We're updating our camping and moorage fees to continue providing great experiences for visitors amid inflation and rising costs. You will see a rate increase for camping stays booked for May 15 and beyond. Moorage fees will increase Jan. 1. Learn more here.
Meet our Mascots
Our mascots represent a wide variety of animals from around the state and hope to welcome our youth to a lifelong love of the outdoors!
Pictured left to right above, our Washington State Parks Mascots are:
Bagley the beaver
Bagley is named after Daniel Bagley, who came to Washington state in 1852. He had a lifelong passion for education.
Lewis the Pacific chorus frog
Lewis is named after Meriwether Lewis, the explorer who co-led the famous Lewis and Clark Expedition with William Clark. The expedition took place between May 1804 and September 1806 and mapped the way west from the Louisiana Territory to the Pacific Ocean.
Belle the raccoon
Belle is named after Belle Reeves, the first woman Washington Secretary of State (1938-1948) and one of the first members of the Washington State Parks and Recreation Commission.
Ruth the deer
Ruth is named after Ruth Peeler, one of the first citizen park commissioners and mother of the Washington State Parks interpretive program.
Matilda the snowshoe hare
Matilda is named after Matilda Jackson who moved to Chehalis, Wash., with her husband, John R. Jackson, in the 1840s. Their reconstructed cabin is preserved as the Jackson House State Park Heritage Site.
Blake the snowshoe hare
Blake is named after Blake Island State Park, a marine state park in the Puget Sound southwest of Seattle.
Wallace the red-tailed hawk
Wallace is named after Wallace Falls State Park, which is home to a 265-foot waterfall.