Olympia, WA Outdoor Activities
Outdoor Activity Deals
Edgeworks Climbing
- West End
10,000 sq. ft. climbing gym helps climbers of all ages learn the fundamentals of bouldering, top roping, and safe belaying techniques
AcuWings
- Renton
A scenic flight showcases a bird's-eye view of Seattle sights; students get training before piloting an aircraft alongside an instructor
Pattison's West
- Federal Way
90-by-176-foot maple hardwood rink, curved to facilitate speed, hosts open skates in facility with private-party room.
GirlDiver
- Multiple Locations
Students can try scuba diving in a two-hour session, or aim for Open Water certification locally in the summer or abroad on their own time
Auburn Skate Connection
- South Auburn
Classic skating on solid-wood skating rink built in the fall of 1965
Cascade Canoe & Kayak Centers
- Multiple Locations
The beginner-friendly lesson on Lake Washington teaches kayaking basics, such as general safety, intro movements & recovering from a capsize
Kent Valley Ice Centre
- Kent
Public skating outings include vouchers for the café, which serves pizza, BLTs, and chili-cheese fries
Operation Paintball Seattle
- Graham
Equipped with rental markers, 200 paintballs, and protective masks, duos engage in combat across six fields marked with obstacles and towers
Recommended Outdoor Activities by Groupon Customers
Locals who frequent the nine holes of Skyline Golf Course have taken to calling it Cathlamet’s “Emerald Gem.” With its undulating fairways and scenic views of the Columbia River Basin, the course offers little to challenge this honored epithet. Designed by architect Ralph Rodahl, its treacherous doglegs and ponds have been distracting hole-bound balls for nearly half a century. Among Rodahl’s most challenging designs are two holes at par 5 and two at par 3, each of which requires golfers to navigate a fairway rife with hazards and packs of feral golf carts.
Situated near the first tee, an ample driving range allows for long-distance practice before setting off to conquer the high-risk, high-reward course. After the round, players can replenish with a cold refreshment or savory snack on the clubhouse deck, or upgrade their golf gear with a new sleeve of golf balls from the pro shop or a cyborg caddy from the future.
Course at a Glance:
- 9-hole, par-35 course
- Length of 2,433 yards
- Course rating of 29.6
- Slope rating of 106:m]]
Apex Karting satisfies your undernourished need for speed by letting you experience the thrill of finally outracing your cheetah half-sister on one of the Pacific Northwest's longest indoor racetracks. And you'll do it all behind the wheel of an 11-horsepower Stratos Kart, a clean-burning conveyance that can reach speeds of 40 miles per hour. Races may be split between family, friends, and medieval scholars, and after you retire from the tracks for the evening, you can unwind in Apex's beer garden; while sipping one of their barley-pop selections (starting at $3), you can reflect on how much more thrilling engine-powered speed is compared with leg-powered penny-farthing rides. Your Groupon may also be redeemed for a $110 credit toward private-track rental (usually $725–$800 per hour).
Today, Mt. Rainier Scenic Railroad stands as a bridge to the past, whisking passengers through timbered foothills, alongside mountain streams, and across wooden trestles aboard trains led by restored locomotives. But roughly 30 years ago, the company was just an idea bouncing around the head of Tom Murray Jr., who made it his mission to preserve the sights, sounds, and experiences of a bygone era.
With the help of a friend, and later, many volunteers, Tom established MRSR as a tourist train service, a title the company retains to this day. As a result, the last three decades have been filled with weekly excursions that send customers chugging around the forestry that unfurls in the shadows of Mt. Rainier. Volunteers still maintain the majority of the company, and with every ride, passengers are reminded that railroads have linked the United States in a manner that airplanes, cars, and gas-powered pogo sticks never could.
A family of ducks swims along Devils Lake, river otters play across Lake Merwin, and a kayak tour floats along the water. When Tracie Driver started NorthWest EcoExcursions, she envisioned a recreation company that would combine outdoor thrills with respect for the environment. To this end, NorthWest's guides, who each boast either a postgraduate education or more than 10 years in park-ranger experience, educate their customers on local wildlife and geology during trips that run the gamut from hiking to whale watching to goat-packing tours. The staff also maintains eco-friendly practices, serving strictly organic foods on camping trips and ensuring all of their office's plants are 100% solar powered.
