"... The grandest and most pleasing prospect my eyes ever surveyed."
The Oregon Coast is phenomenal. I've struggled the last few days to find words that properly describe the coastline so as to give it justice, and there aren't many. Phenomenal will have to do. It is a region that shows the aged earth we live on; 400-year-old sitka spruce trees that blanket parkland, basaltic sea stacks left behind after decades of erosion. It is an area that I am not sure I can captive into one single blog post.
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Spiderwebs gathered morning dew near where we camped in Astoria, OR. |
Last Thursday, having had enough of the hustle and bustle of Vancouver, of working and eating and sleeping and repeating, we took the long weekend to go to Cannon Beach, Oregon, some 552 km and six hours of driving down south. It was the best decision I've made (as of recently). We slept the first night on a dirt road near Astoria (a difficult thing to do in the U.S., as state troopers often patrol roads and will send you packing to a campsite if they catch you). We parked on a sandy marshland/spit area, and in the morning heard the fishing boats heading out along the Columbia River estuary. Not quite sure yet what to expect of Oregon, we took a walk to the waterfront and then packed up to drive a few miles further to Cannon Beach.
We first rented surfboards when we arrived in Cannon Beach. I've surfed only once before in Tofino, and it was a challenging endevour - one I wasn't sure I'd try again. My hesitation at surfing lurked beneath my skin as I pulled on my wetsuit. And then it was off to Indian Beach in Ecola State Park - a beach surfers head to for some nice (I prayed) breaking waves.
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Top: me surfing. Middle: Ben and I with our boards. Bottom: Ben at Indian Beach. |
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Ecola State Park's Hiker's Camp. |


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Sitka Spruce. The right tree began growing atop a fallen tree, which then broke down into the earth, hence my ability to climb beneath it's roots. |
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Ben skimboarding along Cannon Beach in front of Haystack Rock and "the Needles." |
Far too soon Sunday morning came, and we left Hiker's Camp, said goodbye to some very friendly Portland people, and made one last quick stop at Cannon Beach. This beach is perhaps the most famous of them all along the Oregon Coast, if not for the view itself, for it's Hollywood claim to fame. The movie The Goonies was filmed on the beach. Haystack Rock, the most photographed, stands at 235 feet and is a monolith (meaning it is made up of one single type of rock), and is the third largest of this kind in the world. We flew our kite on the beach, ate a snack, and then headed our way back to Vancouver, reluctantly.
For many years I've wanted to head down the Oregon Coast. I love my mountains, but the salt water and the Pacific, with its sandy beaches, welcoming surf, and even more welcoming sites, is grabbing a hold of my feet and pulling me closer. The north part of the Oregon Coast really is the grandest and most pleasing prospect my eyes ever surveyed... yet.
Jesse. Oregon is my favorite. I've been heading down there for years, Camp Spot 44C at Nehalem Bay state park is my second Home. Its just near MAnzinita. I love it there. Did you make it to smugglers cove in oswald state park just south of cannon beach? its amazing. Hike through the old growth down the most popular surfing spot on the oregon coast. Its magic.
ReplyDeleteIf you like volcanic landscapes and easy but rugged backcountry hiking, check out Hwy#97 along the central line. The Deschutes NatForest and the Newberry Volcano Monument have weird & beautiful stuff to see packed high in density. Of course Crater Lake is a big one not to be missed.
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