Four-wheel drive racing could be added to property where sprint boats envisioned

PORT ANGELES — Specialized four-wheel-drive vehicles — called rock crawlers — might have a race track where small sprint boats are to race west of town, the Port Angeles Regional Chamber of Commerce was told Monday.

Property owner Dan Morrison said the sprint boat track is still in development as he waited for the various permits to be evaluated.

Morrison told a chamber luncheon meeting at the Port Angeles CrabHouse Restaurant that he has been in talks with Rich Klein, a prominent rock crawl competition coordinator who lives in Oregon, about holding around competitions a year in Port Angeles.

“These [rock-crawler] trucks are very well-muffled, so noise shouldn’t be a problem,” Morrison said.

“They also are very efficient, so the carbon footprint of this event is very, very small,” Morrison said.

Shallow water track

Morrison and a group of investors want to build a sprint boat race track — a shallow watercourse — to race the small, colorful jet boats.

He said the group was hoping to have surface water rights transferred to groundwater rights.

“We know that there are several wells already on our property,” he said.

“Our surface water rights allow us way more water than we could ever need.”

Morrison, speaking during a chamber program that focused on Port Angeles-area events that bring revenue to town, attempted to dispel concerns about nearby Dry Creek.

The 4-acre sprint boat race course on land southwest of William R. Fairchild International Airport in west Port Angeles would be 3-feet-deep and 15-feet-wide — filled with 500,000 to 750,000 gallons of water.

Dry Creek water

“There are all sorts of rumors that we plan to pump water out of Dry Creek, which runs near our property, but that is not the case,” Morrison told the chamber audience.

“We are trying to transfer our surface water rights so that we can make use of the already existing wells.”

In sprint boat racing, small two-person speed boats powered by water jet propulsion are raced around in the watercourse about 3 feet deep and 15 feet wide.

Navigators help the drivers negotiate a series of turns, with boats usually completing a course in less than a minute.

The boats are about 12 feet long and can reach 80 mph in two seconds.

Four investors

Morrison, one of four investors who bought the 113-acre South Fairchild Industrial Park for $1.05 million from the Port of Port Angeles in August, said the group hopes to have permitting and construction finished by May, but that it can’t set a firm date.

The investors — including Morrison, Don Zozosky and Josh Armstrong of Port Angeles, and Scott Ackerman of Colfax under the name, Dan Morrison Group — have 22 acres of the land for sale.

“We also would design the course so that the water runoff would go into our sprint boat track to make the most use out of that,” Morrison said.

“The water out of the sprint boat track will later be used for irrigation on the rest of the property.”

Community benefit

He said he is enthusiastic about what sprint boat racing — and other competitions on the land — could do for Port Angeles.

“There is really very little gain in this for us putting on the sport,” he said.

“The best benefit is for the community and for the town putting it on.

“The rock crawlers would be some small way for us to recoup some of the money that we have spent doing all of this.”

Also speaking at Monday’s chamber meeting were Scott Nagel of the Sequim Lavender Festival and Dungeness Crab & Seafood Festival, Carol Pope of the Juan de Fuca Festival of the Arts and Vanessa Shearer of the Port Angeles Regional Chamber of Commerce, who spoke about the Jazz in the Olympics Dixieland festival.

Pope said the Juan de Fuca Festival — to be held May 22- 25 — will make extra effort to reach out to Victoria and to the Olympia area because the Hood Canal Bridge will be closed for repairs.

“We are holding this festival when the bridge is closed,” she said, “so we can’t in good conscious spend a great deal of money in advertising in the Seattle area.”

__________

Reporter Paige Dickerson can be reached at 360-417-3535 or at paige.dickerson@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

Art Director Aviela Maynard quality checks a mushroom glow puzzle. (Beckett Pintair)
Port Townsend puzzle-maker produces wide range

Christmas, art-history and niche puzzles all made from wood

Food programs updating services

Report: Peninsula sees need more than those statewide

U.S. Rep. Emily Randall, D-Port Orchard.
Randall bill to support military families passes both chambers

ANCHOR legislation would require 45-day relocation notification

x
Home Fund supports rent, utility assistance

St. Vincent de Paul helps more than 1,220 Sequim families

EYE ON THE PENINSULA: Peninsula boards set to meet on Monday

Meetings across the North Olympic Peninsula

Hill Street in Port Angeles is closed due to a landslide. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Hill Street closed due to landslide

Hill Street is closed due to an active landslide.… Continue reading

Tippy Munger, an employee at Olympic Stationers on East Front Street in Port Angeles, puts out a welcoming display for holiday shoppers just outside the business’ door every day. She said several men have sat there waiting while their wives shop inside. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Holiday hijinks

Tippy Munger, an employee at Olympic Stationers on East Front Street in… Continue reading

Hospital begins recorded meetings

Board elects new officers for 2026

From left to right, Frank Hill, holding his dog Stoli, Joseph D. Jackson, Arnold Lee Warren, Executive Director Julia Cochrane, monitor Janet Dizick, holding dog Angel, Amanda Littlejohn, Fox and Scott Clark. (Elijah Sussman/Peninsula Daily News)
Winter Welcoming Center has expanded hours

Building provides respite from November through April

Wastewater bypass prompted no-contact advisory

The city of Port Angeles has clarified Monday’s wastewater… Continue reading

A crew from the Mason County PUD, in support of the Jefferson County PUD, works to replace a power pole and reconnect the power lines after a tree fell onto the wires and damaged the pole at the corner of Discovery Road and Cape George Road, near the Discovery Bay Golf Course. Powerful winds on Tuesday and early Wednesday morning knocked out power across the Peninsula. The majority had been restored by Wednesday. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Reconnecting power

A crew from the Mason County PUD, in support of the Jefferson… Continue reading

Port Angeles council passes comp plan update

Officials debate ecological goals, tribal treaty rights