on May 8, restoring public access to the visitors center.Climate
Hoh Rainforest is the wettest forest in the Contiguous United States, receiving of rain per year.It is an Oceanic climate, with a much higher rainfall during the winter.
Flora
The dominant species in the rainforest are Sitka spruce and western hemlock ; some grow to tremendous size, reaching over in height and in diameter. Coast Douglas-fir, western red cedar, bigleaf maple, red alder, vine maple, and black cottonwood are also found throughout the forest.Many unique mosses and lichens are also present in the rainforest, such as lettuce lichen, which "requires the cool, moist conditions found under the canopy of old-growth forests" and is consumed by deer, elk, and other animals. Ferns like the Western Sword fern also grow in the rainforest.
Fauna
Much native fauna also makes the Hoh Rainforest their home, including the Pacific tree frog, northern spotted owl, bobcat, cougar, raccoon, Olympic black bear, Roosevelt elk, coyote, Cascade red fox, and black-tailed deer. Recently, naturalists have been planning on reintroducing fishers to the forest and surrounding forests due to their almost extirpated population in Washington and the introduced Virginia opossum is beginning to make way to the region in and around the forest.The area is also home to the banana slug, which has recently been threatened by the encroachment of a new species of slug, the black slug, an invasive species from Northern Europe.
Trails
The Hoh Rainforest is home to a National Park Service ranger station, from which backcountry trails extend deeper into the national park.Near the visitor center is the Hall of Mosses Trail, a short trail—— which gives visitors a feel for the local ecosystem and views of maples draped with large growths of spikemoss. There is also the Spruce Nature Trail, which includes signs that identify various trailside trees and plants.