Vince wrote:
> I go with the baby wipes idea. Don't need no stinkin' showers.
> Shave at your campsite (rechargeable razors are very handy)
> and be sure to pack everything into the bear boxes, especially
> the wipes!
I got back from my trip this week and I did use my rechargeable razor. I would have liked to pack everything into bear boxes (just to avoid cramming everything back in the car) but only saw one campground with individual boxes.
I encountered a variety of different shower facilities, including ones that I didn't necessarily use. Some campgrounds had nearby shower facilities, others had ones a decent drive away, and others required one to find a private shower somewhere.
At Crater Lake's Mazama Camground there was a public shower facility (several stalls separated into men's/women's) which was coin-op for 75 cents. Didn't use it though, so I can't comment on the experience.
At Kalaloch Camground (really nice campground right on the beach) at Olympic NP there were no shower facilities. There were supposedly places one could get a shower. I used the public hot springs pools at Sol Duc Hot Springs at ONP, but that was $11 and towels were extra (wish I had brought my own). That included shower use, but they charged $3 for daily shower use only.
The KOA in Port Angeles, WA of course had adequate showers, including two shower-only rooms (one each for men and women) where you could lock the door.
At Mt Rainier it was interesting. The only public showers were at the Jackson Visitor Center (open 10-7) and are maintained by the NPS and not a concessionaire. They had two co-ed single showers where you can lock the door behind. It was only a quarter for what a ranger described to me as "seven and a half minutes of lukewarm water". There was no way to control the temperature or flow of water. For me it varied from nice very warm shower to lukewarm as described; and that was during the same shower. The coin-op mechanism was a little bit strange. It required the quarter to be inserted with a knob turned counterclockwise. Then the mechanism is wound by turning all the way clockwise. The cycle is then started by turning it back counterclockwise and to the "ON" position. If you're done you can turn off the shower by turning slightly clockwise. I only took about 3 minutes, so I tried turning it on and off several times, which I guess can be done if there's still time left. A sign said one quarter while the mechanism said four quarters (might have been changed at one time). My wife couldn't figure it out and eventually put in five quarters before she got it working, although I figured it out with a single quarter. They're building a new visitor center and supposedly these showers are going down with the dismantling of the old visitor center. Nobody I talked to know if there were going to be new shower facilities at the old one. I'd hope they would have some, since these NPS-provided ones were the only showers available to campers anywhere nearby.