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Camano Island State Park is a publicly owned recreation area on Camano Island in Puget Sound located 14 miles (23 km) southwest of Stanwood in Island County, Washington, United States. The park occupies 173 acres (70 ha) and has 6,700 feet (2,000 m) of shoreline. It is managed by the Washington State Parks and Recreation Commission. [2]
The state parks system has two properties on Camano Island: Camano Island State Park and Cama Beach State Park, both located on the west side of the island. Camano Island State Park, near Elger Bay, was opened in 1949 after a one-day volunteer effort with 500 local residents to prepare the property. [45]
Camano Island State Park erratic is on the south cliff trail in Camano Island State Park, overlooking Saratoga Passage. [ 8 ] 48°07′43″N 122°29′59″W / 48.12861°N 122.49972°W / 48.12861; -122.49972 ( Camano Island State Park
Cama Beach Historical State Park is a public recreation area facing Saratoga Passage on the southwest shore of Camano Island in Island County, Washington. The state park preserves the site of a renovated, modernized 1930s-era auto court and fishing resort.
The primary islands of Island County, Whidbey Island and Camano Island are served by a total of 3 Washington State Routes, those being SR 20 and SR 525 on Whidbey Island, and SR 532 on Camano Island. SR 20 enters Island County via the Port Townsend-Coupeville ferry route from the West, and departs via the Deception Pass Bridge in
Matia Island Marine State Park: San Juan: 145 59 Strait of Georgia McMicken Island Marine State Park Mason: 11.5 4.7 South Puget Sound Patos Island Marine State Park: San Juan: 207 84 Strait of Georgia Posey Island Marine State Park: San Juan: 1 0.40 Haro Strait Saddlebag Island Marine State Park San Juan: 24 9.7 Padilla Bay Skagit Island ...
It is located within the Camano CDP. It has an elementary school, part of the Stanwood school system. [2] The 1923 building of the Utsalady Ladies Aid (founded 1908, and still active as of 2008) is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and the Washington State Heritage Register. [1]
The state government took over maintenance of the Stanwood–Camano highway in 1945, designating it as Secondary State Highway 1Y (SSH 1Y). SSH 1Y ran from Camano Island to East Stanwood, where it was briefly concurrent with SSH 1E, and continued to a junction with Primary State Highway 1 (PSH 1, also signed as U.S. Route 99).