Option 1: From Issaquah High School
7.2 mile out-and-back trail
Option 2: Chirico Trail
3.8 mile out-and-back trail
Option 1: From Issaquah High School
7.2 mile out-and-back trail
Option 2: Chirico Trail
3.8 mile out-and-back trail
I kept a close eye on the tide charts, and wrangled everyone I knew to come with me to enjoy LOW LOW TIDE.
Okay, so... how do you know the best times to go? Well... SCIENCE.
Pick a tide chart... the interweb has about a million. The NOAA site offers a monthly graphic chart that makes it easy to pick out the best days. Find the lowest low tides... anything negative will do, but -2' (read: minus-two-feet) and lower is best. If the only low-tide day with a nice weather forecast is a workday, manage to take it off. IT'S WORTH IT. Plan your day around it. Hell, plan your month around it.
In the example below (June 2018), there's a super low tide (-3.308') that hits its peak at around 1:30 in the afternoon on a Saturday. Start walking out in your water sandals and capri pants so you're already way out on the spit by the time the low tide is at its lowest. You'll want to keep an eye on the time, and notice when the sand spit starts to shrink on you... that's when to start making your way back to shore. The out-and-back usually takes us about 2 hours, since we sniff and play and swim and chase.