Oregon Coast – Day 10

On the south Oregon coast

We are packed up, checked out, and moving down the road before first light. Our destination today is relatively unknown and depends on various factors regarding fatigue, dinner desires, and how much of the remainder of the drive we want to finish tomorrow before returning to Phoenix, Arizona. Regardless of how much ground is ultimately covered we still had to take time to stand before the ocean as we bid Oregon adieu.

On the south Oregon coast

Hello California, thanks for this our last stop to breathe in the ocean air before we take aim for the long haul through the center of the state. Luck would have it that we made it most of the way on the winding 101 through Northern California without rain, but not all the way. As we drove between Oakland and Berkeley on our way to the incredibly boring Interstate 5, we had mostly good weather, but by the time we were about halfway through the state the rain started and never stopped before we did. Options for our overnight were either Bakersfield at 654 miles for the day or Covina at 770 miles. Considering that we once had driven 917 miles in a day from Redding, California, back to Phoenix, Arizona, I thought I could easily nail this “short” drive. With the hammering rain up the Grapevine (for those of you who know this road) and our rental car barely able to maintain 60 mph, I was wasted and near worthless as we plodded over those mountains. Turns out that whoever that was 20 years ago who told me that as I age, I’ll likely lose the ability for such lengthy drives as the body and mind suffer even though the spirit may be willing was absolutely right.

I knew well before we started to approach the greater Los Angeles area that I was nearing exhaustion, but my heart was set on dinner at my old fav The Northwoods Inn. My mind was also telling me that if we could make that side of L.A., we’d only have about 370 miles left to finish the next day. And so it was that another beautiful Thanksgiving trip to Oregon comes to a close, and still, we can dream about our next encounter with the rugged coastline we have fallen in love with.

Oregon Coast – Day 9

The Inside Range of Coos Bay in Charleston, Oregon

The bittersweet last full day doing the vacationy stuff is at hand. The goal is not to dwell on this being an end but an incredible gift of a day that will stand out in a singular fashion of having been a great collection of moments in its own right. I try my best when we are out on epic journeys not to see their conclusion, so much as an appreciation of the idea that asked, “What if this were the only day in my entire life to be out here and this had always been my dream to be right here on a day such as this?”

If you read yesterday’s overly long post, you’d know that we stayed at Sunset Bay State Park last night. What I hadn’t shared is that once more, we slept in one of our favorite dwellings ever: the mighty yurt. From there, the nearest breakfast joint is in Charleston, where we stopped at the new-to-us Cape Cafe. Soon after, we were out driving around town near the Inside Range of Coos Bay when we snapped this photo. I don’t know about you, but this looks about as perfect as perfect gets.

Cape Arago Lighthouse in Coos Bay, Oregon

Cape Arago is home to one of the four lighthouses on the Oregon coast that cannot be visited by the general public. Even seeing this one is a bit off the beaten path, and this is about as close as one gets. Also, this isn’t the original lighthouse that first stood here back in 1866; that one was built further to the left, but erosion threatened it, so it was ultimately moved. Then, the second lighthouse was also in danger of being lost to the encroaching sea, and so finally, in 1935, this current structure was built. Until 2013, there was an old bridge to the island, but without maintenance, it had degraded to the point that it was finally removed. Prior to Europeans/Americans setting up shop here, there’s evidence that the Coos indigenous people had a village out on the island. The other island on the left in the foreground is called Qochyax, pronounced “Quay-KEE-awk,”  which means “women and children” in the Coos language.

Bullards Beach State Park in Bandon, Oregon

Nothing like the call of nature to direct where we head next. Typically, a state park is a safe bet when it doesn’t look like we’ll be hitting a town for a while, and so it was that we pulled into Bullards Beach State Park. Seeing we’re here, we simply must go up over the dune for a walk along the ocean on such a beautiful day.

Caroline Wise and John Wise at Bullards Beach State Park in Bandon, Oregon

These are the faces of contented happiness where the chill wind is a welcome reminder that we are still in Oregon. While I’ve wished it before, I’ll wish it again with a plea that we could easily take sound photos so that years from now, we could also listen to the ocean in the background when returning to this blogged memory. We probably walked around here forever until reaching the edge of infinity, where the horizon of time started to fade, so as much as we would have liked to have never left, we decided that we’d leave anyway as infinity is only so big.

The Famous Langlois Hot Dog in Langlois, Oregon

Louis Pasteur once said, “Chance favors the prepared mind;” with those sage words, we try to pay attention to all that is around us; otherwise, we risk missing important details. Good thing we saw the sign directing us to try the World Famous Langlois Hot Dog. We weren’t really hungry yet, but we were not going to miss the chance to experience something that has gained the attention of people around our planet. We ordered but one of the dogs in order to split it and verify if the claims rang true with us. One bite of this spectacular wiener, and we ordered another. Hailing from Frankfurt obviously makes Caroline an expert in Frankfurters, and my being married to one also makes me an expert. And while these wieners are a bit short and stubby, they are still greatly satisfying. Where exactly does one find a World Famous Langlois Hot Dog? Why in Langlois, Oregon, at the Langlois Market served by the Langloisese. This probably leaves you wondering just what is a Langlois. It’s a disused French word meaning England.

Beach south of Cape Blanco Lighthouse in Port Orford, Oregon

We are on the verge of straining to stand up against a fierce wind blowing over the bluff here at Cape Blanco in Port Orford. Not only is it piercingly cold, but occasionally, the wind carries tiny drops of rain, though maybe it’s bringing ocean spray from the crashing waves below.

These kinds of scenes ignite a spark of imagination where my mind kicks into wondering about our primordial beginnings. Long before creatures had arrived on primitive lands, prior even to the arrival of plants, our still naked earth would have spent eons with a hostile atmosphere, the only witness to these views. Here and there, the sun would poke through the clouds to illuminate a tiny spot on the ocean while not a soul in the eternity of the universe was ever on hand to see what was at work behind the cloak of evolution. Lands were forming and convulsing while magma ran over the surface to extend the reach of where we humans would one day walk along a shore. After billions of years, we should be so lucky to bask in this symphony that plays the elements with a skill mostly unknown to those who gaze into this abyss.

Cape Blanco Lighthouse in Port Orford, Oregon

Cape Blanco Lighthouse is an elusive outpost we are yet to pillage with our senses. Someday, we may arrive during the time of year they welcome visitors, but so far, we are consistently here at the wrong time of year. You may wonder what our shared fascination is with lighthouses. They are one of those intrinsically interwoven icons taken from the tales of the mariner. The lighthouse speaks to the symbiotic relationship between land and sea, man and machine. This beacon worked to help the seafarer navigate the treacherous coastal waters while transporting their cargo of people and treasure, be that food, products from another area, or gold itself. During times of stormy weather, the lighthouse received the full force of the gale, and in the cold dark of night, it was the job of the keeper to maintain the beam that can reach 50 miles (80 km) out to sea. It is that light that allowed the oceangoing traveler to know they were about to be safe once again as they landed on terra firma. The lone sentinel in the night is such a romantic notion that it sits squarely on our bookshelf of dreams.

Chicken Bomb from Wild Oaks Grill in Port Orford, Oregon

We drove right by Wild Oaks Grill on the side of the road on the outskirts of Port Orford, but then Caroline told me this place was getting some great reviews, so we pulled a quick U-turn and headed right over. Rob, the owner, greeted us and told us all about the process he uses to smoke everything he makes. He has a knack for doing everything large, including today’s special, “The Chicken Bomb.” This concoction is only for the serious of appetite and could easily sate two, maybe three, people. What is it? It’s a homemade sausage stuffed into a chicken breast filled with cream cheese and then wrapped in bacon before the entire thing goes into the smoker. The mac and cheese that was served was a spicy mix of jalapenos and habanero and was introduced to the smoker as well. Rob serves up some quality BBQ, but his less-than-ideal location leaves him looking for new digs farther south. We’ll be stopping in on our next visit to Oregon should we find ourselves in his neck of the woods again.

Shark Fin Rock at Gold Beach in Oregon

I feel that I’ve shared a photo of this location too many times already, but I cannot find a previous post of it. Maybe I never identified it formally, and so I am being denied finding it. This is Shark Fin Rock at Meyers Creek Beach near Gold Beach. Off in the distance, where the sun is still shining through, and behind these clouds on the left is sunny California, just a mere 35 miles away. Oregon has arranged the cloud cover to scare away the hordes from their southern neighbor who might otherwise recognize that the Oregon Coast is a magnitude more beautiful than theirs and consequently start migrating north.

Samuel H. Boardman Monument on the Oregon Coast

Then, like a wink to those who are already up north, the sun peeks out to reassure us that its golden light is never far away. This view and the monument reflecting the sun is in honor of Samuel H. Boardman, the Oregon State Parks Superintendent who oversaw the establishment of the state’s roadside parks. The lands put to the side are an amazing collection of beautiful places that no one landowner is able to monopolize. The views are permanently available to all of us who make the effort to travel this coastal road and the highways that supply access to the parks on the interior.

Caroline Wise at Harris Beach State Park in Brookings, Oregon

On our first visit to the coast of Oregon 15 years ago, we stayed right here at Harris Beach State Park in the Winchuck yurt. Tonight, we are staying in Chetco, named after the local indigenous people of southern Oregon and the river that runs through Brookings.

Caroline Wise at Harris Beach State Park in Brookings, Oregon

All those years ago, these yurts were a lot cheaper to rent per night in the offseason than they are now, but they still represent one of the best bargains for being close to the ocean. Driving up from Arizona, we are able to bring all the bedding we want. Wrapped up and ready to unroll is a sheet atop a Pendleton blanket (made in Oregon, 550 miles away in the northeast corner of the state) and our feather comforter.

Harris Beach State Park in Brookings, Oregon

With the heater on, the bed made, and Caroline and I set up at the small desk, the only thing missing is the patter of raindrops on the canvas roof. We can hear the low rumble of the ocean that’s only a couple hundred feet away as we smile at one another and revel in how perfect these cozy moments are. If today were the only vacation journey of our lives, it would have been the most amazing experience anyone has ever had. To see it any other way would mean that we had become jaded and undeserving of seeing the magic all around us.

Oregon Coast – Day 8

Beach at Moolak Shores Inn north of Newport, Oregon

Who doesn’t want to walk along the ocean with the snowy plovers as they are reflected back at themselves, producing an even more beautiful scene? The stormy sea appears to be racing to capture them, and if successful, maybe try to convert them into fish or a kind of mini penguin; who knows? This flight of whimsy catches me as I watch the interplay between the birds and the sea that dance upon the shore. The speed of those legs and their extended beaks demonstrate a perfectly evolved bird package able to burrow for a meal in time with the receding waters. This is a natural elegance we should all stop to appreciate.

Beach at Moolak Shores Inn north of Newport, Oregon

Out of destruction comes change, and from that, a different form of beauty arrives. Volcanoes, in their moments of ferocity, appear dangerous until their violent activity takes a pause, allowing the impact of their disgorging to be seen through the lens of time. This clay sandwiched between layers of sand tells the story of a volcano here on the ring of fire that sent out a layer of ash in a wet environment. As nature continued her story, the sands of time continued to accumulate. Then, in yet another century, the fire and raw earth took center stage again. Another volcano (or maybe the same one) spewed its wrath into the sky and upon the land until, once again, the sand between was trapped under a near impervious layer of fine sediment that would remain damp for thousands of years into the future.

Beach at Moolak Shores Inn north of Newport, Oregon

How does the cauldron of the earth’s bowels work? At one moment, the ash that erupts is gray, followed by another eruption of differently-hued ash, creating a multi-colored natural layer cake of sediment. The greenish hue of the top layer is likely caused by the amount of bentonite in the ash, while the blue of the clay below is most likely due to lower concentrations of iron and aluminum. Seeing how I’m in no way a geologist, I can only guess at things here, but to my untrained eye, it appears that the earlier volcanic ash layer with less iron and aluminum was also compositionally different, forming chunks that are quite unlike those of the clay that rests right on top of it.

Beach at Moolak Shores Inn north of Newport, Oregon

There’s enough iron in these sediments that they are rusting and adding yet another hue to the palette of the earth on display here next to the ocean. Now, look to the top of this photo, and in the sandstone layer, you might see a couple of bands (more evident on the right side of the image) that are darker than the sand above and below it. My guess is that either the temperature of the ocean had changed for a time, thus producing a variation in the vegetative matter that was settling, or maybe runoff from the land was carrying a layer of sediments from further inland. Of course, all I can do is speculate using my limited knowledge of this kind of stuff, but I can tell you that I certainly enjoy wondering about the beautiful things we stumble upon during our explorations as a form of entertainment. Should we fall into some great amount of wealth during our lives, I would be employing the expertise of professionals able to shed light on these mysteries instead of relying on a smartphone and our ability to ask the right questions. Sometimes, neither is available, so we can only speculate.

Beach at Moolak Shores Inn north of Newport, Oregon

Four years ago, I embarked on a path of building a virtual world called Hypatia. It was never intended to be a game per se but a platform meant to enable people of all ages to start developing skills that are becoming more relevant to being able to participate in our current economy. Minecraft was perfect for drawing children into an environment where digital workmanship and collaboration were key to fostering the individual’s progress. Society at large is also in need of such opportunities and training. The grouping of people who share knowledge to further each other’s potential is known as agglomeration, and many communities and even entire states have but a nascent movement towards that goal.

Virtual reality (VR) may end up being a mere stepping stone to augmented and mixed reality (AR and MR), but VR is available now and can offer access to skills that could be a conduit to greater opportunity while the AR/MR technologies are further refined, and prices brought down. My sense was that if we could use a virtual city paradigm to get people to collaborate in VR, bridging the gap of economic and geographic isolation while spurring them to participate and help us build this digital world, they would, at the same time, acquire some of the skills that would help them create a career out of working with digital information and knowledge systems. Online digital agglomeration in virtual space sounded like a great idea to me.

Why do I believe this is important? There is a lot of information stored in various objects and topographies along the Oregon Coast and the larger world, but I cannot know them all. Augmented reality could offer a mapping of resources and act as a knowledge interface that would allow those of us walking these shores to better identify the elements, history, and forces that are at work here. Just imagine what we could learn about the clay we were looking at above if a Smart AR system was able to identify our location along with the object of our gaze and then tell us the approximate time in Earth’s history when a volcano located at a specific nearby spot on the map laid down the ash. Then it could also tell us more about the chemical composition of the clay and the molecular and medicinal properties that might be known. Maybe early people or contemporary local artists have been using clay to make art. Are there examples of those works in local shops or museums? Smart augmented reality could share that knowledge with people as they are out exploring their world. But millions of trained artists, coders, musicians, and developers would need to work many years in order to see this come to fruition.

Beach at Moolak Shores Inn north of Newport, Oregon

How fast do these western snowy plovers run? Are they migratory? What’s in their diet? We cannot ask the birds themselves to help us understand them, and sadly, there are never any ornithologists just hanging around when you need one. A smart augmented reality system would identify the birds and their traits, teaching us about their habitats, if they are endangered, and what their nests look like. We could bring up MRIs, x-rays, and molecular diagrams of their bone and feather structures that help make them particularly adept for life on the shore.

Beach at Moolak Shores Inn north of Newport, Oregon

Fluid dynamics are a complex side of science, and while I can make a wild-ass guess as to how the receding water, along with different elements within the sand, work to align particular types of grains to create such beautiful patterns, I have no real knowledge about these processes. My point is that just as there are countless grains of sand in this photo alone, there are countless pieces of information and 3D models to be built that could be assembled into teaching systems delivered to everyday people out exploring the world while on vacation or out in the field learning. This exposure to knowledge furthers our vocabularies and allows us to see our world not just from the superficial recognition that the walk along the ocean is beautiful but also that at a more intrinsic level, it can be astonishing when we start to understand it at a granular level.

Beach at Moolak Shores Inn north of Newport, Oregon

Many people in our current age are stuck like rocks in petrified sediment that doesn’t allow them to break free of intellectual nearsightedness. Like the ocean wearing down the coast, it crashes into humanity, and our use of knowledge must act as the sea to help loosen those locked into their own tight orbits of intellectual rigidity to reach an escape velocity, allowing them to deploy their minds for the betterment of all of us.

Obviously, this is not an overnight solution where a tempest of thought lands upon the shore of our brains, offering instant enlightenment; we must be a persistent wave battering at the immovable rock. Nearly ten years ago, I wrote a tongue-in-cheek blog entry about universal basic income that I believe still has some salient points. If we were to start exploring something along the lines of using participation credit to boost income along with a culture-wide program to lift our digital literacy, I think we’d be laying the foundation and building blocks to help bring us into the next stage of our economy.

Beach at Moolak Shores Inn north of Newport, Oregon

Even the chaotic properties of rushing water and grains of sand can work together to bring visual order in beautiful accidental patterns. It is then my hope that the intentional minds of humans able to exercise deterministic ideas might also find a symbiotic relationship that would allow us to assemble within our own chaotic universe of thoughts and actions the energy to once again find a common vision. Across history, we have striven to tame nature, develop agriculture, and utilize basic elements to make metals; we have organized ourselves into cities and states, learned to understand the universe, and share knowledge with a thin wafer of silicon, glass, and a flat battery gathered in a package that fits in our pocket. Humankind is not yet at the frontier of taming the planets found circling other stars, but we must continue to endeavor to improve our lives in our own time and on our own planet.

A people without purpose is capable of going to war in order to find a renewed sense of that purpose. I, for one, do not want to lose or sacrifice loved ones because we are choosing the path of continued ignorance after such a long period of great advancements. We must ask ourselves what makes sense that we can work towards at this moment in history that allows all of us to share in trying to accomplish the impossible. How can everyone looking for a greater purpose contribute to the betterment of our species and help provide a healthier, more supportive environment and home for our children and ourselves? This goal must extend beyond our most successful cities and embrace those who remain isolated from the participation of building the future.

Beach at Moolak Shores Inn north of Newport, Oregon

It’s time for us to move away from the public spectacle of being a constant witness to the tragically absurd lives of politicians and celebrities and bring the focus back to what our roles are as individual citizens working to make our communities, states, country, and planet better places. We cannot wait for the wealthiest to share a modicum of their treasure in some trickle-down fashion so that maybe in a thousand years, your town will finally be a financially viable outpost where your descendants will want to retire.

We need a universal basic income agreed to for the entire planet. It must be as ubiquitous as oxygen, something we all have access to. We need a planet-wide goal of helping the ecosystem best support each and every one of us. We can start that process with a basic income and a goal of recording, creating, and sharing all the knowledge locked in the various natural and cultural systems of our earth. I may never make it to Tumba, Rwanda, in Africa, but why shouldn’t I be able to learn about the people who live there and how they coexist with the flora and fauna in the area instead of watching a rerun of Game of Thrones? [Note: I have never watched Game of Thrones or much of anything else on television since 1985] Sure, I can learn what’s available about Tumba on the internet, but I want an immersive experience that takes me to a face-to-face encounter with the Tumbanese without me having to fly halfway around the world.

Beach at Moolak Shores Inn north of Newport, Oregon

Life is like this pattern in the sand in that it will not be here long. Our lives are profoundly short, and the patterns that flow through our perceptions should always be shifting, reorganized by the sea of experience. The good fortune of having been born in this age is that we’ve been able to witness the ushering in of a ubiquitous form of electronic knowledge sharing that must also evolve. We are all witnessing the social problems that are associated with intellectual stagnation and being locked into aging paradigms that do not offer growth and progress. We see it with Brexit, the Yellow Vests in France, with Donald Trump, and the rise of populism. We should resist the temptation to exercise our anger and instead deploy our better natures to rise to the challenge of improving ourselves and our neighbors, wherever they may be on earth.

Moolak Shores Inn north of Newport, Oregon

This blog entry has become a short story, as now it’s over 2,000 words, and I’m only on the 12th image of 30. It is going to become increasingly difficult to share meaningful thoughts without digging deeper into subject matter that may not really relate to our day of meandering, though why shouldn’t the mind meander just as the body and eyes do? This overnight at Moolack Shores north of Newport is part of our effort to explore every bit of the Oregon Coast with as fine a granularity as possible. To date, we have stayed at 13 state parks along this segment of the Pacific Ocean and 12 towns in between, so on average, we have spent a night every 14 miles out here on the western side of Oregon.

For more statistics, we first visited back in 2003 and have now been up here 11 times and even visited twice back in 2011. By the time we are done with this trip, we’ll have accumulated a total of 68 days spent just along the Oregon coast. We’ve also traveled the Columbia River Gorge, spent some time in Crane Hot Springs, Crater Lake, and Portland, and traveled the interior of the state. Now, the sad or maybe good news: some of you reading this might think we’ve been lucky to take nearly a dozen vacations to Oregon with an average stay of about six days, but this is only about 0.2% of our lives so far. Please think hard about that. We’ve stayed over two months on the Oregon coast while on those vacations, and it barely registers as a tiny percentage of all of our time on Earth. Even if you were to travel on vacation two weeks a year every year from the time you are 18 until you are 80, you will have spent a mere 3% of your waking days on serious vacations where truly new experiential opportunities exist.

Caroline Wise on Nye Beach in Newport, Oregon

You must get out and stretch your limited time for gathering experiences on the planet you live upon. There’s no good excuse that stops you from venturing out of your routine. Find someone who will help you if you must. Just go out 20 miles from home if that’s the best you can do, and if you’ve never been more than 5 miles from where you grew up, you really have an urgency to get out. I know that some people reading this will find it hard to believe that there are those who have stayed within a 5-mile radius of where they’ve always lived, but I’ve heard that sad story countless times. This woman in the photo you’ve seen many a time on this blog is 5,295 miles (8,522 km) from her birthplace in Frankfurt, Germany, and yet she’s walked in the halls of the White House, climbed the Statue of Liberty to stand in the largest crown on earth, rafted the Colorado River (yeah I wrote a book about it), snorkeled in Hawaii and Florida, went snowshoeing in Yellowstone, strolled the streets of New York City, and went leaf-peeping on the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Between all that, she’s been to every state in the U.S., and we found time and resources to visit Europe more than once.

Nye Beach in Newport, Oregon

The point is not to brag but to beg people to live with intention and a larger purpose than lying around like a beached jellyfish. Vacationing is a great balance and reward for the investment in pushing your life forward. Then, once you reach that point where your rewards have been great, it starts to occur to you that it would make life all the better if you could help others reach these heights. But all the wishing in the world and playing the lottery of passivity while complaining about other’s unfair advantages will never propel you out of the situation where you find yourself stuck in place.

Nye Beach in Newport, Oregon

The path could be paved with many dead ends, and often, you will feel you are going in circles, never arriving at a destination, but again, you must persevere. Sometimes, we must become aware that we are walking over missed opportunities because we don’t have it within ourselves to deal with the discomfort of doing something we’ve already convinced ourselves is not a thing we would like. But like this pattern in the sand, I have no idea what created it, and I could have easily walked right by, but there’s something intriguing here, so I stopped to photograph this sand anomaly so I could possibly learn what made this after I got home. Try as I might, I’m just not finding a clue. Someday I hope to return to this post and update what it was that created these patterns. Though I’m still lacking that knowledge, I’m not discouraged that I don’t know everything and that I can take great comfort in the fact that I will continue this journey of seeking and not always knowing.

Yaquina Head Lighthouse in Newport, Oregon

If you are still with me on this tiny tome, let the lighthouse be the signal that we are again encountering a story of travel not of the mind or the economic future of humanity but of two people achieving another milestone. It has taken years to connect with the Yaquina Head Lighthouse, as on previous visits, we couldn’t coordinate our arrival time with one of the tours that are offered. Matter of fact we’d first shown up today two hours early and left. Little did Caroline know that I had planned on us returning, but for a time, she was disappointed that we’d missed the chance yet again. The three previous photos were taken on Agate Beach in Newport, where we took a long walk down nearly the entire length of the beach. Funny enough, I’d lost track of time until, at 11:25, I looked at my Fitbit and panicked a little. I immediately called the lighthouse and asked if we were the only two people who wanted to go on the tour and that they please hold it. It had taken 80 minutes to walk down but only took about 10 minutes to return as we hoofed hard to get back to our car.

Yaquina Head Lighthouse in Newport, Oregon

We had 10 minutes to spare when we got to the visitors center, and five minutes before the beginning of the tour. We were standing outside the door of the lighthouse with about ten others, waiting for our guide to welcome us in. Stacy, dressed in garb from the era, was our guide and knew her subject matter. Here we are in the oil room that at one time was fitted with 10 of these barrels used to store 100 gallons each of porcine fuel that was used to keep the flame upstairs alight. We learned that the light burned more fuel in the winter, which only made sense as the days were short and the nights quite long.

Yaquina Head Lighthouse in Newport, Oregon

There are 114 steps to the top of the lighthouse, which was built starting back in 1872. The flame was first lit by Head Keeper Fayette Crosby on the evening of August 20, 1873. With our visit to Yaquina Head today, we have now visited all but one of the visitable lighthouses on the Oregon coast.

Yaquina Head Lighthouse in Newport, Oregon

The group made its way up the iron staircase with us spaced apart so as not to put too much weight on any one section. In the space below the Fresnel lens where the keeper of the light would spend their duty time ensuring the light remained lit overnight, we squeezed into the small space to hear more of the history of this 93-foot tall beacon. I immediately fell for this hand-stamped maker’s mark that, to my eye, looked like the original. Turns out that the company was founded just six years prior by Frederic Barbier and Stanislas Fenestre, who built the Fresnel above us. For a time, they were the world leaders in the manufacturing of this most important element of a lighthouse. The company closed down in 1982 after 120 years in business.

Yaquina Head Lighthouse in Newport, Oregon

This is the original 150-year-old lens that has always made Yaquina Head home. The land it sits over juts out nearly a mile into the Pacific, which was a great location to place the lighthouse.

Yaquina Head Lighthouse in Newport, Oregon

Our view of the ocean, once we got to poke our heads up into the lantern room where the Fresnel resides is spectacular. One easily gets the sense of staying perched high above the roaring surf as the wind howls and the thunderous ocean crashes into the land surrounding the lighthouse. The walkway around the outside of this space is not allowed for visitation as safety for the visitors and the preservation of fragile parts of the lighthouse is of primary concern.

Yaquina Head Lighthouse in Newport, Oregon

These panels on the floor allowed light from the rotating beam to spill through the thick crystal-like glass pieces fixed in iron so the light keeper could monitor things from the warmth of the service room below.

Caroline Wise and John Wise at Yaquina Head Lighthouse in Newport, Oregon

A reflective piece of hand-hammered brass acted as our mirror at the top of the lighthouse in the lantern room. Stacy was nice enough to allow us both a second jaunt up the stairs to snap a distorted selfie with the coast looking north on the right and south towards Newport on the left.

Devils Churn south of Yachats, Oregon

This is the Devil’s Churn inlet south of Yachats at Cape Perpetua. This is one of the worst possible places for Caroline and me to visit on a stormy day, as I’m likely going to get lost in the crazy surf that slams into this narrow cut into the basalt.

Devils Churn south of Yachats, Oregon

Every femtosecond in the presence of this cauldron, there’s a temporary sculpture of extraordinary beauty transitioning from one form through millions of other forms. The chaos wrought by the fluid dynamics is being spectacularly demonstrated as the ocean forces the energy of its waves into this crevice. There’s a power on display that intimidates me and has me standing well back from any potential of a rogue wave scooping me up to drop me in the maelstrom of unbelievable consequence. My imagination races as fast as the rushing water at the thought and feeling that would only briefly be experienced if one were being tossed about in water that never stops heaving and contorting in an inescapable trap.

Devils Churn south of Yachats, Oregon

I keep one eye on the camera’s viewfinder and the other, paying attention to waves crashing on the rocks while this amassing wave careens forward to squeeze into an even narrower crack in the rock before hitting the unseen back of the inlet where, on occasion, the water can splash well over a hundred feet into the air. As my eyes dart around, trying to observe all of the insanity and my ear tunes in the roar of the exploding water, I’m snapping away, hoping my camera might capture but a few good shots that best exemplify the abstract forms found surfing above the water they ride in on.

Devils Churn south of Yachats, Oregon

After dozens of shots are taken, I tell myself that it’s enough, but it is never enough. Every time we are here when the ocean is pulsing in fury, I’m reminded of the Japanese woodblock print titled “The Great Wave off Kanagawa” by Hokusai. I stand in awe of the art that nature is showing me.

A casual glance doesn’t allow one to fully appreciate these images, nor does the resolution that I share them with.

Devils Churn south of Yachats, Oregon

Non-stop exhilaration pumps as my adrenaline demands that I stay just a few more minutes. Maybe the next surge will produce the crashing wave that fills the chasm from side to side, frightening me enough so I run back to our car should I be so lucky to survive. Only then might I be satisfied that I truly stood at the precipice of oceanic hostility and survived its wrath and better understood its potential to fully seize and shake my sense of amazement to a magnitude not yet experienced.

Devils Churn south of Yachats, Oregon

With the light soon to start its fade out and 80 miles (128 km) still ahead of us before reaching Sunset Bay State Park in the dark, we needed to get going. It has taken us all day to move only 30 miles (48 km) down the coast. Our progress was quite reasonable, though, as we’d never visited Moolack Beach before, and we finally were able to tour Yaquina Head Lighthouse.

Oregon Coast – Day 7

Last night’s lodging was in the quiet village of Oceanside, and after breakfast at Blue Agate Cafe, we were ready for our trek south along  Netarts Bay. Our first stop is the home of Jacobsen Salt Company, where they are cooking up local seawater to make some amazing finishing salt. We first learned of the factory and shop on the sea from Allie, who is the owner of Seaside Yarn and Fiber. Later that same night, we were introduced to it at Stephanie Inn in Cannon Beach, which includes it on the table. To top it off, Caroline’s cocktail last night at the Schooner Restaurant & Lounge (where we enjoyed an amazing dinner complete with “Oysters Rockoyaki”) featured a salted rim of Jacobsen Salt. With all that in mind, we would have to visit the shop if they were open this Wednesday morning in the off-season. Sure enough, the place is open, but sadly, there are no “factory” tours due to insurance reasons, as though falling into a boiling vat of salt brine might portend bad things. All the same, almost everything is on display. The bay behind the shop is where they collect the water that is filtered and then cooked down in the large vats in the shed. From there, the salt is collected and put on offer in the shop. This is certainly the most expensive salt we are ever likely to buy, but supporting this kind of artisanal business for enjoying a taste of the Oregon Coast after we return to our desert-dwelling in Arizona is well worth the cost.

Cape Lookout State Park is quiet this morning with nary a soul to be seen or heard out here, just us and all this ocean, gray skies, and forest behind us. Our destination is a mere 60 miles from here. Although the daylight only shines briefly on these late fall days, we would arrive in Newport too early if we didn’t stop along the way to smell the woods and banana slugs.

Speaking of forest or lack of it in this case, this is what clear-cutting looks like. No responsible harvesting happening here; just come in and strip the land bare. Driving past this scarred battlefield feels like open warfare and an assault on visitors who are traveling through trying to appreciate the beauty of the state. Of course, this is privately owned land, but it is still regulated by laws or, in this case, a lack of them. If the Oregon legislature were so inclined, they could put an end to this type of carnage, but in a state with a limited economy, they appear to be beholden to powerful lobbies that must work hard (pay) to ensure the rules remain in their favor.

These lands that face obliteration will be replanted only to be harvested again when it’s economically viable to do so. The old growth obviously will never return, but I also wonder if the biodiversity that had existed prior to the clear-cut will ever return. Then there’s the question of how we disrupt the wildlife that nested or foraged here. What about erosion and pollution? If this were a properly managed tree farm, the harvester might expect to earn about $5,000 per acre, but it’s a wild forest of mixed age and types of trees, so the amount often ends up being less. Once replanted, it takes about 35 years before the acreage can be harvested again.

Fortunately, Oregon hasn’t allowed the majority of the state to be obliterated by stupidity and so we tree-hugging visitors still get to enjoy the greenery even when obscured in a gray shroud of fog. I, for one, prefer the mystery induced by misty roads into dark forests where I might encounter Bigfoot instead of running into anger at witnessing a landscape pillaged of its beauty.

Ah, here we are at Clay Myers State Natural Area and Whalen Island. We’ve experienced tremendous views, mirror-smooth waters, gorgeous mountains in the background, and walks on the island. Today, we are only checking out the view off the brand-new bridge to the island. Turns out there’s been even more work done here in the Sand Lake area.

Welcome to Sitka Sedge State Natural Area. This new explorable corner near Cloverdale has just opened to the public this past June and represents the last intact estuary in the state. Over time, the state park system is going to open a total of six wildlife viewing areas. To the best of our ability to identify such things, there are currently three of those areas that are complete. The first one features squirrels, cute, furry, little squirrels, that stopped to check us out because maybe they thought we were cute, furry, little people.

After making our way through the woods, we were greeted by a favorite sight: European beach grass. Just like the yellow gorse found along the coast, this is an invasive species that was intentionally planted by early white settlers who believed they were taming the land. Instead, they created a kind of nightmare for some while producing a lovely golden sand dune waving in the wind for others.

While we’d like to walk up that way to where the Western Snowy Plover nesting area is, the rain is going to keep us away. In any case, we’ve been enjoying them darting away from the surf on their hunt for morsels right here near where we exited the forest.

If we had to guess, we’d probably put our money on the thought that a seagull enjoyed a tasty breakfast of crab before our arrival. Strange that we never find legs or claws nearby when stumbling across these shells.

There’s much of this 244-acre park that we won’t be seeing today, but it’s great knowing there’s so much to come back to on a future visit.

Another sunset at Siletz Bay would be grand, but not being ones to often sit still, we’ll continue to use the available daylight to find impressions of places that sing to our memories.

Or that appears to be seen for the first time, allowing altogether new memories to be formed.

Funny how just 100 meters in an open landscape can allow everything to look so different.

The closing 30 minutes of the day can see us frantically searching for the perfect spot to experience the sunset. I believe I’m probably more conflicted with the inner dialog that asks if this is the most perfect spot or if it is simply just adequate. Caroline, on the other hand, has the patience to be still and believe that anywhere I pull over is likely going to be host to the greatest sunset we’ve ever witnessed. I decide to press on.

Ah, Boiler Bay on a stormy ocean, this must be the perfect place. The sea explodes against the rocks here, jetting upwards in what appears to be at least 100 feet. Only on very calm days does this pullout fail to exhilarate us.

As is usual, I probably spend too much time looking through my camera’s viewfinder, hoping for this shot right here. Did I take 50 or more photos to get this one? It is likely the latter. Caroline meanwhile simply stood at the fence line, taking it all in without a care in the world while I remained busy trying to capture the image that would best represent these closing moments of daylight along the Oregon coast. Oh, how I love this stretch of America, warts and all.

Oregon Coast – Day 6

Haystack Rock at Cannon Beach, Oregon

There are places we visit that never grow old. We, on the other hand, have grown older between each successive visit, with our knees and backs sure to remind us should we forget. While we gauge the change in ourselves by looking in the mirror, we calculate the change to cities by what businesses have gone away and what new ones might have opened in their wake. We occasionally see changes to forests and coastlines as Oregon is a state that allows clear-cutting of its wildlands, and nature will do what it will with the shoreline. The Haystack at Cannon Beach is a constant unchanging reminder of where we are; it is also effective at hiding its age. Cannon Beach in this respect, remains timeless to us.

Cannon Beach, Oregon

Excuse my poor metaphor, but it is as though the foam of wealth washes over this enclave, keeping its prosperity and quaintness alive and fresh. There is many a community along this coast where poverty is gnawing at the edges, and the accumulation of detritus appears as an open sore on a once-thriving small town that has grown stale. The ocean along the entirety of the western edge of Oregon gives no mind to the goings-on of our economic plight and remains persistent in its gentle and sometimes aggressive lashings of the land it crashes into. On this border of the two worlds of land and sea, Caroline and I walk along, hugging the shoreline where my wife collects bits and pieces of discarded plastic convenience from the sand, hopefully sparing a bird or fish from gobbling it up. If only the foam of knowledge could wash over all of us to pick up and clear away the trash that not only fouls the view but our minds along with it.

Cannon Beach, Oregon

While we’ve been out on this coastal sojourn, we are hearing grumbles of changes afoot in Astoria up near the mouth of the Columbia River. It turns out that Portlanders are gentrifying that town. Instead of embracing the dawn of what hopefully will be a positive change, the locals are lamenting perceived social changes and the springing up of businesses that cater to hipsters. Just as lumber and forestry products made Coos Bay and idle wealth helped Cannon Beach flourish, those changes likely altered the character of what had been there before, if anything. The ocean of time must crash into these communities and, in some way, wash them clean as they are dying with the decay from those afraid of an uncertain future.

Oswald West State Park at Arch Cape, Oregon

Here in the forest, the symbiosis of existence is plain to see, with the new growing healthily upon the old. Sometimes, humans believe that the slate must be wiped clean so we can move in later to plant anew, allowing the destroyed habitat to rebuild itself with our help. The Oregon coastal communities themselves need to be clear-cut. There is a great opportunity to live along this beautiful shore, but the amenities that would foster a dynamic economy have not happened here and require fresh planting and investment. Why is the coast of Oregon so neglected? Some might argue it is perfect, and I certainly love how quiet and relatively uninhabited it is, but without people earning enough to support livelihoods and families, the small businesses along the coast will cease to operate, and the death spiral of economic collapse will take hold.

Oswald West State Park at Arch Cape, Oregon

So there’s a conundrum between new and old thinking where those who’ve been here or visited frequently and like things the way they are might be in conflict with the reality that without renewal and greater opportunity, those who could plant the financial seeds may never arrive. Weed stores are hardly the solution, though they might help dull the pain of change and or stagnation. Places like Jacobsen’s Salt Works and Oregon Coast Wasabi, along with some of the breweries, cheese makers, fish smokers, bed and breakfasts, and restaurants, are a large part of the needed change, but they are not stacked in a central location nor are they marketed as part of a destination trip.

Oswald West State Park at Arch Cape, Oregon

Imagine a coastal journey that started on one end or the other of the Oregon coast and brought visitors in for a complete sensory experience. Live music, bookstores, cooking retreats, kayaking, glass making, horseback riding, beach walks, tide pooling, photography workshops, forest hikes, and more biking trails that didn’t force the riders onto the busy Highway 101. These would all make for experiential outposts that could be planned for along the route and bring the visitor into a true adventure that they could invest a couple of weeks accomplishing. I believe these types of semi-structured journeys are the future of travel and would allow regions like the Oregon coast to compete with places like Venice in Europe.

Oswald West State Park at Arch Cape, Oregon

Ultimately, overly popular locations around the world will have to go to a lottery-type system or price visits so high as to discourage people of lesser means from being able to afford to see these magical places in person. This is not necessarily a bad thing, as overcrowding puts a strain on resources and often harms the very environment we are trying to best appreciate. The dialog of how this evolves will be fraught with arguments of classism, but with greater wealth distribution, the potential for overwhelming numbers of visitors becomes a distinct possibility.

Oswald West State Park at Arch Cape, Oregon

Take, for example, the year I was born, 1963, when 1.5 million people visited Grand Canyon National Park. Today, that number is over 6 million per year. So what happens if the current visitor trends were to continue in the next years? In about a dozen years there will be between 13-15 million people vying for a spot along the canyon rim to look into its vastness. Maybe that won’t be horrible, but what then in 20 years if we approach 25 million visitors? The point is there’s going to come a time when some type of restrictions will have to be established. For example, in May 2009 we visited the White House in Washington D.C. and were just a few of the 100,000 people to visit that month. Two decades before, the White House welcomed about 180,000 visitors per month, but that number was scaled back and has never returned. This means that in my lifetime a little more than twice the population of California will be able to visit the White House, to the exclusion of anyone else that may want to walk in this historic presidential home.

Oswald West State Park at Arch Cape, Oregon

While there’s certainly a mystique walking in the halls of the White House or an incredible sense of history to be experienced while in Florence, Italy, there are also opportunities to discover wild cascades, random places where mushrooms grow, newts crawling across forest floors, or spiny cactus sentinels standing guard over desiccated desert landscapes. These places are largely devoid of visitors, and while that suits Caroline and me perfectly for the solitude we are able to experience, there’s also the need for these locations to be appreciated so their economic value as attractions is appealing to governing localities that protect their assets. Without an appreciation for the remote wilds of land, it isn’t long before industrial interests set their sights on upsetting the natural balance and potentially destroying what natural beauty had been there.

Oswald West State Park at Arch Cape, Oregon

We humans cannot build a forest as nature can; we cannot construct mountains or assemble oceans and yet we have no compunction in spoiling them. These systems are what brought us to our current state of being as a species and for the majority of history, we were not able to interfere with their stability or health. While we’ve certainly wiped out forests, thus changing our well-being in relatively small geographic regions, we have been relatively benign, that is, until the last few hundred years. We have the knowledge but not the wherewithal to respect the balance of our planet. For the past 100 years, it has been a small cadre of stewards who have taken on the role of being the voice of reason; this is not tenable for a positive future. The voice of reason has approached a critical juncture where it must act to overwhelm our destructive tendencies and self-inflicted wounds from denigrating the environmentalists and intellectuals who have been working diligently to protect us from our worst inclinations.

Oregon, Coast

Just as we hope the sun will rise with the new day, we must also hope the sky clears along with the fog that has shrouded people’s minds regarding the ransacking of a world that is also responsible for sustaining us. This is not just about beautiful vistas for those of us lucky enough to visit them and witness their magic firsthand; it is about the underlying symbiotic relationship that shows us that a dead system supports nothing of any value. Look to Mars and the Moon for proof that grass doesn’t grow and water doesn’t flow in an environment hostile to the propagation of life.

Kilchis Point Reserve in Bay City, Oregon

The magic of life is all around us, but here in our modern age, we are more interested in the second-rate antics of pseudo-celebrities who have a shtick of absurdity that has proven popular among the under-educated. Nature, knowledge, and nurturing relationships have taken the backseat in order for us to not look too deeply at our own shallowness. This, in my mind, begs the question: what possible purpose are we then serving here on our planet? I, for one, cannot be happy being part of a giant nothing. I am not only an observer. I want to participate. I need to know that my mind and my efforts in life were for some positive movement forward of our species and the hopeful betterment of our earth.

Kilchis Point Reserve in Bay City, Oregon

Our personal window of opportunity is a relatively brief 80 years or so, give or take a decade or two. If more of us were helping others pull out their roots of stagnation and encouraged them to jump into the waters of active living, to adopt crafts, languages, and the skills that would make themselves more interesting to not only their own perception but to their family and community too, we’d possibly accelerate human progress and ability to share a greater quality of life with more people across our planet.

Kilchis Point Reserve in Bay City, Oregon

How might we begin this journey? I think it could be as easy as taking a vacation with the mindset that everything one encounters is perfect. Do not rely on guided mass-market expeditions where you join 8,000 others on a cruise ship or get on a crowded bus where you have 12 seconds at 1,000 locations to be rushed through a place. Take a slow walk somewhere you are unfamiliar, do not carry old, well-worn biases where you dismiss the unknown, and keep an open mind that you are a discoverer on a quest to inform those back home of the amazing encounters you had.

Sunset at Oceanside, Oregon

At the end of our road, at the end of our personal journey, do we find yet another extraordinary sunset that allows us to bask in a life well-lived, or do we reconcile ourselves that we did the best we could while not actually trying to do much at all? Each and every setting sun I witness is the greatest I’ve ever laid eyes upon, while every rising sun casts the potential to find greater enlightenment of what might otherwise be a dull life if my attitude were any less determined to embrace opportunities. The world is not dismal; it need not be rife with fear. We cannot continue to blame others for our own poor outlook when the only thing between us and happiness is our own closed eyes and minds. Nothing may be perfect, but maybe if we worked on making our own attitudes a little more positive, we might see the glimmer of hope on the horizon.

Oregon Coast – Day 5

Haystack Rock at Cannon Beach, Oregon

It’s windy out here at Cannon Beach in the shadow of the Haystack Rock. Prior to venturing out on the beach, we’d walked down the street to one of our least favorite breakfast establishments called the Pig ‘N Pancake. There are times along the Oregon Coast when choices may not be many. Early, as in well before 8:00 in the morning on certain days, the only option might be this coastal version of IHOP. We certainly prefer the funky little joints instead of the chains.

Cannon Beach, Oregon

The wind was intermittently kicking up with a bit of driving rain thrown in, ensuring those of us who wear glasses would try avoiding walking into it. After dinner last night, we’d heard the area was supposed to get hit with a gale starting in the late afternoon today, but there is conflicting information on the internet, so who knows? And in any case, that’s later.

Caroline Wise and John Wise at Sleepy Monk coffee in Cannon Beach, Oregon

What is out here right now is wetness. So, we are using the falling rain as an excuse for taking refuge at the Sleepy Monk coffee shop. Caroline is plugged into an audiobook while she whittles away at knitting my next pair of socks with yarn we’d collected in Vienna, Austria, this past summer. I’ve got the notebook propped open, trying to find words to accompany some of the images from this traditional journey along the Oregon coast we seem to be on every Thanksgiving.

Bathroom art at Insomnia Coffee in Cannon Beach, Oregon

Our goal for the day should be stated as to just what we are trying to accomplish here and that is nothing. From our sheltered outdoor table, we stepped next door to the Cannon Beach Hardware & Public House for some lunch. Their motto is “Screw and Brew,” and might be the only hardware store in all of Oregon, or along the Pacific coast for that matter, that sells wrenches and lunch all from the same place.

Caroline Wise knitting socks at Insomnia Coffee in Cannon Beach, Oregon

As the Sleepy Monk reached the end of their business day at 3:00, we had no choice but to transfer to Insomnia, a coffee shop that stays open until 5:00. The wind is certainly picking up as the day progresses, but it is still a far cry from a gale-force onslaught. After we closed Insomnia, it was dark already, and it felt that we were keeping with our lazy day ethos by grabbing an early dinner. Back in our room, I found enough wakefulness to play with patch cables and knobs on the synthesizer while Caroline, buried in the couch next to the fire, finished the first sock of my new pair.

Going to sleep with the wind howling was a chore, and by 11:30, we lost the electricity for nearly 30 minutes before it popped back on, only to go out again 15 minutes later. Not sure this rose to the level of a gale, but the wind hammered at the trees and drove the rain hard on our roof making for a fitful night of sleep for me while Caroline slept soundly through most of it.