forestbathing.io

Forest bathing in Portland

Portland has one of the largest forested city parks in the country right at its edge, deep fir and fern with miles of quiet trail. The conifer air here is exactly what the practice is built for.

Where to forest bathe in Portland

These are real, mapped green spaces near the center of Portland, ordered by how good each one is to actually settle into, the closest and leafiest near the top. Pick one with room to walk into and somewhere to sit still.

Governor Tom McCall Waterfront Park
0.9 km
~21 acresWater on site

Open water to sit beside while everything slows down.

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South Park Blocks
0.6 km
~10 acresWater on site

A quiet edge of water to settle near and watch the light move.

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Chapman Square
0.1 km
small pocketWater on site

Water on site, and water is where the stillness tends to land.

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Lownsdale Square
0.1 km
small pocketWater on site

Find the water, find a place to sit, and let your attention go still.

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Southwest Terwilliger Boulevard Parkway
2.6 km
Nature reserve~96 acres

Kept wild on purpose, which is exactly what you came for.

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Keller Woods
3.1 km
Woodland~40 acres

Old trees and real canopy, the kind of cover a forest bathe is built for.

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Portland Japanese Garden
2.3 km
~9 acresWater on site

Room to walk by the water until the road drops away behind you.

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Pittock Bird Sanctuary
4.5 km
Nature reserve~23 acresWater on site

A wide green with water in it to sit beside for a slow half hour.

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Spot data from OpenStreetMap contributors (ODbL).

Find a forest bathing spot anywhere →

The practice, step by step

  1. Arrive slowly. Walk slower than feels natural. For the first few minutes, just take inventory of your senses, what you see, hear, smell, and feel underfoot. Let go of doing it right.
  2. Notice what is in motion. Wander for fifteen or twenty minutes with no destination, following whatever moves, leaves, water, light, a bird.
  3. Find a sit spot. Choose one place and stay there for twenty minutes or more. This is the part that works. The longer you are still, the more the place forgets you are there.
  4. Close gently. Before you leave, mark the end somehow, a slow breath, a last look back. Then carry the pace home with you.

Aim for forty minutes to an hour, in the early morning or the hour before sunset. The full guide is on how to forest bathe.

Rewyld, a daily nature app

A short guided practice to play when you get there.

Rewyld gives you five quiet minutes, guided in a calm voice and tuned to where you are and the day’s weather, plus one nature prompt each morning to get you back outside. Made for the moment you press begin, not a recording.

Try a practice

Questions

Where can I forest bathe in Portland?

Anywhere with real tree cover that is big enough to walk into and quiet enough to settle. The places above are good starting points, but a wooded corner of a large park near you works too. Tree cover and stillness matter more than the name of the spot.

How long should a forest bathing session be?

Aim for forty minutes to an hour. Twenty minutes is enough to begin. Move slower than feels natural, and spend a good stretch of it sitting still in one place.

Do I need a forest, or is a city park enough?

A city park with real trees is enough. What matters is paying attention with your senses instead of your phone, and staying long enough for that to settle.

Forest bathing in other cities

Back to the spot finder · A small thing by Rewyld.