10 Nature & Parks in Willamette Valley That You Shouldn't Miss

July 6, 2021 Merry Kessler

Discover the best top things to do in Willamette Valley, United States including Schreiner's Iris Gardens, McKenzie River National Recreation Trail, Washington Park, Bush's Pasture Park, International Rose Test Garden, Hoyt Arboretum, Portland Japanese Garden, Mount Tabor Park, Crystal Springs Rhododendron Garden, Oregon Zoo.
Restaurants in Willamette Valley

1. Schreiner's Iris Gardens

3625 Quinaby Rd NE, Salem, OR 97303-9720 +1 503-393-3232 [email protected] https://www.schreinersgardens.com/
Excellent
87%
Good
11%
Satisfactory
2%
Poor
0%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

5.0 based on 239 reviews

Schreiner's Iris Gardens

Iris bloom season is in the month of May. OPEN DAILY MAY 8 - MAY 31, 2020 9AM - 6PM. Bloom season events run Mother's Day through Memorial Day. Visit our website for details on bloom season events. Iris Display Gardens closed in summer and winter months. OFFICE remains open year-round, Monday - Friday, 8:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m; office is closed New Year's Day, 1/2 day on Good Friday, Memorial Day, July 4th, Labor Day. Closed for the week of Thanksgiving. Closed for the week of Christmas.

Reviewed By casaahha - Salem, United States

For three short weeks in May, the Schreiner's Iris Gardens become one of the most beautiful spots in the world. The 10 acre display gardens are arranged in rectangular beds with multiple iris plants supplemented by rhododendrons, day lilies, oriental poppies and other flowers. This is augmented by circular beds of iris surrounding a flowering tree or large plant. The color combinations are excellent. This is heaven for a photographer. There are plenty of chairs and benches to rest if needed. There is a flower shop and gift store. We came on a week day and our only regret was that the gift shop did not have hot drinks available. It is hard to believe that the gardens are within sight of the I-5 freeway. The commercial iris growing areas surround the display gardens. It only costs $5 per car to enter.

2. McKenzie River National Recreation Trail

McKenzie Hwy, Blue River, OR 97413, Eugene, OR http://www.fs.usda.gov/recarea/willamette/null/recarea/?recid=4479&actid=24
Excellent
91%
Good
8%
Satisfactory
1%
Poor
0%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

5.0 based on 76 reviews

McKenzie River National Recreation Trail

Reviewed By ShirleyG958 - Springfield, United States

Great hiking trail for all skill levels. Families would do well on this trail. I loved that the trail is close to the river, wide, and very little poison oak or mosquitos. Be sure allow lots of time and take a camera. My suggestion would be to go during a weekday if possible. The trail can get pretty busy during the weekends. A September hiking area after summer campers have left would be idea. If you don't mind crowds then combine your hike with a camping experience.

3. Washington Park

4033 SW Canyon Rd, Portland, OR 97221-2760 +1 503-319-0999 http://explorewashingtonpark.org/
Excellent
77%
Good
20%
Satisfactory
2%
Poor
0%
Terrible
1%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 1,532 reviews

Washington Park

This popular park offers miles of trails, an extensive rose garden, a large Japanese garden and a zoo. For information on free shuttles, attraction admission hours and pricing within the park, and maps, visit our website.

Reviewed By PaulPapich - San Miguel de Allende, Mexico

My wife and I live immediately adjacent to Washington Park in Southwest Portland. In fact, being close to the Park was one of the major reasons we selected the property we bought. We visit it every week without fail. To start with, Washington Park is immense and gorgeous! It is home to the International Rose Test Garden, Japanese Garden, Holocaust Memorial, Vietnam War Memorial, the city's zoo, arboretum and forestry museum, archery range, tennis courts, walking trails, and much, much more. It would be a world-class destination if it only had the Rose and Japanese Gardens, which are extraordinarily beautiful. But perhaps the greatest draw for me personally are the trees - my ancient, stately friends, covering the hilly terrain, providing shade to walkers like me, and peace to anyone seeking a haven in today's chaotic world.

4. Bush's Pasture Park

600 Mission St SE, Salem, OR 97302-6203 +1 503-930-2734
Excellent
64%
Good
29%
Satisfactory
6%
Poor
1%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 136 reviews

Bush's Pasture Park

In the middle of the city sits the 90-acre Bush's Pasture Park, with trails for jogging, walking or biking, picnic areas and playgrounds, Oregon's oldest greenhouse conservatory and the historic Bush House Museum, a Victorian home with original wallpaper and furnishings.

Reviewed By Oregonwriter19

This park has it all...trails that meander through beautiful landscaping, through the woods, beside a creek, around a very active sports-field, a soapbox derby track, 2 children's playgrounds, a greenhouse, a Victorian mansion that is open for tours, and a rose garden. People jog, walk, run, sit on benches, have picnics, take family photos, attend weddings in the rose garden's gazebo, hike in the woods, play tennis on the courts, cheer teams from the bleachers, paint, sketch, take photos, walk dogs, volunteer to maintain the grounds or give tours of the mansion, or just lie on the grass and stare up at the sky. Everything a park should be, and more.

5. International Rose Test Garden

400 SW Kingston Ave, Portland, OR 97205-5883 +1 503-823-3636 [email protected] https://www.portlandoregon.gov/parks/finder/index.cfm?action=viewpark&propertyid=1113
Excellent
71%
Good
23%
Satisfactory
5%
Poor
1%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 5,561 reviews

International Rose Test Garden

The oldest official, continuously operated public rose test garden in the United States boasts more than 8,000 roses.

Reviewed By PaulPapich - San Miguel de Allende, Mexico

If you are ever in Portland during its glorious summer months, you absolutely owe it to yourself to visit the International Rose Test Garden. It is one of Portland's true gems. Imagine tens of thousands of perfect roses in full bloom, dozens of rose varieties, colors of every hue! Now imagine lovely walks among the rows and rows of roses, the perfume in the air, the tranquil atmosphere, the stately conifers that enclose the Test Garden on three sides, the view of downtown on the fourth, and the happy people taking photographs and stooping to smell the flowers. There you have the Rose Garden!

6. Hoyt Arboretum

4000 SW Fairview Blvd Fisherlane, Portland, OR 97221-2706 +1 503-865-8733 [email protected] http://www.hoytarboretum.org/
Excellent
75%
Good
21%
Satisfactory
4%
Poor
0%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 355 reviews

Hoyt Arboretum

A popular destination for nature lovers, this arboretum contains many different species of trees.

Reviewed By aprkniess - Beaverton, United States

The Hoyt Arboretum park is absolutely gorgeous in the fall. We hiked about 4 miles today following the Wildwood Trail and several smaller trails from the rose garden to the Hoyt Arboretum visitor center and back. The trail was not difficult but following the exact loop was sometimes not clear with the map we had. You could easily spend all day roaming and exploring. There are memorials and old douglas fir trees, etc all through the park. It's so close to downtown Portland, yet you feel as if you're in the country.

7. Portland Japanese Garden

611 SW Kingston Ave, Portland, OR 97205-5886 +1 503-223-1321 http://japanesegarden.org/
Excellent
66%
Good
24%
Satisfactory
8%
Poor
2%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 6,182 reviews

Portland Japanese Garden

Considered the most authentic Japanese Garden outside of Japan, the Portland Japanese Garden is a haven of tranquil beauty in all four seasons. In Spring of 2017, the Garden opened its new Cultural Village, complete with new garden spaces, classrooms, exhibition and gallery space, and the Umami Cafe.

Reviewed By mrg0137

On a recent trip to Portland, my wife and I stopped in Washington Park with the intention of seeing the Japanese Garden and nearby International Rose Test Garden. Since it was clearly out of season for roses in mid-November, there wasn’t much to see when we stopped at the Rose Garden first. We almost then skipped the Japanese Garden, since it was chilly and raining, and I hadn’t realized that unlike the Rose Garden, the Japanese Garden is an attraction with its own admission fee, not just part of the park that you can meander through freely. I’m really glad we ultimately decided to pay the $18 per person and visit the Japanese Garden, since it was absolutely serene and beautiful, even while walking through in the pouring rain on a chilly day. The line for tickets didn’t look particularly long that afternoon, but it was a bit slow-moving, since there was only one person working the admission window and others had a lot of questions and were buying memberships. I would definitely buy tickets online in the future to skip the line. We entered the gardens close to 3:00 pm, and were told that the last admission of the day would be at 3:30, although it sounded like there was no real time pressure, with the gardens staying open for a while after 3:30 so the final guests of the day could still make their way through. The gardens are built into a hill, so there was a bit of a leisurely uphill climb to get from the entrance at the bottom of the hill to the start of the gardens at the top. There is a shuttle service offered for those who want to avoid the walk and start at the Cultural Village at the top of the hill. From the Cultural Village, which includes restrooms, a gift shop, and a terrace with beautiful bonsai trees, you can start to meander through the gardens themselves, which are absolutely beautiful, with stunning landscaping and water features. Everything in the gardens is currently marked out with one-way paths to help promote social distancing, and the only thing that appeared to be closed was the Japanese Tea House. The gallery building that currently has a photography exhibit with photos from internment camps was open with limited capacity and was interesting to visit. Outside of that, we really enjoyed taking a leisurely walk through the various garden paths and discovering the various sculptures and plantings. It was especially gorgeous to be able to see the variety of changing colors on the trees in the fall. We also really liked that the size of the gardens was manageable so that it didn’t take forever to see everything, but there was still enough to do that the $18 admission was just about worth it (it could maybe be a couple dollars cheaper, but it’s so lovely that I didn’t mind supporting them through our ticket purchase). We spent about an hour at the garden in total, and probably would have spent more time if it wasn’t raining the entire time. I imagine that on a nicer day, you could easily spend a couple hours meandering through the gardens and taking time to relax at various spots along the way. Despite seeming a little pricey at first, the Portland Japanese Garden is absolutely beautiful and worth a visit. It’s a serene paradise in the middle of Portland, and it’s an interesting chance to see what I’ve read is one of the most accurate Japanese gardens in the United States.

8. Mount Tabor Park

SE 69th and Belmont Street, Portland, OR 97215 +1 503-823-2223 http://portlandoregon.gov/parks/finder/index.cfm
Excellent
52%
Good
40%
Satisfactory
6%
Poor
1%
Terrible
1%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 277 reviews

Mount Tabor Park

A forested mountain peak lying just outside the city of Portland: great for hiking.

Reviewed By carmenlK5654FY - Houston, United States

This is a great hiking/walking park. So many trails and choices to walk. Due to the Coronavirus, these hiking trails were not so crowded. Great walk here. Check out the dead Volcano.

9. Crystal Springs Rhododendron Garden

5801 SE 28th Ave, Portland, OR 97214 +1 503-771-8386 [email protected] https://www.portlandoregon.gov/parks/finder/index.cfm?propertyid=27&action=viewpark
Excellent
73%
Good
23%
Satisfactory
3%
Poor
1%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 439 reviews

Crystal Springs Rhododendron Garden

In the summer months, this peaceful park comes alive with brightly colored rhododendrons.

Reviewed By U57KMmaryl - Portland, United States

In any season, you'll find a reason to linger here. You can see bald eagles, great blue herons, wood ducks, and a huge variety of overly friendly geese, ducks and squirrels. There are also nutria, beavers and river otters. Each season brings new delights.

10. Oregon Zoo

4001 SW Canyon Rd, Portland, OR 97221-2799 +1 503-226-1561 [email protected] http://www.oregonzoo.org/
Excellent
52%
Good
32%
Satisfactory
11%
Poor
2%
Terrible
3%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 2,564 reviews

Oregon Zoo

Community-supported since 1888, the Oregon Zoo is a world leader in animal welfare and conservation, connecting more than 1.6 million visitors with the world of wildlife every year. Open every day of the year except Dec. 25.

Reviewed By Julestheadventurer

On my trip I was fortunate upon researching that a free entry was being offered at Zoo in Beaverton / Portland border I guess you would say .Anyway, was fascinating to see Black bear , lions and giraffes in person. The kids loved it. Zoo had great directional signage and was well maintained. This experience was exciting to see these other animals that we dont normally see on.a regular basis It also offered hot chocolate and elephant ears dessert treats which was great Would definitely go back to see this wondrous sight. Julie B

ThingsTodoPost © 2018 - 2024 All rights reserved.