Deep Surprises in Oregon – Day 10

Yurt at Bullards Beach State Park in Bandon, Oregon

Welcome to the tenth and final day of our coastal vacation that saw us waking in this yurt at Bullards Beach State Park in Bandon, Oregon. We watched a rafter of turkeys stroll by, and while I tried to get a decent photo, it just didn’t work out with our car as background, a curb in the shot, the motorhomes across the way, etc. So, with the sadness that arrives at the last moments of all of our getaways, we pack up one last time, say fond goodbyes to inanimate things that don’t care that we were here, and offer wishes that we might return again one day.

Cosmo the Tufted Puffin in Bandon, Oregon

Might not have been able to capture a nice photo of a turkey, but Cosmo the Tufted Puffin had no problem keeping a pose until I got something reasonable. Cosmo took up its perch here at Coquille Point back in 2018 in celebration of Earth Day. Made from recycled materials found on Oregon beaches, it was the efforts of Angela Haseltine Pozzi and her non-profit Washed Ashore that brought Cosmo to be a fixture here on the southern coast. This tufted puffin is likely the only 6-foot-tall bird made of marine debris on our entire planet.

Coquille Point National Wildlife Refuge in Bandon, Oregon

In poor light and an angle that doesn’t exemplify what others see, this is Elephant Rock. Don’t bother trying to catch sight of what I’m failing to bring attention to; let it suffice that the arch is the place between its legs. While Face Rock has always been obvious to me, I just learned that this one is officially called Elephant Rock, and I fail to see why.

Coquille Point National Wildlife Refuge in Bandon, Oregon

With the weather holding, meaning it’s not raining, there’s no time left to waste if we are going to get some beach exploration in.

Coquille Point National Wildlife Refuge in Bandon, Oregon

And so, down we go.

Coquille Point National Wildlife Refuge in Bandon, Oregon

This will not be further musings on the world of barnacles, though this is definitely one of the largest clusters of tiny ones. I’m more curious about the blood-red rock sandwiched in the surrounding metamorphic rock. I just learned that the sacred Sae-Tsik-Na (“Grandmother Rock”) that used to stand out here was quarried out of existence for the building of the Bandon jetty back in 1900. Well, that sacred rock to the Coquille people was made of blueschist speckled with red garnets, and if this is some ancient metamorphosized sandstone with a high amount of iron oxide in it, this would be the deepest red sandstone I’ve ever seen. I understand that the red rock is not translucent, so not likely to be red garnet, but could it have been on its way to becoming a gemstone had it remained in the deep miles below the surface for a bit longer?

Coquille Point National Wildlife Refuge in Bandon, Oregon

Looking up the rocks standing out here, I learned that they are called knockers (cue John’s childish giggles) and are formed after the softer rocks and soils wash away. The really cool thing is that some of the rocks out here formed hundreds of miles apart, but thanks to millions of years of subduction, they’ve ended up here.

Coquille Point National Wildlife Refuge in Bandon, Oregon

All of a sudden, the gloom of the sky, in a sense, lifts, and I see the beach here in Bandon in a whole new light. If we might have thought that this trip to the Oregon coast might be our last, it is nearly certain that we’ll have to make a return as there are obviously things that require deeper examination.

Coquille Point National Wildlife Refuge in Bandon, Oregon

Between two sides of the beach is an outcropping with a cut in it that is filled with boulders and large pieces of driftwood. We only need to scramble through it to reach the other side.

Coquille Point National Wildlife Refuge in Bandon, Oregon

Doing so without distraction is another matter, as there are thousands of details here worth scrutinizing.

Coquille Point National Wildlife Refuge in Bandon, Oregon

Once on the other side, we get a better view through the arch between the legs of the elephant, except for the backed-up water that obscures the view.

Seals at Coquille Point National Wildlife Refuge in Bandon, Oregon

I took more than one photo of these seals, and this was the best of them, which is not saying a lot as they are almost unrecognizable, but they are reminders to Caroline and me that we saw them and maybe for others to gather a hint of what’s to look for while along the coast. I’m pointing this out as one of the other contenders showed a large part of the rocks above them, which to my eye looked incredibly ancient, not as in billions of years, but still quite old. Good old research to the rescue, but also bad for me as there is now ZERO doubt of our return to this area.

There are blueschist knockers out here, and of course, there are chunks of it in the jetty. This stone turns out to be very rare, as in seriously rare. The conditions for its formation are the reason: they must be near a subduction zone, and they can’t go too deep below the surface; otherwise, the pressure and heat will change the minerals into something else. They are typically not old rocks because subduction zones are chaotic places pushing large pieces of earth to and fro. From the Scientific American article I was reading, I learned that it’s easy to find examples of blueschist here in Bandon that were created under 10 kilobar of pressure, meaning these rocks were once 22 to 25 miles (35 to 40 kilometers) below the surface of land we were standing on while here in Oregon. If this means little to you, I’d surmise you have little understanding about time and should get yourself out in the world and question what you are seeing.

Highway 101 north of Bandon, Oregon

In the fog and mist, we move slowly, not really out of caution regarding the driving conditions but more out of the desire to bring to our senses as much as possible due to our event horizon coming to a close.

Highway 101 north of Bandon, Oregon

Knowing that last impressions are what we are gathering, we have to look hard at the gray environment for those things that, in years to come, we’ll hold close from our days in Oregon. These perfect examples of yet another wonderful day full of experiences are worth remembering forever.

Coos Bay, Oregon

Over the 20 years, we’ve been passing up and down this coast, this corner here at Coos Bay has held a special interest that I’ve always failed to satisfy my curiosity about. It seems apparent that at one time, long before we ever visited, this must have been a major center of the timber industry, and while remnants are still here, I get the sense that it had a much more significant presence here.

Coos Bay, Oregon

The old adage “be careful what you wish for” needs to be updated for me to “be careful what you research.” Looking for information about the history of logging in the Coos Bay region, the first thing I learned was there are 41,000 acres of old-growth trees still remaining in 1.15 million acres of Coos County. Trees older than 400 years old have been clear cut, and with that, I’ve read enough; this includes a recent 2019 harvest approved by Anthony Davis, a dean of Oregon State University entrusted with lands under their forestry protection program who axed a 16-acre tract of land because they needed the money due to cost overruns regarding a university construction project. Pardon me, but this is bullshit.

Coos Bay, Oregon

While I’m out in this beautiful place, I only want to enjoy the solemnity of it all. Now, back in Arizona and knowing that our form of capitalism will only continue to exploit everything that can make money, my wish is for either a meteorite to splash down in the Pacific and wash humanity from the surface of our planet or maybe even for a certain Russian megalomaniac to let the nukes fly so our planet can get to the business of repairing the profoundly ugly damage we perpetuate on these lands, waters, and atmosphere on a daily basis.

Coos Bay, Oregon

The presence of humans over the course of history has left impressions for centuries into the future; things like cave paintings, old middens, burial sites, certain buildings, and even some artifacts have been found. Today, though, we consume and throw away everything we touch as though some omnipotent god could wave a hand and repair the horror we are leaving in our wake. While I can pause and appreciate the aesthetic of a rusting nail from a disused dock, I’m also reminded of how little we care about what’s left behind as long as we got ours.

Coos Bay, Oregon

But if I don’t leave this track of destruction and neglect behind me, I’ll be ending this series of blog posts on a negative note, and that’s not really where I want to go.

Road to Umpqua Lighthouse State Park in Reedsport, Oregon

So, let’s return to the intense pockets of beauty that still exist out here and share those impressions. From here I can hope that others might stumble upon these posts, not only to see what had been but to inspire them to visit and see for themselves an environment cared for and protected where not everything need be fouled for the sake of exploitation.

Road to Umpqua Lighthouse State Park in Reedsport, Oregon

Certainly, this forest view is one of wonderment, but you might notice there are no old trees here. Maybe others in the centuries to come will be afforded the opportunity to see this place still filled with the trees that were standing here back in 2022.

Caroline Wise leaving the Tsunami Hazard Zone north of Reedsport, Oregon

Maybe instead of telling people passing through that they are entering and leaving tsunami hazard zones, we should have signs in life that we are entering an exploitation-free zone where nature is being allowed to present itself in the rawest format without anything more from humans than pathways through and maybe accommodations that leave no impact.

Highway 101 in Gardiner, Oregon

It’s not lost on me that, in effect, we modern humans are not as “modern as we might pretend and are instead half-stupid creatures stumbling through the fog of our own arrogance.

Highway 101 in Gardiner, Oregon

It’s with great sadness that we inch ever closer to the exit.

Oregon Dunes Overlook in Gardiner, Oregon

Then again, maybe, just maybe, there’s enough time for us to capture one other new place we’ve never visited before that is to be found right here at the Oregon Dunes Overlook in Gardiner.

Oregon Dunes Overlook in Gardiner, Oregon

Is it the melancholy of distance that stimulates ideas not realized while I was at a place where I should have tried pulling back from the abyss of being overwhelmed to gather yet a different perspective? In this instance, I wish to see the forest from the level of a newt, between mushrooms, while walking across the moss and sand.

Oregon Dunes Overlook in Gardiner, Oregon

As I said, we are here in the sand dunes, among mountains of sand.

Oregon Dunes Overlook in Gardiner, Oregon

With a lush forest growing on top of it in spots.

Oregon Dunes Overlook in Gardiner, Oregon

While the trail could have taken us to the ocean (you can see the sign points right to it), we are limited regarding goof-off time. Being mindful of that factor, we reluctantly return to the car.

North Jetty Beach in Florence, Oregon

And then, before we know it, we are back in Florence, where our encounter with the coast began ten days ago. By this time at the North Jetty, we’ve already lunched up at the Little Brown Hen, where, for the second time, we shared a warm bowl of the best brown rice pudding you’ll find on the entire coast of this state. The need to walk off that indulgence is part of what brought us out here.

Caroline Wise at North Jetty Beach in Florence, Oregon

That, and Caroline’s need to bring out Happy McKiteface for a final flight in the cool coastal air we’ll soon be missing.

North Jetty Beach in Florence, Oregon

If I can’t take a multi-hundred-pound souvenir with me today, I can bring a reminder.

Exploding Whale Memorial Park in Florence, Oregon

Speaking of reminders, who doesn’t want to be reminded of that day 52 years ago when too much dynamite was used to remove a whale carcass from a nearby beach but instead blew car-crushing, possibly life-extinguishing chunks of rotting whale in all directions?

Exploding Whale Memorial Park in Florence, Oregon

This warning sign at the Exploding Whale Memorial site regarding soft sand and mud should include some text that the incident did NOT happen here but somewhere on the other side of that dune. I didn’t want to visit some random place for a moment of remembrance; I wanted to stand on ground zero where said whale failed to vaporize and instead was sent off to chunkidom.

Petersen Tunnel east of Mapleton, Oregon

With a bunk memorial site behind us and Dutch Bros. coffee along for the ride to Eugene, we have now left the tsunami zone.

Happy McKiteface Over Oregon- Day 9

A Stellar Jay at Umpqua Lighthouse in Reedsport, Oregon

Good morning, Steller’s jay! I hope you enjoy your morning meal courtesy of the vanlife guttersnipes that squatted here overnight. Caroline and I have been visiting the Oregon coast for about 20 years now, and I can say with certainty we’ve never seen so many roadside freeloaders who don’t have the respect to pay attention to the “No Overnight Camping Allowed” signs. I can only surmise that their sense of being free to roam America’s roads allows them to feel a sense of entitlement that arrives with their chosen form of homelessness for the sake of social media status. Regarding the homeless situation, it has spilled out of the bigger cities and now shows up on the coast in ways we’d not seen before. From more people living in cars (not in the aforementioned vanlife configuration) to people struggling with loads of stuff being moved through town and those who will join the ranks in the coming year due to the problem of rising rents, the situation is one of ugly proportions. Back to the vanlifers, Caroline and I used to pull into overlook parking lots where we might be the only people, but when we pull in, and there are people just waking, finishing their ablutions, or putting away the cooking gear, I try to imagine what our experiences would have been like if people in motorhomes had exercised the same liberties, especially considering two large vehicles could fill up a pullout and stop anyone else from stopping for a moment. Just because we didn’t park at an ocean overlook doesn’t mean our waking experiences are any less valid or someone else’s even greater because they flaunt convention. Enough of that, I look forward to the day that vanlife is no longer a thing or I’m dead and gone, no longer able to witness the arrogance.

Umpqua Lighthouse in Reedsport, Oregon

Normally, waking near the shadow of a lighthouse is a terrific thing, but driving into someone’s temporary bedroom sure puts a damper on that. Fortunately, they were soon gone after we spoiled their perfect isolation with our intrusion. Oops, I said I was done with all that, but the truth is that I’m never done once something gets jammed in my craw.

When we travel on weekends, it’s often been difficult for Caroline to connect with her mom in Frankfurt for her weekly call, but it just so happens that our brother-in-law Klaus is visiting Jutta as we were packing up the yurt and is going to bring us into a video chat. While my mother-in-law has certainly been here at the lighthouse, we have some skepticism about how much she remembers or whether she simply learned to just go along with things and agree to fond memories rather than admit these things are largely gone from her book of memories. It’s really not a problem, though, as she smiles a lot, and we know she’s still very aware that she’s been to the United States many times, even if many of the details are lost to the passage of time.

Umpqua River in Winchester Bay, Oregon

Do you remember how years ago there was a floating restaurant off in the distant corner here in Winchester Bay? We fondly do and have often wished to visit again, but it’s been closed for years. We first dined there back in 2006; such is the good luck of having blog posts to remind one of something that might have been forgotten otherwise. Today, we sit next to the Umpqua River for breakfast after choosing the place with more cars parked outside, figuring the locals know something.

Umpqua River in Winchester Bay, Oregon

Never believe in 10-day forecasts, or better yet, simply don’t look at them because would they really change your travel plans? This is probably bad advice because at least they offer some idea of how to dress for potential weather conditions. As for the location, we are on the other side of the restaurant for a post-breakfast walk under perfect skies.

Umpqua Lighthouse State Park in Reedsport, Oregon

This isn’t just any old forest; it is the forest that goes back…

Umpqua Lighthouse in Reedsport, Oregon

…back to the Umpqua Lighthouse because without Tillamook Creamery around for breakfast dessert, this will have to do.

Oregon Dunes seen from the David Dewett Veterans Memorial in North Bend, Oregon

We are looking across one small part of Coos Bay from the vantage point of the David Dewett Veterans Memorial in North Bend. It almost never fails that the reflections of the Oregon Dunes catch our eye, and poetically, it makes sense that a place of such great reflection should be the site of a veterans memorial.

McCullough Memorial Bridge in North Bend, Oregon

In the opposite direction, you’ll find the McCullough Memorial Bridge.

Rail bridge over Coos Bay in North Bend, Oregon

In all the years we’ve been passing through here, we’ve yet to see this rail bridge in any other position or to see trains crossing the bay. We can only guess that this is a relic of the age of forestry as it existed in the past.

McCullough Memorial Bridge in North Bend, Oregon

From this fascination with bridges, one might think Arizona doesn’t have any, but it turns out that Arizona and Oregon are nearly equal in that department, which suggests that the bridges in Arizona are not remarkable in any way. Before you object: yes, we have the Navajo Bridges over the Colorado River and the London Bridge that was moved from the U.K. to Lake Havasu, along with the Black Bridge down in the Grand Canyon, but other than those, I cannot think of any other memorable crossings in Arizona. [May I suggest Roosevelt Lake Bridge?  Caroline]

McCullough Memorial Bridge in North Bend, Oregon

For 86 years, people have been using this bridge, but has anyone else taken so many photos of it?

Traveling Highway 101 south of Coos Bay, Oregon

I’m always trying to remind myself not only to stop and take photos of the most iconic things but also the mundane ones along the way, as they are just as important a part of the attraction that draws us back year after year.

Old rain shelter on Riverside Drive in Bandon, Oregon

In addition, we try to turn down side roads we might have missed on previous travels, and today, that worked in our favor when we turned onto Riverside Drive. At first glance, this might look like an outhouse to those of us not accustomed to living in rainy places, but upon looking closer, it was obvious that this was a long-neglected bus stop for kids who needed shelter while waiting for their school bus.

Big Foot and child on Riverside Drive in Bandon, Oregon

That, or it was a hiding place from a marauding Big Foot and its daughter.

Bandon Marsh National Wildlife Refuge in Bandon, Oregon

Also from Riverside Drive, a view of the Bandon Marsh National Wildlife Refuge we’ve never seen before.

Caroline Wise at the Wool Company yarn store in Bandon, Oregon

The same cannot be said of the Wool Company yarn store in Bandon, which we’ve visited countless times and must have bought 50 skeins of yarn by now. Yes, there is new sock yarn there, destined for my feet.

The famous Langlois Market in Langlois, Oregon

Another place becoming a regular stop on our journeys is found here at the famous Langlois Market, best known for the more than 1,000,000 hotdogs they’ve sold from their little roadside market in a town of only 370 people.

Cape Blanco State Park in Port Orford, Oregon

Not being able to remember offhand the last time we visited the Cape Blanco Lighthouse in Port Orford, we decided to drive down the road through the state park to have a gander.

Cape Blanco State Park in Port Orford, Oregon

Oooh, it’s windy and cold out here, but the sky demands that we take the short walk in the elements to nab a photo of the lighthouse should it happen that I’ve never taken one in such nice weather.

Cape Blanco State Park in Port Orford, Oregon

Apparently, Neptune has raised his Sword of Damocles against those who live above the surface of his vast ocean, threatening all of us should we not heed our own knowledge that we are ravaging his seas.

Cape Blanco State Park in Port Orford, Oregon

And to our right, as we walk out on the spit of land that is home to the lighthouse, is this view of the deep blue sea that just yesterday was dark green.

Lighthouse at Cape Blanco State Park in Port Orford, Oregon

At this time of year, nothing is open; the season is over. No matter, as the tower itself is not currently visitable even during the summer.

Caroline Wise at Cape Blanco State Park in Port Orford, Oregon

As I said, it’s windy out here, which Caroline thought was as good a time as any to break out the new kite and test how it compares to the one it’s replacing. We’ll just call it love.

Cape Blanco State Park in Port Orford, Oregon

Our car is out there in front of the tree line, and looking at the photo above this one, you might have noticed that Caroline was standing in the old parking lot. Even if the road to the lighthouse was still open, you should be reluctant to drive it as the adjacent cliffside is eroding.

Cape Blanco State Park in Port Orford, Oregon

This is still part of the Cape Blanco State Park, and to the left is the Historic Hughes House built in 1898 that is visitable.

Port Orford, Oregon

There are a lot of places I can say with certainty we’ve visited before, even multiple times, but this pullout looking north towards Port Orford seems to me to be one of the surprisingly many new sites we’ve stopped at during these days.

Looking southwest from the same vantage point offers up a crisp sky and a horizon nearly devoid of any fog. Of all the times we’ve been asked if we’ve been here or there, this country or that, nobody has ever asked if we’d ever had the opportunity to be out in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.

While our yurt at Bullards Beach State Park in Bandon is now 30 miles behind us, we have a date with a rock 35 miles ahead.

View from Highway 101 north of Gold Beach, Oregon

Persistence paid off in my attempts to figure out where the heck we were on the road, but it is mislabeled on Google Maps and is not identified at all on Bing; the address is roughly 35690 Oregon Coast Highway, identified with Port Orford, and it is NOT Foramen Arch.

View from Highway 101 north of Gold Beach, Oregon

Turn and look south, and this is your view from the photo above. To the left of the image, you can see Euchre Creek spilling into the ocean.

Wedderburn Bridge in Gold Beach, Oregon

Moving down a hill and between the bushes, we were offered this view of Wedderburn Bridge in Gold Beach. I wanted to snap a photo from the road, which gave a much better view; stopping for a photo would have been too dangerous though, so this one will have to do. It’s yet another bridge designed by the famous civil Oregonian engineer with a Hitler mustache named Conde McCullough.

Caroline Wise at Meyers Creek Beach in Gold Beach, Oregon

Meet our southern date here at Meyers Creek Beach, the Shark Fin. This visit, though, now comes with 100% more kite.

Meyers Creek Beach in Gold Beach, Oregon

No more disappointment trying to fly the previous pathetic little kite that was reluctant to take to the sky, as this one is a natural.

Caroline Wise at Meyers Creek Beach in Gold Beach, Oregon

Caroline is so happy with this new kite that she’s named it Happy McKiteface. Cute name and all, but I think it actually describes her.

Meyers Creek Beach in Gold Beach, Oregon

Until next time, Shark Fin, it’s been great.

Cape Sebastian Trail in Gold Beach, Oregon

There we were, driving north as though we were doing so with purpose when, not even two miles away from our last stop, a steep road up a hillside on my left seemingly demanded that I pull a quick U-turn to investigate. Why hadn’t the Cape Sebastian sign caught our attention before?

Cape Sebastian Trail in Gold Beach, Oregon

Seeing how we are now up here, we should check out what is down the hill, not this way but the one in front of us.

Cape Sebastian Trail in Gold Beach, Oregon

Nope, this is the view to the north, but in a second, you’ll know what I’m speaking of.

Cape Sebastian Trail in Gold Beach, Oregon

This is the trail I wanted to bring your attention to.

Cape Sebastian Trail in Gold Beach, Oregon

It apparently brings us out to the edge of Cape Sebastian, here between Pistol River and Gold Beach.

Cape Sebastian Trail in Gold Beach, Oregon

Where exactly it’s going is uncertain as there was no trail map at the parking lot, and at this moment, we’ve not passed anyone else who can tell us anything more about where we are. Checking our phones is not an option as we have no signal.

Cape Sebastian Trail in Gold Beach, Oregon

If this were as far as we’d been able to go, it would have been worth every moment and more. Around this time, we’d met a couple coming at us on the trail, and we asked how far they went; they’d gone all the way to the beach but warned us it was too late to try that as it would certainly be dark by the time we got back to where we were talking with them. Something to come back to.

Cape Sebastian Trail in Gold Beach, Oregon

With that, we turned around for our walk back through the forest until we found a slightly different view north.

Cape Sebastian Trail in Gold Beach, Oregon

In the distance to the south, way out there, that’s Arch Rock.

Cape Sebastian Trail in Gold Beach, Oregon

Back at the Cape Sebastian parking lot and ready to tackle the last 65 miles to the evening’s yurt accommodations.

Visitor Center Beach at Gold Beach, Oregon

We’ll still have 60 miles left after this “last” stop, but who could blame us? We’ve stopped at the Gold Beach Visitors Center, which appears to be the name of the beach, but that can’t be.

Visitor Center Beach at Gold Beach, Oregon

While I busied myself photographing the last moments of the setting sun, Caroline quietly pulled out Happy McKiteface and threw it aloft before I could protest. With that smiling face beaming at her new kite high above the beach in the fading light of day, there was no way I was going to rain on her moment of finding yet more joy.

Never too Gray in Oregon- Day 5

Stonefield Beach State Recreation Site in Yachats, Oregon

The ocean is dark this morning under stormy skies. At the moment, the winds haven’t arrived, and so without further ado, we breached the comfort of shelter to venture into the potentially wet day. As always, when out on the Oregon coast, we are excited to see what comes next; at this point, we are just hoping for breakfast and a walk. I did get the order of things backward here because we stopped at Stonefield Beach to see the differences between yesterday’s low tide and the approaching high tide this morning.

Stonefield Beach State Recreation Site in Yachats, Oregon

The view was disorienting as things shifted so dramatically that the only certainty was our uncertainty regarding just where we’d been. There wasn’t a reflective beach or a thing signifying what we’d seen.

Stonefield Beach State Recreation Site in Yachats, Oregon

To our left on the south end of the beach, I find familiarity with that little cabin atop the cliff where, late yesterday, I snapped a photo of Caroline to the west of it out in what is now the ocean.

Stonefield Beach State Recreation Site in Yachats, Oregon

Standing between the cliffs and the sea, I try to decipher what is visible and wonder if there’s any opportunity to determine just where we are, but it all looks so foreign. It’s as though amnesia struck overnight, leaving us with only the name of the place we’d been while erasing most everything else. It also seems that even now, back in Arizona, while I’m trying to write about that morning, the ocean is still playing a game of amnesia with me, denying my imagination the words that might convey other aspects aside from the obvious.

Stonefield Beach State Recreation Site in Yachats, Oregon

Just like staying out here on the shore under uncertain circumstances regarding what the weather would bring, I’ll remain vigilant, sitting before these images and looking for that change in the situation that will inspire an interpretation of things no matter how difficult it may be.

Caroline Wise at Stonefield Beach State Recreation Site in Yachats, Oregon

With a tiny, nearly imperceptible amount of wind starting to pulse, it was time for the kid in this relationship to break out her kite that had been stowed away for such an opportunity. Running upon the rocks didn’t work out, so we headed back to the sandy part of the beach where Caroline could really give it a go.

Caroline Wise at Stonefield Beach State Recreation Site in Yachats, Oregon

For a full minute or two, the elation of flight took hold, as seen in her smile, but as the wind died, so did her hope until, once again, her invisible friend grabbed hold of the kite and tried pulling it high into the sky. Again, smiles climb upon her face as she starts to sense mastery over the one sport she might be good at.

Stonefield Beach State Recreation Site in Yachats, Oregon

Spotting this perfect cairn, we realized it was pointing us to breakfast, and so we accepted its guidance and headed into town. Yachats is a tiny outpost with barely 1,000 people living here, and yes, I wish we were two of them. Services are thin, although there are around a dozen restaurants that, at this time of year are not open at the same time. We had two options and went with the somewhat sad place we’ve eaten at before that will remain unnamed to help a business that’s likely not making anyone rich. It served its purpose. Sitting at the window, we watch as the wind kicks up and, with it, the rain racing northward. Our hopes of taking up a table at the Green Salmon Coffee House are dashed as they are closed today through Friday; the same goes for the Bread & Roses Bakery. The only thing left to do is go plant ourselves in the Nest if we don’t get distracted on the way back.

Caroline Wise at the Shags Nest Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon

If you don’t think I got worried when Caroline voiced her desire to go fly her kite on our tiny deck sitting atop a steep cliff, you’d be wrong, as in my imagination, it wasn’t beyond impossible that a sharp wind would take her and that pocket kite aloft and drop her a couple of miles out to sea. I could only bite my nails and hope she’d know the right moment to let it go. Luckily, the wind was so strong that all the kite wanted to do was dive into the bushes to hide from the insane forces beating it into submission. Caroline, now equally beaten, conceded defeat and brought herself back into the warmth of our cabin overlooking the raging tempest.

Shags Nest at Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon

Between staring mindlessly out the window and trying to write a thing or two, I tended to a pot of black-eyed peas that would certainly be the comfort food befitting a wet gray day.

Caroline Wise at the Shags Nest Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon

On the far north side of our deluxe chateau, Caroline took to the Barcalounger (which happened to be invented in Buffalo, New York, where I was born) and with yarn from Cambria, California, (picked up recently on a trip to the Monterey Bay Aquarium), she sat oceanside in front of a massive picture window with her cup of Heiße Liebe tea (Hot Love) to work on my newest pair of socks. Not that Hot Love tea is necessary for such moments but this looks like love to me.

View from the Shags Nest at Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon

Sitting before our window at the Shags Nest or sitting in a coffee shop, there are times when the mind would rather meditate. There’s a need in all of us at times to allow the lines to blur and let the uncertainty of what comes next take hold, to just kick back and listen to the full length of a favorite album or watch the surf roll in.

View from the Shags Nest at Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon

A lot of nothing has passed by though somehow we remained busy in that nothing. The black-eyed peas allowed us to stay in, enjoying one of our favorite comfort foods while not budging from our perch. As the day went on, it appeared that we might be able to start growing moss due to our near-total lack of activity.

Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

But then the clouds started breaking up. Always in need of accumulating more steps on our path to walking into better health, we decided to go check out Bob Creek though I figured we’d quickly pack it in and return to Stonefield for more hopeful encounters with wild sea creatures temporarily living outside of the ocean.

Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

Just then, the Eye of God looked down from the sky and commanded us to give good ‘ole Bob Creek a proper chance, and, well when God speaks, atheists listen.

Barnacles at Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

Oh wow, tidepools featuring exotic lifeforms we’d never witnessed before! I thought this would sound better than saying we’re just seeing plain old mundane sea stuff we’ve seen a hundred other times, which wouldn’t be true either because neither Caroline nor I have ever seen a barnacle that wasn’t far more interesting than any Kardashian or wet noodle clinging to our colander.

Barnacles at Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

Mussels with barnacles provide space for other barnacles. It turns out that mussels attach to other mussels using excreted stringy fibers called byssal threads. While working with adhesive threads is interesting enough, it is the barnacle that is truly amazing when it comes to attaching itself to things. You see, before it settles down, the baby barnacle is adrift looking for a suitable home; when it finds one, it uses body fat to clean and sterilize the surface. Once that is done, they deploy a mixture of six different proteins to glue themselves to their perch, be it on a whale, ship, rock, turtle, mussel, or another barnacle. This glue is said to be multiple times more adhesive than anything made by humans.

Barnacles at Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

This obviously brings me to the size of the barnacle penis, which, Caroline informed me, is the largest in proportion to the body size of all species on Earth. A little bit of internet searching confirms this, but my imagination takes it to frightening lengths. First, I’m seriously intrigued that the lowly barnacle is able to change the size and shape of its penis to meet local conditions for mating, but it is the length that baffles the mind. I need to put this in perspective: the average American male is approximately 5 foot 9 inches tall or 175 centimeters. If we could whip out what barnacles can, there would be situations where our penis would be a respectable 552 inches long or about 46 feet in length (14 meters). At this point, I think our wieners would be weapons, and I, for one, wouldn’t appreciate the guy behind me in traffic on a summer day with my windows down casting his tool into my car, maybe even into my back seat, looking to mate. If penis length is the root of all intelligence and power, as many men believe them to be, then the barnacle should be the hero of any young man’s youth.

Barnacles at Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

Comparatively, there are thousands of miles, possibly a million or more miles of penis before me.

Barnacles at Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

As far as I know, and not that I’m willing to research information on this particular type of seaweed, there is nothing very peculiar that should be found or shared concerning this plant. Heck, I don’t even know the name of this seaweed, so I’ll call it Suzie.

Anemones at Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

There’s nothing left to tell you about anemones nor of my most obvious impressions of delight that are taken when seeing these meat eaters. Oh wait, there is that small detail about its mouth being its anus.

Anemones at Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

I think these anemones might have swallowed some raver’s glow sticks during a beach party.

Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

Hi blue sky, nice of you to come out to see us! Might you be letting some sun through your veil in order to astonish us with another majestic sunset?

Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

There’s something about these rocks that feel as if they’d been sculpted by fast-moving water like that running through a river. Was Bob Creek at one time a river bed?

Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

Like sunburned skin, these rocks appear to be peeling. Upon closer inspection, it looks as though sheets of barnacles were removed, but after just learning about their superglue qualities, the question arises: how’d this happen so uniformly across areas?

Caroline Wise at Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

While I can speculate about the various species temporarily exposed to our senses out here, and I can use the internet to learn more about them after I go home, I cannot really know where Caroline is when she stands before the ocean and examines the scene. If I ask her, the answer is likely to come back that she’s just looking at stuff, but what does she feel? What is offering her wow moments? Are we seeing the same things, or are our eyes focusing on absolutely different things?

Sea Stars at Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

While the sea stars capture my eyes first, it is the more than 50 anemones that got me thinking about how they decorate their body as they do. While they are curled up with their tentacles withdrawn, maybe the camouflage helps them avoid predatory crabs because at night, while the anemone sleeps, the nocturnal crab is out looking for food.

Sea Stars at Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

In an effort to demonstrate fair representation and give an example that I don’t have a bias for orange sea stars, I present you with no less than half a dozen purple sea stars, or are they burgundy in color?

Sea Stars at Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

In a pinch, sea stars will eat anemones, but what they are really interested in is the abundance of mussels that live here on the rocky shore.

Caroline Wise at Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

I can’t say I’ve explicitly thought or expressed this before, but these excursions and the subsequent photo prep and writing requirements hold Caroline and me in these environments well after we’ve left a place we were visiting. The lingering begins as I bring photos in for cropping and color adjustments, and then I identify where each was taken. As one day is finished, Caroline joins me to whittle the selection down to the best representations and I guarantee you that there’d be a lot fewer images posted here if it were up to my ruthless wife. And then, if I have taken notes, those are transcribed from the notebook as I work to decipher my handwritten words. As those are matched to photos, there are huge gaps between images because there is no way to write in the field about specifics, and who knows which photos and impressions will find their way here? During what amounts to rewriting what’s in the notebooks, I also find inspiration to write about particular images due to something or other that’s striking me at that moment. Finally, I set down to fill the empty spaces. In the case of this post, it’s now 31 days after we stood at these tide pools, and we are still, in a sense, visiting the Oregon coast. One last thing: before this ever gets pushed to the public, Caroline applies her deft editing hand to bring (or at least attempt to bring) to clarity those things I found relevant, capturing memories we’ll hopefully return to in many years to come.

To belabor a point, I’m not playing video games, watching TV, or otherwise wasting my time with frivolous things as this adventure continues to travel within me during the weeks since we left the seashore. I find this luxury to be incredibly valuable: instead of impressions of vacation being made and quickly fading, I indulge in examining details over and again to possibly know more intimately what would otherwise be difficult to carry with me.

Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

A moment arrives when I see glimmers of insight that I’m the foible; my desire for knowledge driven by curiosity is a weakness as it informs my disappointment that so many in our species do not truly share that quality. It is here at what amounts to a mussel farm that I see that many of these mussels will be sacrificed as food for birds, sea stars, fish, and even us humans. So, it behooves the local mussel population to just keep cranking out mussels as its evolutionary knowledge understands that the greater the number, the greater the chances of surviving all disasters or sacrifices. Why have I failed to see this behavior in people? I’m often crushed by human stupidity and don’t want to accept that it is our norm, but why should the average person be any smarter than a mussel? Their presence is to ensure there are seeds and eggs available tomorrow should something catastrophic befall us. In this sense, what I consider stupid is nothing more than the norm, and I the anomaly, an intolerant foible of our species’ presence who simply isn’t happy sitting on the rock attached to a million clones who don’t mind being part of the collective.

Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

I am transfixed by this inky pool that rarely exists. It can only appear during negative tide situations while the rings are created by the water dripping from the mass of mussels hanging overhead. As surrounding rock is eroded by the motion of the sea, making what looks like toadstools above the ocean floor, the harder rocks obviously make for a great home if you are a mussel, barnacle, sea star, or anemone. The patterns that ripple across the surface are trance-inducing. If I had the proper equipment, a video might better allow me to experience them again, but instead, I prefer to rely on images and words to freeze what once captured my attention. I’m guessing the mussels around me give little care to the evolving aesthetics and only look forward to the comfort of the sea and returning to the place they know so well.

Caroline Wise and John Wise at Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

At this very moment, I was cultivating my inner barnacle and working on a new shape.

Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

We walk below the sun, below the sky, and this late afternoon, we are offered the chance to walk below the surface of the sea that would typically cover this edge of the shore. There’s nothing easy about leaving here as long as there’s light that allows us to find our footing. We attempt to go further, hoping that more of the mysteries all around us are revealed.

Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

We use art to bring impressions to people who are not able to witness the breadth of patterns for themselves. Those with the great fortune of seeing rare sights or having been able to cultivate great thoughts bring back approximations of what things look like or how they might be thought of. In this way, the anomalies of our species task themselves with bringing culture back to the tribe, possibly in order to elevate all of us from the ground we are fastened to.

Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

A triptych by Mark Rothko could hardly compete but if it were the only possibility for a city dweller to see such a thing, I suppose the surrogate will have to do.

Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

There’s no pussyfooting around this one, I saw a stone vagina fringed with bright green mold looking at this, and so it’s included. As a matter of fact, I think it compliments the vulvic impression I spotted while on a Mystery Valley hike near Monument Valley earlier this year. If you are interested, it’s the 36th image down on this post.

Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

This might have been a rainy day where the comfort of a warm room and a pot of beans could have held us in cozy contentment, but instead, we were drawn by the potential that something might be happening and that we’d benefit from investigating that change. Our reward was not only trying to fly a kite in the windy rain and witnessing the temporary nature of a fragile and elegant cairn; we were allowed to gaze in on the secret lives of those who live outside of our view.

Bob Creek Beach in Yachats, Oregon

And so the curtain is being drawn shut, signaling us that time has arrived for us to depart.

Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon

I am back at the table I’d been writing at earlier in the day and on a previous visit. At night, there is no ocean to see, only my blurry reflection in the window that kind of looks like this guy. I hear the ocean but it’s a steady white noise, no collapsing wave sounds, just the hum of the shore machine down below.

Mostly, I’m here not writing, not reading, not really watching much of anything. Maybe this is more of a meditation, though that would be accidental as I’m simply here. Occasionally, it occurs to me that I could be doing something more specific, but I don’t want to expend the effort as nothing feels comfortable. Then a trigger of micro-panic attacks me that I’m missing the opportunity to explore a thing, a subject, a frame of space such as the gap between a barnacle and a mussel if one even exists. Time goes by.

Hey, let’s step outside. Nothing like a good rain to cleanse the air, opening the sky with a clear view of the Milky Way filled with as many stars as we might humanly be able to take in. With no moon in sight, the night is as dark as it can be

Accretions, Oregon Style – Day 4

View from the Shags Nest at Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon

It’s still a murky gray out over the Pacific at 6:30 as I strain to see if our cliffside is still standing high over the ocean. The fishing boat I’d seen on the far horizon to the north a half-hour before deciding to leave bed is now gone, replaced for attention by an invisible barking seal somewhere below us.

Five to eight waves are lining up as they take aim for the land, while in the distance, a silvery blue belt looks calm. Between it and us, there’s a dark patch that offers an ambiguity I can’t read. A shadowy ocean at least appears mysterious, while a perfectly black sea at night is downright terrifying, though it is fascinating to see the reflection of stars on its surface.

Ocean Beach in Florence, Oregon

Sunrise is still 15 minutes away, just enough time for us to have made it to Tokatee Klootchman a quarter mile south of us, hoping for an easier trail down than the steep descent in front of our cabin, but in the shadowy light before dawn, it looks too precarious, and so we head further south to the uninspiredly (but maybe appropriately) named Ocean Beach.

Ocean Beach in Florence, Oregon

I won’t consider this egret to be looking for breakfast because I want to see it searching for the same thing we are, a glimpse of the approaching morning and arrival of sunrise. Like us, it just stands there listening and watching, its head doesn’t dip towards the foamy water swirling around its legs as if it were looking for morsels; it observes. Maybe it enjoys the music of the sea as we do and wants nothing more than a quiet meditation in the surf before the formalities of the day summon it back to its routine.

Ocean Beach in Florence, Oregon

Time passes slowly, and morning comes in as we let it. The choice is there; we could have just as easily opted to remain in our perch on the cliffside, but the waking world beckoned us so that we might be witnesses for others who’ve forgotten that these things happen with or without them present. Are we then emissaries for cold dark mornings found on distant shores where few care to venture other than us and birds?

Ocean Beach in Florence, Oregon

There are things that can stand out like a sore thumb once you’ve seen them, but until that time, they remain hidden in plain view. On how many other visits to the Oregon coast have we passed such sights and not recognized what we were looking at? At first glance, I understood I was looking at either a tree trunk or a large branch, but what I failed to comprehend was that this chunk of wood was emerging from between solid rock and a rough conglomerate above it. This can really only mean one thing: the tree was knocked down and carried along in what was likely a landslide. For centuries, it lay buried in an oxygen-poor sarcophagus and is now returning to light due to the effects of erosion. Was this from another episode of earthquake activity in the Cascadia Subduction Zone?

Ocean Beach in Florence, Oregon

Bird and visitor alike look upon this scene, both interpreting a sight almost incomprehensible, aside from the possibility of both finding it appealing. While I stood before this tranquil image, astonished by the colors transitioning over surfaces, any sense of the magnitude and mechanics of nature were kept at bay by my shallow ability to see, hear, and think outside the grip of senses holding this fluid reality together as something to behold. It is only after bearing witness to such things that we start sorting what it was that challenged us to understand the appeal of what ultimately is infinite to our puny minds.

Ocean Beach in Florence, Oregon

In each cubic foot of sand, there are approximately 1 billion grains of those fine particles. In another post, I mentioned the 86 billion neurons in your head; try this thought experiment at home: measure off a space of 4 feet long by 4 feet wide and 5 feet high. The cubic dimensions of that space carved out of your living room would be 80 cubic feet. Now fill it with sand, and you’d have close to 86 billion grains of sand in that cube or the number of neurons packed into your head. What patterns would you make out in the depths of your collection, not in the sand but in those cells that populate your brain? I’d wager most would find a symphony of junk culture streamed into their experience that reflects nothing about who they really are. At least the sand actually represents the mountains, rivers, rocks, sea shells, and other bits and bobs of where it all came from across time.

Ocean Beach in Florence, Oregon

Accretions, the Oxford dictionary describes them as such; the process of growth or increase, typically by the gradual accumulation of additional layers or matter. Our foundation, if we are lucky, is built upon love and care. For the less fortunate, they might be a hodgepodge of neglect, violence, and hunger. Even for those with good beginnings, it is not uncommon for the wheels to come off the cart of emotional security as anger, bullying, betrayal, and lies start to accumulate upon good intentions. Now layer in the superficial nature of a consumer society that convinces one and all that one becomes complete through consumption. So you pile on the designer clothes and celebrity-sponsored shoes, you buy the car and home just slightly above your pay grade, you diligently watch the series and seasons of dramas and sports so you own the right language to be popular among your peers, or maybe you become sidetracked by conspiracy, religious fanaticism, hate, and intolerance. For a while, the layers accumulate of hard pretense or of spongy swamp-like mud as you are drawn into someone else’s scheme, their alternative reality.

You never realized that the deeper foundation was no longer able to support a healthy outlook from the toxic topsoil poisoning the surface of who you thought you were. The flowers and happiness that you thought you were cultivating turned out to be sour bitterness that obscures your vision and leaves you feeling that you must plow under everyone else who fails to see the world as you do. Once I learned some 40 years ago that the computer phrase GIGO (garbage in, garbage out) had real-world consequences for not only data but for humans too, I began trying to shift what the accretions of John might look like.

Cellophane Tube Worm casings at Ocean Beach in Florence, Oregon

It was not easy to determine what these things are or what created them, but I finally learned that they are cellophane tube worm casings. Neither of us remembers ever seeing them before, and maybe for good reason: they typically live in the sand near the low tide line. My understanding was that negative tides weren’t due until Thanksgiving, but (and we’ll see more later in the day) maybe they arrived early. As for the molted shells of crabs, those seem to be unseasonably out of character, with females molting in spring and males during the summer, so why here, near the end of fall, did all these crab casings wash up along millions of worm filaments?

Ocean Beach in Florence, Oregon

Maybe this is a tiny part of the earth’s brain. It holds the knowledge that what might appear permanent is potentially volatile and can reconfigure itself in the blink of an eye. With humans, on the other hand, the process of change can be glacially slow to the point of imperceptible. One big storm could hit this shore, and a wave could consume the evidence of this landslide, dragging all that is seen here into the sea. Those who never saw it with their own eyes will not understand the truth of what things looked like before their own arrival. In this sense, wave after wave of knowledge can crash into us humans, and yet we remain impervious to change and unable to understand the vast landscape before our arrival.

Ocean Beach in Florence, Oregon

Water runs back into the sea, humans too often run into self-constructed walls made of their own short-sightedness.

Big Creek Bridge in Florence, Oregon

Big Creek Bridge is as far south as we get before turning around, now satisfied we’ve felt the warming rays of the sun and functioning imaginations.

Shags Nest at Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon

Back to the Nest for breakfast of unintended scrambled eggs, potatoes, and bacon. We ended up needing to render the bacon fat so we’d have some oil to cook the hashbrowns we’d picked up at the market in Yachats last night after dinner, but as soon as those potatoes hit the grease, it disappeared, leaving nothing for the eggs. With some quick thinking, I chopped the bacon and scrambled the eggs so I could toss it all together and hope for the best. The coffee percolated, and before we knew it, we were serving up a perfect breakfast, at least the part that wasn’t holding past to the frying pan that I’d be scrubbing for days. At least we didn’t have to go to town, and we had the best view ever.

Carl G. Washburne Memorial State Park in Florence, Oregon

Incredibly, the weather is looking quite favorable this morning, so we’ve decided to gamble that it will hold long enough to take a walk down at Carl G. Washburne State Park and the old familiar China Creek Loop Trail. The sound of the surf across the way is everpresent while the trickle of China Creek lets us know it’s just below us in the ravine. The faint sounds of birds are near, but almost always they remain unseen. That held true while we were still on the Valley Trail but as we reached the small bridge where the loop trail turns off, there were a bunch of chickadees fluttering about. There will be no crossing the obviously broken crossing as the damage is too severe, plus the park service has blocked the passage with a notice posted that the trail is closed. But this is a loop trail, so we made it a bit further on over the Valley Trail and while the China Creek Loop was taped off, that was easy enough to bypass.

Carl G. Washburne Memorial State Park in Florence, Oregon

There’s a different kind of tranquility out here, knowing we are alone. On other occasions, people walking through can be loud, boisterous, and simply rude in our estimation. In the exceptional quiet we’re experiencing, we can hear more birds, smell more forest, and see more plants.

Carl G. Washburne Memorial State Park in Florence, Oregon

Similar to looking at a familiar place through a rearview mirror and seeing it differently, walking the loop trail in reverse changes our perspective. And then there’s the recognition that we’ll be taking all of this in twice since we must return from whence we came.

Carl G. Washburne Memorial State Park in Florence, Oregon

Trail upkeep has taken a hit because why clean the trail when it’s closed? It’s fascinating how quickly the forest encroaches upon the trail, starting to erase our presence.

Squirrel at Carl G. Washburne Memorial State Park in Florence, Oregon

This was the first squirrel we spotted today, but it wouldn’t be the only one. Before one sees the squirrel in the rainforest, one hears the squirrel. Hearing the squirrel, though, is only one tiny part of the enjoyment as its tail appeared to be part of the apparatus that helped it offer a louder chirp because, with each new chirp, that tail behind it was hard at work pumping back and forth in time with its commanding voice.

Carl G. Washburne Memorial State Park in Florence, Oregon

Have I ever known that this is beard lichen? Maybe I thought it was moss, but whatever it is, I do know that it adds to the lushness of the environment and helps exemplify the still atmosphere that glows in the radiant light of day wherever the sun spills into the forest.

Carl G. Washburne Memorial State Park in Florence, Oregon

We walk with soft steps, not wanting to disturb the majestic awe that inhabits this place. Everything feels delicate requiring that we travel without disturbing the forest that only shows its true tenderness when we arrive with the kind of respect that desires to be here in a symbiotic coexistence.

Mushroom at Carl G. Washburne Memorial State Park in Florence, Oregon

While I was down here on the ground, lying on the damp earth, looking to capture a moment from this mushroom, I could only see the fungi of my photographic desire. I had to breathe lightly lest I move the camera or disturb the fragility of the scene. What I hadn’t seen was the mushroom to the left just breaking out of the earth. What I cannot see no matter how close I dream of looking at this tiny world, is when the spore started becoming mycelium before its branches give rise to mushrooms or the microscopic addition of new cells in the branching mosses that are everywhere.

Carl G. Washburne Memorial State Park in Florence, Oregon

Why can’t we humans find a way to live in such harmony with our environment as the elements of sun, soil, plants, and creatures do? How is this so wild for our senses that we must denude it and then plant grass over the top of it in order to bring uniformity, sterility, and ultimately a sense of death to the places we inhabit?

Carl G. Washburne Memorial State Park in Florence, Oregon

This visit to the China Creek Loop Trail has probably seen us more unprepared than any previous visit, for had we known just how deserted the forest would be, we would have been well advised to bring a blanket in order to lie here and take it all in for hours undisturbed by anything besides our own biological needs.

Carl G. Washburne Memorial State Park in Florence, Oregon

White Worm Coral Mushroom is not to be confused with Ken Russell’s film Lair of the White Worm.

Caroline Wise and John Wise at Carl G. Washburne Memorial State Park in Florence, Oregon

Two old friends find solemnity in a wonderful forest of grace and enchantment.

Carl G. Washburne Memorial State Park in Florence, Oregon

I know this curve and believe we are approaching the broken bridge. We’ll soon have to turn around for the indulgence of experiencing the trail a second time in just one day.

Mushroom at Carl G. Washburne Memorial State Park in Florence, Oregon

The pallor of corpse skin draped over this mushroom screams poisonous, but the eye of curiosity says stop and take a memory home with you.

Mushroom at Carl G. Washburne Memorial State Park in Florence, Oregon

What you don’t know about these posts, especially one where there are more than 60 photos, is that I often struggle to write something fresh in the narrative, as it is my task to write at least a little something about each image I post. At this point, I’ve already written 15,000 words that are published in the previous days’ posts and in today’s post so far, while in my handwritten notes, I’d guess there are nearly 7,000 more words waiting to be transcribed. If I follow my pattern, this 11-day post will end up being approximately 35,000 words long. It’s easy to have doubts if I’m using my efforts to the best of the time I have available and if I share anything new at all, but then Caroline reminds me how I never tire of these photos featuring many of the themes we’ve seen countless times before. So, like photography, where I shoot 5,000 images to hopefully have 400 at the end of a trip that I’m in love with, I’ll just keep writing these verbal snapshots, and if from 35,000 words, I might pen I have 2,500 that are tremendous to me, then I’ve won, and this ends up being deeply meaningful.

Mushroom at Carl G. Washburne Memorial State Park in Florence, Oregon

At times, it seems that the mushroom cap is effectively the face of these fungi, at least as far as wild mushrooms are concerned.

Carl G. Washburne Memorial State Park in Florence, Oregon

I’m well aware of what it means to be sentient, and I hope I remain rational enough not to want to imbue the inanimate with such qualities, but when it comes to trees, plants, and the earth’s creatures, there’s always this creeping sense that I cannot be fully certain that there isn’t something there at a level of os sentience I cannot fathom. Sure, it might just be the idea that I’m projecting myself into the position of thinking, “If I were this tree sitting in the forest, I’d….”

Carl G. Washburne Memorial State Park in Florence, Oregon

As our species has understood so little during our time on this planet, I can’t help but wonder how much more there is yet to know as we try to portray our knowledge as being full of absolutes.

Carl G. Washburne Memorial State Park in Florence, Oregon

Everything that has preceded our arrival on earth was obviously instrumental in laying the foundation that would usher in humans, and yet each of those key pieces is at risk of extinction, in large part due to the heavy hand we wield without discretion when we feel we need something that improves our brief existence. While I cannot tell you what the exact utility is of a carpet of moss in a coastal rainforest environment, I do know that I find it aesthetically wonderful, and my senses would be crushed if one day I were to arrive for a return visit and this had all been clear cut or burned off the face of our planet. Come to think about it that is exactly what we are doing in countless places.

Carl G. Washburne Memorial State Park in Florence, Oregon

I understand the need to use lands to cultivate the products or mine the elements we need to sustain us, but we are not treating our planet as we would our home. If this were your toddler’s favorite place to play in your backyard, you’d want to forbid an entity from coming in to scrape all of these fragile details out of existence in order to make a company already worth billions an extra milkshake under the guise that even those poor souls in faraway land “XYZ” should have the opportunity to taste a milkshake too. Maybe we shouldn’t all have a milkshake at the exact moment we want it, and instead of giving in to instant gratification, we should help people understand that if we remove all that is beautiful because Joey doesn’t have a McMansion-size playground in his backyard, we’ll soon have none of the original things earth offered us that started the lessons of what was essential and beautiful.

Squirrel at Carl G. Washburne Memorial State Park in Florence, Oregon

Mr. Squirrel would likely agree with me.

Squirrel at Carl G. Washburne Memorial State Park in Florence, Oregon

The bridge we would typically cross at the start of the China Creek Loop Trail turns out to have been impassable going on a year now, and it shows. We’ve never seen squirrels in this forest, nor could we hear as many birds, so the implication is that without us humans, wildlife is returning to the area. Regarding our observation that there were no newts out here at the ranger station, we learned that this was due to the dry weather, which would also explain the relative dearth of mushrooms in comparison to previous visits.

View from the Shags Nest at Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon

For the astute with a keen sense of spatial awareness, they will notice that we are obviously no longer in the rainforest. As a matter of fact, we have returned to the Shags Nest for some reason or other. As we left Washburne, the idea was that we’d visit the Devil’s Churn and then continue up the road to Luna Sea restaurant for lunch.

Flower at Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon

Those plans were fungible with other plans as no matter the direction, we’d still be at the ocean doing things we love, and so instead of a left turn heading north, we went to the right to pay a quick return visit to Tokatee Klootchman should the light of day make the short descent any easier.

Tokatee Klootchman State Natural Site in Florence, Oregon

Our idea here at Tokatee Klootchman, oh how I love that name, was to negotiate the steep trail down and find a way to scramble over the rocks to get over on our side of the beach below Ocean Haven and try our luck at ascending the cliffside access trail back up to the Shags Nest followed by walking down the street back to where we left the car or with my fear then conquered, we could just return the way we came. Nope, couldn’t find a way over the rocky outcropping with the Tokatee Creek running right through it.

Tokatee Klootchman State Natural Site in Florence, Oregon

Might as well see what’s here.

Anemone at Tokatee Klootchman State Natural Site in Florence, Oregon

Oh, it’s a forest of anemones in an aquarium-like setting, except it’s the ocean.

Anemone at Tokatee Klootchman State Natural Site in Florence, Oregon

Sure, there are more anemones here, but the center of my focus is on the chiton, a.k.a. gumboot, a.k.a. Loricate, which, for some reason, has me thinking about the Lorax from Dr. Seuss.

Anemone at Tokatee Klootchman State Natural Site in Florence, Oregon

I could simply write that we’d seen an abundance of anemones on our walk through the rocky shore but when a picture speaks a thousand words, this sentence just got a lot longer with the inclusion of yet another image of an anemone.

Chiton at Tokatee Klootchman State Natural Site in Florence, Oregon

One of 940 different recognized types of chitons, how many will you hold in your lifetime?

Stonefield Beach North in Florence, Oregon

Leaving Tokatee, we were now ready for lunch, right up until we saw the sign for Ten Mile Creek and thought, we should make a quick stop here as we’d never visited this place before. With it right next to the ocean, we’ll only be a minute. Well, we were there less than a minute as we didn’t feel like crossing the creek and getting around to the right looked to be a hassle, so we went back to the car and off to Luna Sea for some fish. That was until we saw that Ten Mile Creek’s sign marker specifies this as location 85 while Tokatee Klootchman was number 87, so where is location 86?

Note to Caroline for future reference: we wouldn’t have needed to scramble down the rocks and cross the creek, there’s a small trail sliced through the trees that take visitors to what is the north side of Stonefield Beach.

Stonefield Beach in Florence, Oregon

About 50 feet south is the small driveway to a parking area for maybe half a dozen cars serving location 86, known as Stonefield Beach.

Stonefield Beach in Florence, Oregon

There were more than a few people down here, with most everyone congregating near Ten Mile Creek. Feeling they knew something, we joined them, and sure enough, the reflections in the shallow water on the beach were beautiful. While it was obvious that we were here at low tide, we didn’t fully understand just how low it was.

Stonefield Beach in Florence, Oregon

So we continued to walk along the shore, admiring the glistening water as we strolled to the south with no urgency to reach anything in particular.

Stonefield Beach in Florence, Oregon

To the best of our recollection, we’ve never visited Stonefield Beach before, so our expectations are zero, and we simply take our time to enjoy our first encounter.

Stonefield Beach in Florence, Oregon

These wide, flat expanses, or somewhat textured as this one is, are certainly on our list of favorites because when they are wet and reflective, we love seeing the sky mirrored in the surface below.

Stonefield Beach in Florence, Oregon

Keep changing your perspective; what you gaze upon becomes another essential part of how you’ll interpret reality, but if you only see things for how you think they are at first glance, you’ll miss the nuances that might alter your certainty that you’ve seen and understood all there is to be known.

Stonefield Beach in Florence, Oregon

If I’m being redundant, it’s only because I want to bring everything home with us.

Stonefield Beach in Florence, Oregon

So here we are, approaching what might be a good turnaround point to head back to the car as it appears that the sun will soon disappear behind a thick cloud bank, dashing hopes for a spectacular sunset, but who cares? We’ve already had a tremendous day with unexpected great weather. But we’re close to the rocks that failed to attract anyone else’s attention, and Caroline wants to investigate.

Sea stars at Stonefield Beach in Florence, Oregon

Whoa, the tide is so low that the entirety of life in the ocean is being exposed, all of it! Why oh why were those people near the creek, and nobody was down here? This is like the beginning of an entirely new day of experience.

Barnacles at Stonefield Beach in Florence, Oregon

A negative tide has exposed a huge swath of ocean floor, and we’re down in the middle of it. Astonishing is a weak description of what we are ogling; nothing in our previous experiences of low tides comes close.

Anemone at Stonefield Beach in Florence, Oregon

I’m going to make my life here easier, and instead of trying to find something profound to share about anemones, these two are husband and wife, and after having moved here back in the early 1950s, they are now in retirement, having spawned thousands of little anemones over the past 77 years. Now, in their sunset years, they just kick back, swaying in the waves, happy to have lived such wonderful lives on the Oregon shore where the waters were always cold, and people stepping on them were kept to a minimum.

Caroline Wise at Stonefield Beach in Florence, Oregon

There’s no way of knowing how many gazillions of bivalves, anemones, barnacles, and sea stars we are seeing. Maybe we could have counted the sea stars, but we’d have ultimately been drowned by the return of the ocean to take back what belongs to it; this does not include my wife.

Sea stars at Stonefield Beach in Florence, Oregon

When we see sea stars, they are typically firmly attached to something, just like this giant orange star holding fast to the rock and mussels that are temporarily hanging out above the world they normally live in, that being the ocean. Returning to subjects captured in my photos time and again, I need to stretch in finding something worthwhile to say about what I feel compelled to share and so it is with this beautiful specimen. A simple search for interesting facts about sea stars taught me that not only can sea stars reproduce sexually, but they can also reproduce asexually. While a sea star can regenerate a lost limb (this I knew), that broken-off wayward limb, if detached close to the body, will have all of the essential organs to regenerate an entirely new sea star thus, the species is able to reproduce itself.

Anemone at Stonefield Beach in Florence, Oregon

Just when I think I’ve taken too many photos of anemones, there’s that one photo that spurs me into asking questions about the anatomy of this sea creature, and it’s there that I learn that the main part of the body is called the column, but that’s not exactly what I was curious about. We’ve seen this before: the column appears to be covered with debris. This would make sense when the anemone is out of the ocean during low tide, and I’m left thinking that the receding waters distributed the shells and small stones on its body and will simply rinse away when the tide returns.

This anemone is in the water, and it was while looking at this that I finally realized that it was not the first time I had seen this kind of patterning. Sure enough, this type of anemone has sticky tubercles (a small rounded projection or protuberance) that it uses for intentionally attaching shells, sand, and other small debris. Reading the article I linked to also informed me that this anemone has fighting tentacles (usually retracted), but the truly mind-blowing lesson for the day is that in the phylum of cnidarian, there are two forms, polyps and medusae, with anemones being of the polyp type, and jellyfish belonging to the medusae type. The fact that jellies and anemones both belong to the same phylum isn’t a big deal as my knowledge of biology is nearly nil, but when the author pointed out that jellyfish are essentially untethered upside-down anemones, well, my eyes nearly popped out of their sockets. Hmm, imagine that eyes popping out of our skulls was the way humans reproduced.

Stonefield Beach in Florence, Oregon

Do you see the sadness out on the horizon? That’s the face of nature wearing a wistful expression that this human who should have been able to do better has reached what is likely the final quarter of its life and only now finds the awareness that it took the creatures living near the seashore for granted. The backward idea that it was all just stuff that, while beautiful, was simply the things that were there.

Anemone at Stonefield Beach in Florence, Oregon

Then it strikes me: these anemones are essentially like the majority of people around me; they arrive in different colors, shapes, and ages, but for the most part, they lack intentionality, and so, while pleasant to look at, they are easy to take for granted. Their flourishes might be attractive and their forms seductive, but at the end of the day, they are attached to routines that allow them to exist, but they rarely affect outcomes. Among us humans, there’s a tiny fraction that attempts to harness deliberate consciousness to action, believing they can loosen the binds that tie them to doing things the way they were always done. Lucky us that anemones, jellyfish, and sea stars haven’t evolved intention. Then again, unlucky us that the same holds true for so many around us.

Devils Churn at Cape Perpetua in Yachats, Oregon

Finally made it to the Devil’s Churn, but as you can see in the waning light, the churn is calm, so we didn’t finish the walk down and instead opted to finally fetch a very late lunch / early dinner back at Ona Restaurant for our second visit. Yes, last night’s meal was extraordinary enough that we are returning for a repeat performance. Tonight’s menu must be mentioned as a reminder to Caroline and me to come back to Yachats and eat at Ona once again if we are so fortunate. Our first course was smoked local maitake mushroom pâté followed by clams in vermouth and then another beet salad, as we enjoyed the one last night so enthusiastically. For the main dish, Caroline opted for miso ramen while I took on the stuffed sole. What perfect punctuation for an exquisite day.

Knowns and Unknowns in Oregon- Day 3

Coquille River at Bullards Beach State Park in Bandon, Oregon

It’s the quiet serenity at the break of dawn, and the externalities of being human are kept at bay. Stand at the edge of a river looking toward the sun behind a thin shroud of clouds while the forest across the way obscures that there’s a bigger world beyond the trees and try to consider that the majority of the humans that came before us only knew themselves as another element in nature, not the megalomaniacs who’ve convinced themselves through self-ordination that a god gave them dominion over a planet.

Coquille River Lighthouse at Bullards Beach State Park in Bandon, Oregon

The light of being should emanate from within like the beacon of a lighthouse. Instead, we’ve foisted the dollar, organized religion, cult-like politics, and celebrities to act as our guiding lights. We get our compass and our evolving intellect from our parents; there is no need for corporate interests to use the media to bombard us with their capitalistic agendas, but that’s how we now exist. Rarely is the message that one should take a sabbatical to reconnect with the real, the meaningful, and truly profound. With the conclusion of this trip, Caroline and I will have been away from home and work for just shy of 80 days this year, and if we had another 30 days, we’d have no problems filling those moments with more grand experiences.

Caroline Wise at Bullards Beach State Park in Bandon, Oregon

Love of life, one another, and our rare moments in time connecting to the larger world found in raw nature are the greatest things we take from life. I’m a broken old record by now, considering how often I’ve repeated my message to focus your loyalties away from things outside of your control that have been placed upon your shoulders by external forces who require your servitude to their concerns, but then again, this beach was all ours, no one else was here to disturb our experience. There we were, just two of us out of 8 billion others. Maybe I should change my tune and thank all of those people nestled cozily at home making toaster waffles, waiting for Uber Eats to deliver their coffee as they check social media, e-mail, TV, or some other important aspect of their lives in expensive homes so Caroline and I can go about exploring our world in the beautiful solitude of perfect days.

Coquille River Lighthouse at Bullards Beach State Park in Bandon, Oregon

Right out there in the cosmos, in the vast wonderment of a universe of exceedingly infinite potentiality, the light of curiosity illuminates a way forward that seems to insist that happiness is found in learning about what you didn’t know yesterday. Seeing the unfamiliar and touching the rare alights the being of our humanity and fuels the desire to explore more of what we didn’t understand in the moments prior. Of course, the seed of yearning is not equally distributed, and through neglect, it’s easy to kill the chance of it ever moving beyond the nascent sprouting stage. If only continuing nourishment had been offered, the child might have taken a path that would have taken them farther.

Jetty at Coquille River Bullards Beach State Park in Bandon, Oregon

There are many paths that lead nowhere, and in the age in which we live, these are the destinations that best serve those who’d love more out of life. While I find it selfish that the haves would rather offer false destinies and aspirations to the masses, I reluctantly have to concede a hint of genius to this blunt method of oppression as I, for one, love the civility found in the serenity of a place that’s not been cluttered with the grotesque stupidity of crass, unrefined people, their boisterous obnoxiousness and displays of their gaudy self-image.

Bandon Marsh National Wildlife Refuge in Bandon, Oregon

There are beautiful things, and there are ugly things, and while we would prefer to remain immersed in the aesthetically wonderful, it’s inevitable that we’ll be encountering the ugly, typically in the form of people.

The beach, river, surf, jetty, lighthouse, and marsh do not have a political affiliation. Those places and things aren’t afraid or angry about perceived injustices and conspiracies. Our last visit to Oregon was in November 2020, it was our Remote Isolation Vacation, and as such, we had very few encounters with others, certainly not indoors. We know full well that Oregon is largely a conservative state, regardless of how people want to portray Portland. This is a state, after all, with a charter that featured a black exclusionary clause, and while those pockets of liberalism exist, the rural enclaves can be quite oppressive.

This contrast between the pleasing and the vulgar shows up every once in a while. It’s Sunday, so more people go out for breakfast, and the other nearby restaurants seem to have fallen victim to the pandemic, “if you want to call it that,” pipes up the man in the “Let’s Go Brandon” cap sitting next to us at the counter. As I said, our visit in 2020 might have had us encountering 3 or 4 people, and all of them were outdoors and keeping their distance, while the year before, in 2019, the right’s God/King was still sitting upon his Orange Throne, and all was perfect in the universe. I’d like to say, “Enough of this distraction that should remain but a tiny part of our time on the coast!” is but one more thing.

In trying to understand more about the local history and mentality, Caroline is reading about the racist past of Oregon and came across that point in time when Oregon ratified the 14th amendment, you remember, the one that reads, “No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” But then, a couple of years later, they rescinded it when they decided that black people were not entitled to citizenship. Sure, they eventually fixed this act of poor discretion, but NOT until 1973! Oregon’s history with its Chinese population might be worse, but before we go down that rabbit hole, it is time to stop the history lesson.

That old saying that one bad apple spoils the barrel might hold true as the stupid man with an off-the-cuff comment and his abhorrent hat had us reevaluating our perception of a state where we most typically find ourselves inspired while looking outward toward the sea, up to the mountains, through the forest, or within our feelings of love.

Tayberry Jam at Misty Meadows in Bandon, Oregon

Speaking of fruit, while we had to do some minor backtracking this morning, Caroline required a visit to Misty Meadows south of Bandon as this might be the best chance for her to collect a sweet gift for a friend of hers in Germany. Oh nice, banana slug and tsunami zone stickers for my computer and Tayberry jam for Caroline, friends, and family.

On the Coquille River in Bandon, Oregon

For one reason or another, on the return north, we stopped in Old Town Bandon. Maybe we wanted to take stock of what the pandemic shuttered, or was the bathroom calling, oh, how that candy store? After evaluating the shops and restaurants, we made our way toward the dock and public restroom before walking along the southern shore of the Coquille River. Come to think of it, we were in the car and leaving when, nearly simultaneously, our eyes caught sight of a sign that read Cranberry Sweets & More. The combination of cranberry and sweets demanded we turn around and make a visit; we didn’t leave empty-handed. And what’s more, we also made a stop at Face Rock Creamery for a sweet ice cream treat on our way out of town.

Gorse at Whiskey Run Beach in Bandon, Oregon

We weren’t even 5 miles out of town when a sign pointing to Whiskey Run caught our attention. good thing it did, as it brought us to this gorse fantasy. While not everyone’s favorite scourge of a plant, there’s no denying that this oily cousin of the pea plant is a sight to behold.

Gorse at Whiskey Run Beach in Bandon, Oregon

Lovely pea-like flowers are said to have the scent of coconut, but I wouldn’t know. [Coconut and peaches, in my opinion – Caroline]

Gorse at Whiskey Run Beach in Bandon, Oregon

One must first get past some of the worst thorns known in the plant kingdom to gather a sniff at the flowers, and one would be a terrible fool to become entangled in this otherwise beautiful bush.

Whiskey Run Beach in Bandon, Oregon

This is Whiskey Run Beach and yet another place we have failed to visit previously. I’d like to be cheeky and blame it on the idea that to get down to this beach, we have to drive between two golf courses, but that would just be me trolling the reader that my disdain for golfers is that great; close but not that bad.

Whiskey Run Beach in Bandon, Oregon

To the south, there are some vehicles and seeing that we’re on foot, we’ll walk the other way where not a car is to be seen.

Whiskey Run Beach in Bandon, Oregon

Our long walk north pays off as we’re here at low tide. Not that we’ll be seeing a lot of sealife this afternoon, but we’re not so difficult to scoff at a dearth of sights; we can appreciate even the littlest of things.

Whiskey Run Beach in Bandon, Oregon

I shouldn’t imply there’s a payoff due to seeing sea life when any and every moment out here together while we are just walking along inventorying the shore and counting the number of visible droplets from splashing waves sends us into matrimonial bliss.

Whiskey Run Beach in Bandon, Oregon

When the inventory is finished, and all the droplets that can be counted have been accounted for, Caroline breaks out the calculator and graph paper and starts to plot how much water volume is in the clouds as sampled from a 22.5-degree angle of the ocean’s horizon to a point 22.5 degrees above sea level. In this particular game of “Guess the Volume,” she ventured a bet that there would be about half a cubic kilometer of clouds in our sample cube if they were collected in a single cloud. This would equate to about 250,000 kilos of water or the same as measured by liters. For you Imperialists, that would be about 66,000 gallons of water lofted into the sky in front of us.

Caroline Wise at Whiskey Run Beach in Bandon, Oregon

When not performing beach geometry, Caroline can be found collecting clumps of mussels.

Whiskey Run Beach in Bandon, Oregon

Meanwhile, I busy myself over here trying to find patterns in the rocks that would imply an ancient civilization had once lived here, leaving these foundations of their dwellings and rock carvings that tell the story of their alien overlords that planted them here over a million years ago.

Whiskey Run Beach in Bandon, Oregon

Clearly, I’m suffering from sun poisoning and not in my right mind. That’s not true, but I have to make something up as we walk along in a mindless trance of wonder.

Whiskey Run Beach in Bandon, Oregon

I’ve lost just too much time trying to discover why erosion is working on these rocks in just this way. It’s nearly maddening how difficult the search is with Google Images absolutely failing while Bing Images at least identifies that they are from Whiskey Run Beach, but what the rock is and how these cavities were formed is a mystery.

Whiskey Run Beach in Bandon, Oregon

What’s not a mystery is that these rocks are tilted nearly perfectly at 90 degrees from where they used to sit, meaning they fell clean over. This has me thinking about earthquakes and that 1,200 years ago, movement of the Cascadia Subduction Zone dropped some of the coastlines just north of here at Sunset Bay and deposited a large part of the forest into the ocean, thus creating a “Ghost Forest.” What, a ghost forest? Now that I understand this, I want to visit Sunset Bay again and Neskowin where there’s another ghost forest. So, regarding these titled rocks, I could see that they might have fallen over during that cataclysm over a thousand years ago. I can only wonder when we might be able to witness another event of such great magnitude.

Whiskey Run Beach in Bandon, Oregon

Worms, sand-peckers, crabs, birds following worm track? I’m at a loss; let’s hope sleuthy Caroline finds a bead on just what creates these patterns in the sand. [Nothing so far – Caroline]

Jellyfish at Whiskey Run Beach in Bandon, Oregon

This is either a baby jellyfish or it’s an adult with the shortest tentacles of all jellyfish.

Sand Dollar at Whiskey Run Beach in Bandon, Oregon

If there is a saying that reads, “Money on the floor brings money in the door,” then I wonder if there is good luck to be found in “Sand dollar on the beach – beautiful experience within reach.”

Seven Devils Road south of Charleston, Oregon

A John-and-Caroline road trip may not be complete without at least some dirt road as part of the route. Today’s off-road adventure brought us down old Seven Devils Road to avoid a road we’ve driven before. Just before getting back on pavement to return to Highway 101 via Charleston, I had to pull over to capture at least one image of our trek down dirt. There were far more impressive narrow parts of the road with hairpin turns and just enough room for one car, but those are not the places I’m inclined to stop, get out of the car, and snap an image or two when I have no idea if Joey Badass in his big truck is cruising along, figuring that this little-used road will likely be empty, especially as he enters a blind turn.

McCullough Memorial Bridge in North Bend, Oregon

Before anyone goes telling me that I’ve posted the McCullough Memorial Bridge in North Bend half a dozen other times, so what? I’ve also posted everything else you are seeing on this blog at least one other time, too.

McCullough Memorial Bridge in North Bend, Oregon

But have I posted an image of the bridge from this exact spot while crossing?

Tahkenitch Lake Boat Ramp in Gardiner, Oregon

Tahkenitch Lake is such a beautiful place, but I’ve yet to find a place to stay nearby, as in on the lake shore. There’s a campground, but it literally sits just a few feet away from Highway 101. Maybe kayaking across the lake to a remote campground could be a thing so I turn to the internet to find such places, but instead learn the following from Wikipedia, “Brazilian waterweed limits the lake’s usefulness. The weed, which has formed a dense mat over most of the lake bottom, hampers swimming, boating, and fishing. Introduced to the lake in the 1930s, it has resisted all attempts to control it.

Tahkenitch Lake Boat Ramp in Gardiner, Oregon

It turns out that Brazilian waterweed flowers could necessitate a visit outside of the time of year we typically visit, but would we really be willing to sacrifice tranquility for the potential crowds of summer if that is when flowers bloom?

North of Big Creek Bridge in Florence, Oregon

We’re about to reach where we need to be on the map, not necessarily at an optimal place to witness sunset but where our lodging is for this evening.

North of Big Creek Bridge in Florence, Oregon

Another mile or two, and we’re there, though you may not know it. We pulled onto the property, and as this wasn’t our first visit, I had to step over to the grassy rise in front of the main house to take yet another sunset photo should this one prove to be the best I captured today.

Shags Nest at Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon

We are now set up in the Shags Nest at Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon. No yurts for the next four nights as we luxuriate in grand opulence and extravagance as though there were levels of the incredible above the lofty yurt experience.

Shags Nest at Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon

If ever there were a good reason to bring the tripod, it would be right here to take HDR (high dynamic range) photos of this setup so I could get the light balanced between the interior and exterior. Then again, I’m taking these images for our memories first and foremost, and for that purpose, these suffice.

View from the Shags Nest at Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon

Does this look suspiciously similar to the photo just above the interior Shags Nest images? Well maybe, but this was taken from our private deck that allows us to own this view for the duration of our stay.

Caroline Wise at Shags Nest at Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon

It’s two years later, and once again, we try heading down to the beach on the narrow cliffside switchback of a path only to get exactly to where I was stymied on my previous attempt back then, the exposure is too much as the idea of splattering on the rocks below remains an unappealing potentiality even if my better senses try to reassure me that it’s highly unlikely. Maybe this is the “one thing left undone” that is meant to bring us back to Ocean Haven for a third stay in the Shags Nest?

View from the Shags Nest at Ocean Haven in Yachats, Oregon

From my original notes from that evening: Here I am at the end of the day with little left to say; if there’s nothing, it’s likely because so much has been said before. Oregon and its coast have made deep impressions and might be the subject of more of my writing than all other places. This exercise begins while at dinner at Ona Restaurant in Yachats, but like all inopportune moments of trying to slip some thoughts into a notebook, I should get my attention over to the process of dinner and paying attention to our server and the woman sitting across from me, namely Caroline.

Back at the edge of the sea, for more than a few nights, in fact, though the exact number is unimportant, just that there’s more to come of our time at the Shags Nest. It’s completely dark outside and a cool 47 degrees (8 Celsius), and maybe not a lot warmer inside the nest right now as the windows are open to let the sound, fresh air, and sense of the sea drift into our tiny cabin that feels like it has more windows than walls. We’ll not close the windows nor will we turn on the heat; we’ll not draw the curtains as we try to maintain our relationship as close as possible to these moments at the edge.

Highway 101 is nearby behind us but cannot compete with the constant roar of the crashing waves. From time to time, we hear the compression and heavy collapse of a wave that sounds larger than those that preceded it. Out in the darkness, the tide is shifting with high water approaching us. The thought creeps in that without being able to see the churning ocean; it could soon be lapping at the cliffside, the same one we’ll be trying to sleep in front of.

Not content writing here under this convenience of electrical light; the time approaches when I must grab a flashlight and go out to our deck to confirm that I can still see nothing while still hearing so much. Fog is coming up, and the surf is significantly louder outside. Standing here, I’m no longer certain how much land extends out in front of our cabin as everything disappears into the dark. As my eyes adjust, I can make out the whites of the cresting waves that look extraordinarily large and maybe bigger than I want to imagine. This has the effect of having me listen closer with my feet. Do I feel earth vibrations through my shoes that might suggest we could go surfing tonight?

A mere 10 minutes after I returned to the warm light of our room, I’m nagged by my curiosity, which tells me to investigate if conditions out there have changed. I know full well that this ocean has been pounding the shore on this section of the coast for many a year and that the dark sky has descended over the land for more years than any of us alive today have lived. Still, I need to know, is anything different? Can I find something of awe just by seeing for myself that the world remains as I suspect it is, or is it ready to deliver the unfathomable?

Nothing has changed, although there were a few stars poking through the overcast sky and fog. Light pollution from the north and south can be seen in the distance, triggering the thought that I may never see a truly dark Pacific Coast. Back inside, it’s cold in here, even with my wool base layer, a shirt, and my fleece on. The inner whine of wanting comfort, i.e., instant gratification, says, “Close the windows and turn on the heat,” but I cannot have ears for that as the constant song of the ocean demands that we sleep to its serenade.

All and Nothing in Oregon – Day 2

Rockway Beach Trail at Harris Beach State Park in Brookings, Oregon

The encroaching morning began to overwhelm the incredible cozy factor that wrapped us in blissful sleep in our yurt. With the awareness that sunrise might be rare over these days, we peel out of our toasty zone to venture into the beauty zone.

Rockway Beach Trail at Harris Beach State Park in Brookings, Oregon

We have made it outside before the sun pokes over the horizon not only due to the science of how morning light spilling into sleeping spaces typically wakes people but also due to the biological process that alerts you that you’ve held your water long enough. On our short walk to the loo facilities, we saw what we couldn’t during our arrival in the evening and what we had conveniently forgotten in order that novelty would once again play its hand: we are mere steps away from the ocean.

Rockway Beach Trail at Harris Beach State Park in Brookings, Oregon

How we missed this Rockaway Beach Trail on one of the many previous visits to Harris Beach State Park might be described as a mystery, but when the eyes dart about faster than the sense that searches for luxury, we find ourselves at the place of instant gratification. I’ll explain how that works as we approach the end of this walk. From the cliffside, the trail led us to this narrow path sliced between rocks that would have otherwise been difficult to access. Thank you to the mole people who carved this narrow passage that enchanted us with an opportunity to slither through.

Rockway Beach Trail at Harris Beach State Park in Brookings, Oregon

Before reaching the point where we practiced our snake routine, we nearly fell into regret at the lack of foresight to bring the binoculars or zoom lens with us just as some river otters went scampering across the beach before disappearing into the rocks we were about to walk over. We were just too far away for a worthy photo, so instead of finding regret, we recognized how amazing everything can be when our will is able to propel us out of routines, even when sacrifices have to be made to experience the extraordinary or things turn out less perfect than planned.

Rockway Beach Trail at Harris Beach State Park in Brookings, Oregon

And so we walk forward instead of rushing back for what was forgotten as the evolving light of the early morning will not wait on us. With sunlight starting to be captured by the waves, molten splashes of daytime fireworks jump above the rocks they crash into, and we are reassured that our decision was sound. With the rising mist glowing in golden-orange light peaking around the corner of a particularly large rock, I gawk in awe, wondering how far this sight can extend into the realm of magnificence.

Yurt at Harris Beach State Park in Brookings, Oregon

Ah yes, our tiny castle by the sea with every bit of splendor the Wises look for when going coastal. While we lack television, wifi, room service, a toilet, shower, microwave, sheets, blankets, running water, and a breakfast buffet, our yurt features a sense of opulence found when the two of us walk through that door, and the place takes on inexplicable qualities that likely can only occur when those passing the threshold are truly in love. Yep, that must be it.

Matties Pancake House in Brookings, Oregon

Now full of romance and sunshine, it was time to fill up equally on breakfast. Our meal at Mattie’s Pancake House might have turned out ordinary if it weren’t for the second Sun of the day rising over our table in the form of Peggy. She’s a waitress in the classical sense, where people with such jobs used to understand something more about customer service and engagement. One is not fully served by Peggy if one refuses to acknowledge the rarity of being offered time to engage in banter. In exchange for the playful back and forth, we were offered a tip on a small, infrequently visited beach just up the road and a look at this vintage postcard of Mattie’s Pancake House that recently came into their possession.

Mill Beach in Brookings, Oregon

Here we are at Mill Beach in Bandon, Oregon, with gratitude being sent Peggy’s way for the tip. This is also where my notes for the day took a break until the final glimmer of light danced over the sands and sea during sunset many hours from now. What follows are the musings of memories, impressions, desires, and the necessity of fingers representing a mind to record things that will allow Caroline and me to revisit this place in our days ahead and possibly inspire someone else to follow in our footsteps or craft their own journey that takes them to previously unknown places.

Mill Beach in Brookings, Oregon

Hmm…a new configuration of rocks, water, and sky. This can only mean one thing: we must up our vigilance to ensure nothing gets by our keenly tuned senses that are looking for what’s out of place and especially for what’s in its rightful place.

Mill Beach in Brookings, Oregon

Splashy water, check.

Caroline Wise at Mill Beach in Brookings, Oregon

Smiling hagfish on the beach, check.

Mill Beach in Brookings, Oregon

Alrighty then, this beach has my seal of approval. Yep, I went there.

Mill Beach in Brookings, Oregon

We stand on the seashore under the warmth of a sun that sits 93 million miles away while our planet zips around that sun at 67,000 miles per hour and don’t forget that our entire solar system is racing around the galactic center at 490,000 miles per hour which equates to 136 miles per second or 219 kilometers per hour. What this means is that we are hauling ass even when standing still and contemplating what sets this scene apart from one seen yesterday. Looking these numbers up, I come to realize that if we spent only 15 minutes at this beach, we’d have moved 122,500 miles through space, which is the same as circumnavigating Earth almost five times. I swear I’m not stoned (high) as I write this stuff, but as one thing leads to another, over the course of a lifetime, we’ll have traveled 340 billion miles through the vastness of space or for a way to better understand such big numbers, you make 1,823 roundtrip journeys between the sun and your home. I wanted to share how many roundtrips this would equal if it were to the moon, which would be 1,423,189 times, but then that number starts getting difficult to comprehend while 13.6 million trips around our own planet wouldn’t even allow one to see anything other than a blur.

If you got this far, my point is that even if we stand still, we are in motion, but then again, we are not unless we’ve engaged our senses to the changing world that hurtles forward in much the same way we are passing through time and when it comes down to it, 29,000 days in a lifetime is an ever so brief moment to be out here standing still before the ocean wondering why we’re so fortunate to contemplate abstractions.

Caroline Wise at Mill Beach in Brookings, Oregon

Meanwhile, crazy hagfish lady performs an ancient Teutonic dance from her childhood to bring on the wind in order to fly her kite. Little does she care that just above our sky, the solar winds are blowing by at 1 million miles per hour; she should try flying her kite there.

Arch Rock to Secret Beach Trail in Brookings, Oregon

So John, what big thoughts do you have on fern-lined paths through the forest? The mind swirls around fantasies of nymphs, imps, pixies, and gnomes, and no, I’ve not eaten a mushroom along the way. Regarding our location, we’ve left Mill Beach and traveled about a dozen miles north to hike the Arch Rock to Secret Beach Trail.

Arch Rock to Secret Beach Trail in Brookings, Oregon

Is this really just the second day out here in Oregon? Oh yeah, time is dilating due to our awareness that we’ve already traveled 12.7 million miles around our galaxy. For those who travel far, we are presented with riches of experience that have no rival; for proof, just consider this moment in time that was captured by Caroline and me on our walk down this trail. We were the only ones out here, as evidenced by the lack of other cars in the parking lot, while the play of light and color with this exact configuration of elements will have only ever been witnessed by us. Why is that? Because we traveled far and invested in our potential for experience in order to gain just such moments of wonder. In a sense, this becomes the religious journey in much the same way others travel into the Bible, the Koran, the Rig Veda, or the Tripitaka, searching for moments that show them the truth. We find the visceral affirmation of life standing at the precipice of nature where the hand of man remains invisible.

Arch Rock to Secret Beach Trail in Brookings, Oregon

Who doesn’t love shield lichen? Whoa, the rabbit hole that opens should you search for info about edible lichen offers things such as the tasty fact that the partially digested lichen eaten by caribou and harvested from their rumen is called stomach icecream while on a tastier side of things, lichen is used in various masalas of India and is said to impart an umami flavor to foods cooked with it.

Arch Rock to Secret Beach Trail in Brookings, Oregon

I’ll wager you are smacking your lips together right about now, wondering what kind of culinary achievement you might whip up with a couple of tablespoons of these lichens.

Arch Rock to Secret Beach Trail in Brookings, Oregon

Often, when I’m writing of these days after we’ve returned from vacation, I’ll listen to something in order to block the sound of the coffee shop I’ve taken up in and to set a mood that feels congruent with where I was mentally while walking in the environment. As I looked at this photo, I was wondering if there was a song that fit the sense I was feeling from it and that maybe it could kickstart this return to my narrative. I’m caught between two songs: the first is from Röyksopp, titled Lights Out, and the other is from Beach House, titled Space Song. Even before writing this, I also made consideration of songs from Rüfüs Du Sol, Odesza, and Ólafur Arnalds’ track So Far + So Close, meaning it’s taking a while to get these words going, but the music is nice. Needless to say, the trail was far better than any song, hence the difficulties in finding one that really hit the mark in my attempt to trigger a flow of descriptive words. If nothing else, I put a reminder here in a post that will refresh my memory about what I was listening to in late 2022.

Arch Rock to Secret Beach Trail in Brookings, Oregon

I don’t believe I thought of this before, but in some ways, these photos are like the pop songs we were listening to on the days we were out on vacation. One-day wonder hits such as The Trees with On The Arch Rock Trail or DJ Peggy’s remix of Mill Beach, followed by Wet Feet performing I’ll Fly My Kite.

Arch Rock to Secret Beach Trail in Brookings, Oregon

Somewhere nearby is the Kabouter, a mushroom sprite, just out of sight, maybe in the shadows, or is he hiding under the cap? Calling a Kabouter is futile as they appear when the magic of the moment suits them, and in any case, one should be careful around mushrooms as the treacherous Giftzwerg could be close at hand.

Arch Rock to Secret Beach Trail in Brookings, Oregon

I may well be mistaken, but I’m going to guess this is Spruce Island. I know that we are close, and I know that there’s an official overlook, but we’re not at that signed overlook, and the other images I might compare to on search engines show me Arch Rock, so who knows?

Arch Rock to Secret Beach Trail in Brookings, Oregon

This is the end of the trail for us as we just about reached Secret Beach. There was a hint of trail that continued down to the beach level, but my fear of exposure to precariously steep slivers of earth held me back. There was also the matter of needing to cross Miller Creek down there that I allowed to give me pause, and while we stood here well satisfied with our third walk of the day, now that I’m writing this, I do wish we’d gone all the way down to the beach to see the view from that perspective. On the bright side of regret, everything about this beautiful trail would invite us to a return visit, and what’s more, we have a solid reason to come back.

Arch Rock to Secret Beach Trail in Brookings, Oregon

And this is the other part of the namesake that identifies this trail, Arch Rock. With so many years traveling this coast, I’m astonished that we could find three new places to visit today that we’d never been to in any of our previous adventures here on the western edge of Oregon. I can only wonder how many hidden gems still exist outside of our view that we are yet to experience if we are so lucky in the years to come to visit yet again. I can share with you that just writing that is an invitation to drop what I’m doing and start scouring maps and travel blogs to find what we’ve missed while dreaming of coming back next November.

Arch Rock to Secret Beach Trail in Brookings, Oregon

There’s really nothing in this photo that hasn’t already been shown in the previous few images, but the shift of where we are on the trail has it looking brand new to us. That or we are reluctant to let go of such a delightful stroll and are trying to bring it all back with us.

Meyers Creek Beach in Gold Beach, Oregon

The reassuring shark tooth/fin of Meyers Creek Beach. One of my all-time favorite images of this place was shot back in 2006 on a gray, blustery day; click here to take a look. Maybe I should explain why it’s reassuring. Down south in California at Garrapata State Park in Big Sur, we’ve watched the beach change in incredible ways where large disappearing rocks are somehow buried in shifting sands or they’ve been broken up and taken into deeper waters. Yet the shark tooth here in Oregon has become a homing beacon for us over the years. But John, aren’t you contradicting one of your basic tenets, and that is that you love change? Anyone who really knows me knows that I’m capable of contradicting almost everything I tell others I believe; such is the fluidity of being able to change my mind.

Meyers Creek Beach in Gold Beach, Oregon

Lest we forget, this is the northern view of Meyers Creek Beach with Highway 101 on the right, so should you find yourself driving down the Oregon coast, you too will have the chance to view this favorite stop of ours, even if you should decide not to scramble over the boulders to reach the beach.

Meyers Creek Beach in Gold Beach, Oregon

But you should make that scramble as the reflections down here seriously worthwhile.

And according to Caroline, the water is fine, maybe not for a swim but certainly for a late fall walk in the surf.

Meyers Creek Beach in Gold Beach, Oregon

While I was ready to go, Caroline insisted that we at least make our way over to the back of the shark fin/tooth, and wouldn’t you know it that her intuition (I meant insatiable appetite to see it all) proved right as I nabbed yet another image I feel worthy of sharing. By the way, Caroline is standing on the left, and if you look closely, you can see her and better understand the scale of this giant rock. After I snapped this great silhouette with the sun just peeking up over the corner, Caroline was flailing her arms about crazily, and she didn’t even have her kite in her hands. She was probably hollering something, too, but who can hear anything over crashing waves?

Meyers Creek Beach in Gold Beach, Oregon

As I approached she was pointing to the sea stars, anemones, and countless mussels and barnacles – score! You’d think my wife had found the leprechaun with a pot of gold due to her wild enthusiasm. I have no idea how many thousands of sea stars this woman has seen, and each time we encounter them in their natural habitat, her inner six-year-old is spirited back into existence as she lets her exuberance flow.

Meyers Creek Beach in Gold Beach, Oregon

Maybe you think she’s any less excited by barnacles? You don’t know her. From the patterns, gradations of color, textures, and sharp edges, along with the clicking sounds they make as they move around in their shells, Caroline is right there studying these crustaceans, looking for a detail she might have overlooked on one of the other 412 encounters with these tidal dwellers. Come to think about it, and for the sake of honesty, I might have also been describing myself.

Meyers Creek Beach in Gold Beach, Oregon

Okay, okay, Caroline, I’m almost done taking my 50 photos of these fascinating barnacles that are just begging to have their images shared on my blog; well, that’s how I am interpreting the clicking sounds.

South of Port Orford, Oregon looking out over the Pacific Ocean

The elevation change should be the first giveaway that we’ve left the tide pool and are continuing our trek; northward we go as tonight’s lodging is to be found up a ways.

South of Port Orford, Oregon looking out over the Pacific Ocean

These two images are similar, but the first one is not a crop of the wider view; they are a reminder to not just give a glance and move on but always try to see more. While the closeup is great in its warm golden glow, intimating the approach of sunset, the wider view lets you see the sun dog.

Port Orford, Oregon

Sure, we were just at Port Orford yesterday, but that was then, and this is now. Something could be different out here today, and sure enough, it is. A couple of fishing boats entered the bay/port area to be removed from the sea, and for maybe the first time, we’d be on hand to see with our own eyes a fishing boat being pulled from the water as there are no berths here.

Port Orford, Oregon

The dozen or so fishing boats that dry dock here have been seen by us for years, and each time we’ve been here, it seems we learn something new. In addition to seeing the crane at work, we now know that Griffs at the Dock restaurant is no more, likely another victim of the COVID-19 plague.

Port Orford, Oregon

If we are quick, we might be able to make Bandon for this evening’s final remnants of sunset, so off we go.

Bandon Beach at sunset in Bandon, Oregon

No disappointment here as the glow of our nearby star wouldn’t disappear so fast that we’d not be able to offer some oohs and ahhs in appreciation of the spectacular sights that were still on offer.

Light often reacts differently depending on how you choose to perceive it. One minute, it’s warm, but from a second away, it turns cool; light moves as we move and is seen through the filter of our perception and maybe of our expectations to some small degree.

Caroline Wise at Face Rock at Bandon Beach in Bandon, Oregon

Obviously, or possibly not so obviously, we made it to Bandon and the famous Face Rock and did so just as the sun was about to slip below the horizon.

Bandon Beach at sunset in Bandon, Oregon

We’ve been places today, so many that we skipped lunch and only got to dinner after reluctantly leaving this beach. As I write this at the restaurant we are eating at, it’s fully dark out, meaning we used every moment of daylight that was available to us today. While a shared appetizer of clams and a salad started to revive me, I have a lot of nothing to write about at this time. Maybe after we check in to our yurt, I’ll find some inspiration between the countless impressions taken in today.

Bullards Beach State Park is home for the night. Specifically, we are set up in yurt C-39. The heater is on and I’m looking for the switch to turn something on inside of me so the words become as abundant as the skies were blue today. The only thing here in my head with any heft is the weight on my eyes that suggests sleep would be more easily found than inspiration.

With nearly 700 photos shot in the past two days now on the computer, I could review the images of today and write to those, but I nearly resent that the computer is on. It’s only on because I try to make daily backups of the photos I’m taking. As for what’s being written, I’m on page 11 of my Moleskine and have a second pen with me should I put down so much ink, but right now, I feel as though the ink is being wasted.

At 9.5 miles walked today over our 11 hours of exploration, it’s no wonder I just want to do nothing. But who simply stops and ceases to go about not reading, not watching TV, not wanting to go on a starlit walk on the shoreline? There’s no way to bargain with ourselves to call it quits and fall asleep, as remaining in bed for the next 10 hours is a non-starter. In any case, getting up at 5:00 on the coast in November means we’d have to wander around in the dark while the temperature is still in the 30s; there’s no appeal in that idea.

I attribute this apathy to our recent bout of COVID. Nothing like this has ever happened in the past, so I’m in unfamiliar territory. Or am I confusing an insistence to write when at other times I’m content to prep photos and leave the writing to a different day? I find a prolific right hand working my mind’s bidding, typically on lengthy days when the sun shines bright for 15 hours or more. Today, with little more than 10 hours of direct sunlight that facilitates outdoor exploration, I must keep moving during those hours and leave the writing as an evening activity. This has been exacerbated on this trip as there’s an imperative to use our blue skies wisely as the weather forecast gave us two days of clear skies and warned that the following eight would offer rain and cloud cover.

No matter the desire to write, I must concede defeat as all I have in me at this time would read something like this: walked, drove, walked, snuggled, walked, held hands, drove, parked, walked, peed off the trail, walked, said I love you, walked, drove, and in between we kept repeating wow until we ran out of oxygen, finally had dinner. End of day.