On July 15, 2026, the Wednesday Wonder Walk brings an evening of hands-on plant lore to Discovery Park in Seattle, Washington. This two-hour session (5:30pm–7:30pm) pairs a coastal hike with practical lessons in edible-plant identification, ethical harvesting, and basic field herbal first aid. The walk is part of a Discover Backpacking Series aimed at people who want to condition with weighted packs while learning useful backcountry skills; other walk dates include May 20, June 17, August 19, and September 16.
The route threads Discovery Park’s shifting habitats: a firm Douglas-fir forest that opens into coastal prairie, then drops to sandstone bluffs and tidal mudflats with long views across the Salish Sea toward West Point. Key features you’ll encounter include the coastal bluff and beach access, remnant prairie grasses, and coastal scrub where edible and medicinal plants grow in plain sight. This makes the site ideal for plant-study: species tolerate salt spray and wind, and the geology—exposed glacial till and sandstone—creates diverse microhabitats.
Participants receive hands-on guidance and a small kit—your event listing notes a free knife, bandana, and water bottle—so you can practice safe cutting, identification, and emergency field care. Instruction emphasizes ethical harvest: take only what you can use, avoid rare species, and follow park rules. Expect short demonstrations on preparing common first-aid herbs, simple poultices, and how to improvise dressings and splints from natural materials.
Why book this session? It pairs practical, immediately usable skills with an approachable evening timeline, so you walk away better prepared for backpack trips and day hikes. The Discover Backpacking format makes it social and low-pressure: walkers carry weighted packs at a manageable pace, ask questions, and test techniques in situ. The meeting point is listed as Tolt-MacDonald Park & Campground—confirm check-in details on the event page—and the location address is 3801 Discovery Park Blvd, Seattle, WA 98199, USA.
The walk is a standout local activity because it blends urban access with coastal ecology and practical wilderness skills training. You’ll learn to read plants in context, move confidently on bluff trails, and apply simple first-aid methods should a hiking mishap occur. Bring sturdy shoes, a headlamp for post-sunset walking, and a spirit of careful curiosity—this is learning by doing on a living shoreline, with techniques that extend from backyard foraging to multi-day backpacking.
Whether you’re new to plant ID or carrying weight on overnight routes, expect a moderate route that emphasizes observation over speed. Bring layered clothing for wind off Puget Sound, a first-aid kit if you have one, and a notebook for species names. The session suits families with teens able to hike with a pack, and it’s an economical way to upgrade practical skills before longer backpack trips, and social practice.