Oregon Coast Trail: Whales!

August 25, 2019

Whew! What a long and full day!

5:03 leaving camp after strawberries and xxixiiixixiï-recycling poachers
6:30 asked a fisherman
6:35 @ mo’s
6:47 @ bus stop
7:25 bus arrives waits til 7:30
7:45 @gleneden wayside cooking kale and oatmeal in gazebo (electric is off)
8:45 to the beach at gleneden
9:23harbor seals near shore. High frothy surf
9:45 leave beach. Talk to residents
10:00 chesters gocery store in
10:45 back on beach. Very close! Willow street
11:00 fogarty “point”
11:15 on 101
11:26 stumped on the beach.
Found it!
12:06 boiler bay whales!
12:39 finished talking with sebastian
Lunch cookies and cheese
1:06 leave boiler bay
1:30 at pirate coffee. Spicy wench
1:52 walking on to Beach Street
Depot Bay is nice with lots of public space along the coast in town. Nice Private residences with ocean viewing on coast street
3:05 leaving depoe bay at town boundary sign Still on trail next to 101
3:47 -4:07whale cove viewing platform. Whales here too!
Whale Cove Inn
5:15 foulweather point (poo emergency!)
6:13 devil’s punchbowl
6:30 beach
7:30 at camp in Beverly Beach at park. Receptacles for charging. Welcome center open 8-8 read more

Oregon Coast Trail: Rain Day

August 21, 2019

7:56 Zach drops us off by boat on the Netarts Spit. We walk the beach, wondering when the forecasted rain would start. It’s overcast and raining oh so slightly. As we walk, the only ones on the beach today, my mind wanders to the rhythm of my feet.

This is our eighth day of hiking and I have noticed some inconveniences – I’m tired from our long days of walking, ready for a rest day; my sandals aren’t working so great because they rub a couple of toes raw. I do have gauze tape which helps; Its windy and starting to rain making walking a little uncomfortable. read more

Oregon Coast Trail: Highest Coastal Summit

August 18, 2019
We slept in til 7:45 in our softground forest site. I could hear traffic on Highway 101 below, but the forest was quiet and lush. Our food bag, hanging four feet off the ground on a line between two trees was intact. We don’t now what critters might get our food, maybe mice, but still didn’t want to keep food inniur tent.

Time for oatmeal, cooked with a chopped apple in it.

Grizelwilliams0723@gmail.com does YouTube for REI. send link to trailjournals
Tara brach radical acceptance
Thirsty boots
11 a.m. falcon point/30 min break
12-1:19 from south viewpoint to bench near sign to parking (short sand beach?) Lots of hikers in the trail to falcon point and surfers in the beach!
2:01 starting up N Mtn
3:15 devil’s cauldron (sketch)
5:15 neahKahNie summit
6:30 gravel road
7:17 turn off 101 toward beach
9:14 @ hiker biker siteafter shopping at fresh foods and walking down read more

Oregon Coast Trail: Visitors

August 17, 2019

Fourth day on the trail.

We got out from the Hiker camp on Tillamook Head at the leisurely hour of 9 a.m. It was raining oh so lightly. We took off our rain jackets, even! Our morning walk continued another two miles through the forest, descending to the beach at Ecola State Park. The trail going north from Ecola State Park is gentle and wide, a good one for a day hike to Tillamook Head. By contrast, the connecting trail to Cannon Beach, our next one, is closed! Washed out, I understand. That means a two-mile road walk on the state park road. I think we chose the busiest time to walk there-10 a.m. on Saturday morning! We hugged the left side and tried to be visible to drivers. Success! read more

Oregon Coast Trail: Tillamook

August 16,

The landmark we had approached for two days was now underfoot. Rounding the ridge of Tillamook Head we heard a wondrous sound. Here, from within the cathedral of spruce and fir, a chorus of sea lions resonated! Ocean and forest meet!

As we climbed the forest path of Tillamook Head, generously and thoughtfully preserved by Marie Louise Feldenheimer in the 1970’s, I recalled other forests of majestic trees I have walked – Washington on the Pacific Crest Trail, Joyce Kilmer in Tennessee, Mt. Rogers in Virginia, even the tiny 60-acre Wesselman Woods in Evansville, Indiana.  In all of them, the ancient trees, wide and tall, filled me with awe at the ability of plants to grow so huge! We rounded the ridge to the surf side and there I experienced something none of these other forests had provided – the barking of sea lions! A little ways out from shore, is a rock capped with a light house. With my binoculars I could just barely make out the movement of the silhouettes of sea lions. read more

Oregon Coast Trail: Underway

Favorite Tide Table book on the northern coast.
We slept in the van, across the parking lot from the trash compactor!
Classic landmark of Fort Stevens State Park is the wreck of the Peter Iredale
One of our first Oregon Coast Trail posts
South Jetty of the Columbia River, northern terminus of the Oregon Coast Trail
Our journey starts by walking north on the beach in Fort Stevens State Park

August 14, 2019

Our first three miles of the Oregon Coast Trail is a shakedown for the rest of the trip.

The Fort Stevens State Park staff who registered us for the Hiker Biker Site said we could park our van there for the extent of our trip! They are really supporting us as hikers, including providing a secure parking space for the whole month we’ll be on the trail! As we wandered around the back lot behind the employee area where we understood we could park, a smiling park staff said, “Can I help you?” She excitedly pointed us to the correct spot, delighted to have Oregon Coast Trail hikers. She also answered our query about where to get a tide table, a necessity for hiking the coast, with directions to Bornstein’s Fish Market, “the place with the best tide table – and good food too!” read more

Oregon Coast Trail: First Day

August 15, 2019

I walked all day along the beach and didn’t have to turn back.

Last Spring, while walking on the beach in San Diego, I wondered what it would be like to just keep walking along the coast, all the way to Washington. Today, on our first full day on the coast of Oregon, I got a taste of that! I liked it! Of course, this beach, from Fort Stevens State Park to the town of Seaside, may be unique with its pure brown sand and no shells or rocks. I wore my new sandals and enjoyed them as I walked in and out of the surf. I did have a break in issue with abrasions on the second for of each foot. I taped them up with the sports tape in my pack, which isn’t as good as the self-stick gauze. I’ll have to get some. This is exactly the reason I decided to carry two pairs of shoes! I haven’t decided which is best for the mixed terrain of this walk. I switched to my trailrunners and socks for the last couple of miles. They were so much better on the dune leaving the beach and the two miles of road walk through Seaside. read more

Journey to the Oregon Coast Starts Today!

August 10, 2019

We’re headed to Oregon!

Today, John and I will wrap things up in Ohio and begin our cross-country drive to Oregon. John has been researching the Oregon Coast Trail (OCT), learning that it’s quite different from the Eastern US trails we’ve walked!

  • It’s relatively level
  • It goes through or near towns frequently
  • Many state parks along the way have sites for hikers
  • It frequently follows a road
  • It’s along the coast, which means beach walking!

We still have to choose our gear. We’ll probably take the free-standing tent rather than my all-time favorite tarp because it will set up more easily on the beach. We’re also discussing whether or not to take a stove. It could be difficult to find canister fuel, although the tiny stove itself is lightweight and easy to carry, so we might just have it in reserve. We’re counting on having lots of wind, so will be sure to have our windshirts or rainjackets. I’ll keep you posted on our other gear choices! read more

Regina’s Favorite Pouch

https://forgivenesswalks.com/ReginasPouch

One piece of gear I love is my waist pouch. In fact, it’s not just hiking gear, it’s become everyday wear! Yes, it may not be the most stylish accessory, but hey, style hasn’t been a priority of mine. Usefulness wins!

What’s useful about a waist pouch is that my essential items are safe and always available!

Here’s what I keep in my waist pouch:

  • Phone
  • Credit cards
  • Cash
  • Notebook
  • Tiny journal tools
  • Toothbrush
  • Tiny bottles of essential oils
  • Dental floss
  • Tiny Pocket knife
  • Extra phone batteries
  • Ear buds
  • Pens
  • A copy of The 13 Steps
  • A spoon
  • Lighter
  • Thumbdrive
  • Needle & pins

This is a long list of items, right? The key is to have tiny versions of each thing!

And, my favorite pouch so far is the Eagle Creek Wayfinder or the Eagle Creek Tailfeather. read more