3 hours (approx.)
Daily Tour
12 people
English
Experience the best of Warrenton with our guided tour! Our tour is like a hop-on-hop-off experience but with the added assurance of staying together as a group to ensure you make it back to your next destination on time. This is the location where the ocean and the river collide to create the most treacherous sandbar in the world, known as the Pacific Graveyard. Please remember to bring your own water bottle. As a token of appreciation for reducing plastic waste, you will receive a sand dollar. We will stop at Fort Clatsop National Memorial for approximately 30 minutes. Then, we will show you where High Life Adventures Zip Line/ Axe Throwing is. After that, we will drive to a place where you can buy tuna, crab, and fish off the boats. Next, we will head out to the Hammond Marina to see the view and where the movie Free Willy's big scene was filmed. Additionally, we will visit the Peter Iredale Shipwreck, South Jetty, and Battery Russell. You might catch a glimpse of an elk!
See the winter home of the Corps of Discovery on the Pacific coast in 1805-1806
30 minutes • Admission Ticket Included
See where the Zip lining and Axe throwing is located as we drive through the park.
• Admission Ticket Included
Learn where to buy fish, crabs off the boats. we will also drive out to the South Jetty for a stay of 15 minutes.
20 minutes • Admission Ticket Free
Historical landmark Battery Russell is one of nine batteries at Fort Stevens and was active for forty years, from 1904 to 1944. Fort Stevens was in service for 84 years, from the Civil War to WWII. It’s named after Bvt Major General David Russell, who fought in the Civil War.
20 minutes • Admission Ticket Free
Learn about crabbing, fishing, and legal requirements from Big Game Fishing.
15 minutes • Admission Ticket Free
Peter Iredale was a four-masted steel bark that ran ashore on October 25, 1906, on the Oregon coast while en route to the Columbia River. The ship was abandoned on Clatsop Spit near Fort Stevens in Warrenton, about four miles (6 km) south of the Columbia River channel. Today, the wreckage is still visible and serves as a popular tourist attraction, being one of the most accessible shipwrecks of the Graveyard of the Pacific.
15 minutes • Admission Ticket Free
This relates to the Tour of Astoria and the individuals who were relocated, discovered, and restored.
10 minutes • Admission Ticket Free