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110823_Quinault_7291Huckleberries, Quinault Rainforest.jpg
Red Huckleberry, photographed here in the Olympic Mountains near Lake Quinault, are found throughout the NW Coastal ecology from Northern California to British Columbia and inland the the Cascade Mountains. These are the berries that make the Huckleberry famous, sweet and crunchy and used for foods from ice cream to pies. Olympic Penninsula, Olympic National Park, Lake Quinault, Willaby Campground. Olympic Peninsula
Douglas H. Orton
Red Huckleberry, Ericaceae, Vaccinium, Gaylussacia, Vaccinium parvifolium, grizzly food, native fruit, sweet treat, huckleberry icecream, cobbler, pie, berry picking, edible incredible, native flora, wild delight, rainforest, Olympic Peninsula, Olympic National Park, Olympic National Forest, Pacific Ocean, Strait of Juan de Fuca, Salish Sea, Port Angeles, Sequim, Forks, rain forest, rainforest, camping, hiking, biking, fishing, climbing, Hurricane Ridge, Deer Park, Hoh River, Queets River, Elwa River, Bogachiel River, Mt. Olympus, Mt. Seattle, Dungeness, Dungeness Spit, Duingeness Recreation Area, Sequim, Sequim Bay, Sekiu, Clallam, Klallam, Clallam Bay, Kitsap County, Jefferson County, Grays Harbor County, Sol Duc River, Lyre River, Dungeness River, Lake Crescent, Lake Ozette, Lake Mills, Lake Aldwell, wilderness, logging, park lands, tourism, U.S. Route 101 Douglas Orton, Olympic Peninsula