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.

Measuring Things in Oregon – Day 1

Fall foliage in Eugene, Oregon

Nothing like being teleported out of the desert into a 24-degree (-4c) Pacific Northwest morning in a rental car without seat heaters or even one of those scraping things to de-ice our frosty windshield. While this disorienting shift of time zones (we gained a whole hour) is allowing for yet more experiences to seep into the potential of the day, we are somehow extraordinarily hungry and waste no time finding the closest establishment to satiate this need for hot food.

Sipping on Elmer’s Northwest Lodge Blend of coffee, we are watching the trees of fall catch the rising sun as we wait for the delivery of our first meal of the day. I’m writing with furious gusto as though that will speed the arrival of the egg dishes that should arrive any second, which in turn will allow us to get on the road pointed at an ocean beckoning for our return. Maybe part of my urgency to bounce out of here is related to our Super Walmart experience last night. Airlines should warn travelers when their destination is a parallel universe which might be contrary to the sensibilities of people who enjoy traveling to Europe, and to brace themselves for the risk of setting eyes on the homeless fentanyl crowd. Open sores and bedraggled fellows, kids hitting us up for cash in a store, that was not our scene.

Still, here this morning at Elmer’s, it is apparent that we’re in a damned slow-functioning resort for the obese, decrepit, conservative, and elderly curmudgeons. While I often enjoy eavesdropping on other tables, I draw the line when the dialog risks lowering my own I.Q. or contributing to the PTSD that grips my well-being when recognizing that I’m somewhere from whence I should try to escape posthaste.

Siuslaw River in western Oregon

Our destination might be the ocean, but in a pinch, a river will do. We’ve pulled over here next to the Siuslaw River after having passed miles of great dark green forest, some of it so frosty as to be dusted in white, and with the coastal plain obviously just ahead, this was going to be one of the last moments to share at least something from the 75-minute long drive from Eugene that has brought us to the cusp of our dreams.

Harbor Vista County Park in Florence, Oregon

Hello again, dream world; it’s great to be back for our first glimpse of the sea here at Harbor Vista North Jetty in Florence.

Harbor Vista County Park in Florence, Oregon

One of us walks in the cold sand with their shoes on…

Caroline Wise at Harbor Vista County Park in Florence, Oregon

…the other must get her feet wet and feel the sand between her toes.

Harbor Vista County Park in Florence, Oregon

There’s no time to think, no time to talk, no time to write about impressions out here in the brisk ocean air that greets the cheeks of the desert dwellers. There is only time to feel, smell, and see something that is at once familiar and new all over again.

Harbor Vista County Park in Florence, Oregon

This thin blue line and the blowing sand keeping the ocean where it belongs is all that separates the land from the sea. Consider that the surface of the United States is roughly about 3 million square miles (8 million square kilometers), while the Pacific Ocean is approximately 171 million cubic miles (714 million cubic kilometers). Remember that this is a cubic dimension and not a square. Caroline and I have spent 25 years trying to explore these American states and have barely scratched the surface; no one will ever know the sea and what really happens in its vast depths.

Darlingtonia State Natural Site in Florence, Oregon

Old travel habits are hard to break, so why should today be different than other days? We made it 5 miles before Caroline asked me to pull over to the Darlingtonia State Natural Site, home of the cobra lily of the genus Darlingtonia.

Darlingtonia State Natural Site in Florence, Oregon

This is only the second time we’ve stopped at this small wayside, and both have been during the late fall, but from the photos I took back in 2020, this year’s gathering of carnivorous lilies is looking a bit ragged, likely due to environmental factors though there’s not a botanist in sight to ask for clarification.

Darlingtonia State Natural Site in Florence, Oregon

The day this plant emerged from its egg, it already had a taste for flesh and blood; else how does one explain a plant that eats creatures and ones that voluntarily crawl into its mouth? What, you say plants aren’t born from eggs? Well, that’s news to me or at least I’d like it to be if I stop to think about carnivorous plants because I’m at a loss for how they came about out of the mysteries of evolution.

Darlingtonia State Natural Site in Florence, Oregon

Knowledge might be far away from what little certainty I believe I have, but with my macro lens, I can attempt to bring near those things typically only experienced from a distance, such as smaller details found in this leaf suffering its demise with the changing season.

Darlingtonia State Natural Site in Florence, Oregon

And then there’s this tiny piece of bark that might appear to be close to flaking off its tree, but for now, it’s a symbiotic piece of nature. On its surface, a bit of moss has taken hold, and behind the bark’s edges, I’m going to speculate that there’s a spider family, maybe some mites, or a pathway the local ants travel when out collecting stuff required for the colony. How many squirrels might have walked by or birds dropped in looking for snacks? I’d be willing to wager that I’m the first person to ever photograph this small specimen with such intimacy and that the chances of ever finding it again would be as successful as trying to locate a specific neuron in the 86 billion brain cells I have or a single plankton in those 187 quintillion gallons of water in the nearby Pacific Ocean.

Happy Kamper Yarn Barn in Florence, Oregon

Contemplating things some days earlier, I sketched a few rough ideas of how this first day on the coast might play out, but things are not going according to that guesswork and instead are being usurped by spontaneity and routine. Maybe 500 feet (150 meters) north of the wayside and across the street is the Happy Kamper Yarn Barn that we first visited ten years ago, nearly to the day. As anyone who’s read about our travels and stops at yarn stores already knows, we’ll not be leaving without new yarn, especially this fingering weight yarn that is destined to become yet one more pair of hand-knitted socks for me.

North of Baker Beach in Florence, Oregon

With instincts directing the wheel of the rental car, we drove north, though by now we knew that we’d not be attempting a slow walk in the rainforest of Washburne State Park as by the time we’d get out of that trap of the senses it would be seriously late considering we’d still have to make our way to the south coast where we’re staying this evening. So, if that’s not our goal, we might as well take our time, and it was right about then, while we were discussing options, that I thought I spotted something that required a turnaround. No, not just this view; although it’s certainly worthy, it was a little anomaly in the continuity of the coastal universe.

North of Baker Beach in Florence, Oregon

Just behind the guardrail, I thought I saw what looked like a small trail, and sure enough, that tiny gap quickly descended to a well-worn trail that took us right to the ocean’s edge and a place we’d never been to before.

North of Baker Beach in Florence, Oregon

It’s just a clump of rock with some barnacles on it, but it’s more than that. Maybe it’s part of primordial earth, or did it emerge as lava in the relatively recent past, ending up here on the beach reflecting itself back at me from the wet sand? Like the clouds overhead, it inspires me to find form in its shape; I see a whale here, albeit a small one. Should we ever revisit this particular beach, the likelihood of seeing this rock in just the same way is virtually zero. The sands will have shifted, the rock will give way to further erosion, or maybe a high tide will obscure it, and so in our view, the rock will be forever gone, just like a cloud passing overhead or our own lives passing down the beach.

North of Baker Beach in Florence, Oregon

How many countless steps have we left in the sand, in the transitional, never-to-be-seen-the-same-way-again, shifting earth below our feet? From out of the distant past, we’ve witnessed with our own eyes the impressions of dinosaur feet frozen into stone. There’s a place where a child’s steps are right next to those of a wolf or large dog, and right over in New Mexico at the White Sands National Park are the tracks of a toddler and woman traveling across a playa that includes imprints from a mammoth and a giant sloth, and while those reminders that other species and people have walked over places we can visit today, the majority of impressions left by modern humans will fade and disappear. So, unless I figure out how to cast these words in stone, they, too, will become nothing more than the amorphous fabric that was left behind and recaptured by the elements, leaving no trace of what was there.

North of Baker Beach in Florence, Oregon

Even stone is not impervious to the ravages of time and the elements. All things will return to the sand and gasses of what in another form might have been the sustainers or protectors of life. Bastions, ramparts, armor, lungs, or thick leathery skin is no defense to the passage of this rare commodity measured by days, nights, and the cycles of a planet in relation to its sun. Knowing that you and everything you were will one day disappear, will you be content to simply have existed when, if you are reading this, you were likely born to a kind of privilege the majority of people on our planet can never know? Even if I’m but a grain of sand on this beach, I hope it’ll be the glimmering fleck that captures the eye of something out of the future that is enjoying its brief moment in existence.

Heceta Head Lighthouse and Sealion Beach Vantage Point in Florence, Oregon

In a previous age, the lighthouse was a beacon to seafarers, warning of the dangers that they were approaching land. Nowadays, lighthouses act as tractor beams drawing us to their light, even when those lights were extinguished long ago.

Heceta Head Lighthouse and Sealion Beach Vantage Point in Florence, Oregon

Instead of keeping us at a safe distance, they encourage us to come closer to revel in their rare existence and cherish their unique architectural characteristics. It’s easy to be drawn to a unique building, while a historic one offers intrinsic values that dig deep into our fascination that these things are still around. Take Jonathan, the tortoise who lives in Seychelles: he’ll celebrate his 190th birthday on December 4th this year. None of the curious people I know would turn down the chance to meet and touch this ancient, gentle animal. And for those of us fortunate enough to visit the over 4,000-year-old bristlecone pine trees of the Great Basin of Nevada or the prehistoric redwoods in California, we know the attraction of those things that have survived far longer than any of us gazing into the distant past.

Heceta Head Lighthouse and Sealion Beach Vantage Point in Florence, Oregon

If we take pause and think about it, we also enjoy and are drawn to experiencing the effects nature has played on the evolution of things, such as with sea lions basking in the sun below us as we were positioning ourselves to admire the Heceta Head Lighthouse. It was right here along the Oregon and Washington coasts that it’s believed the first flippered pinnipeds first showed up about 17 million years ago, but when we modern humans stop to look upon a tiny aspect of their lives, it is as though they just emerged from the sea for our enjoyment with little thought given to how many generations of sea lions came before them. My sense is that we have not yet developed an innate ability to appreciate the spectrum of time that life requires to arrive where it has. Maybe this is a negative side effect of religion, where we’ve used stories of magic and the supernatural to explain the mysteries that early humans were unable to comprehend.

Highway 101 looking south towards Florence, Oregon

It is out on the horizon of time (and trying to understand my relationship to it) where I look for the peace of mind that while I may not be able to experience the longevity of a tortoise or bristle cone pine tree, I’m at least capable of considering that I’m able to look back and forward into time’s domain and consider what I’ve learned from its passing and what I might still be able to do with what could lay ahead for me should I be around to explore new moments that are yet to be experienced in the future.

Looking out over the Pacific Ocean from Highway 101 north of Florence, Oregon

Out in the chaos of everything, the order of it all remains in constant flux as the energy of nature shifts things across time. The way I understand it, even constants have slight variations, but the contrivance of the arrogance of humans to find stasis is, in my view, hostile to the nature of our potential. Mind you, particular laws of nature and society should be respected, such as gravity containing oceans in their basins and our rules for penalizing transgressions against fellow humans and probably against the creatures with whom we share our space, too. Not that people are even near the precipice of unleashing our potential as the effect of centuries of uncertainty and the modern age exploiting fear has left our species afraid of the future, hence why we strive to contain variations that disturb the superficial surface of things.

Driving south on Highway 101 in Oregon

Where does the time go? One minute, you’re eating lunch at the Little Brown Cafe in Florence, not Italy, and the next moment, you become aware of the blur of having been driving south for hours, which is required if are going to reach Brookings down near the California state line by sunset. Being inland for much of the drive, it’s not like we could be distracted with a dozen oceanside stops, while the forest roads often barely have a shoulder, so even if we wanted to stop for photos of the afternoon sun lending a vibrant glow to the moss and hanging lichen on tree branches, we were stymied by highway engineers who neglected to add those important pullouts.

Port Orford, Oregon

Choose your battles wisely, they always say, and so it was as the Wises pulled over at Battle Rock Wayside Park in Port Orford for the sunset as it was obvious that if it wasn’t now, it might not happen today if it was our hope to see a spectacular sunset.

Port Orford, Oregon

While the famous Face Rock is found a couple of dozen miles north of us in Bandon, Oregon, this equally well-worn sister rock in Port Orford should be noted as a monument, too. Sadly, it is not, but from where I’m standing, I’d swear this is an Eastern Island Statue Face Rock and deserves recognition as such. Come to think about it, just on the left of it is Nipple Rock, and while you might want to jump to conclusions and see the two humps behind the nipple as boobs, I’d strongly disagree, though, as camel humps, I could see that. So, while not given the status or official name it should have, I present you with Camel Hump Nipple Statue Face Rock. [Nice try, John, but this rock is already noted and has a name – Tichenor Rock – Caroline]

Battle Rock Wayside Park in Port Orford, Oregon

As soon as I’m satisfied that I’ve captured the various perspectives available from this overlook, we’ll turn our attention to putting ourselves down on that beach with the others to experience the sunset here.

Battle Rock Wayside Park in Port Orford, Oregon

In my intro from yesterday morning, I spoke of things near and far and the lenses I’d bring to capture these spaces. I also offered hope that I’d do the same with the thinking I’d put forward in this post. While I may fail in the thinking and writing, this silhouette image contains elements from two images above the one prior, the trees in golden light and Camel Hump Nipple Statue Face Rock. In those two photos, I used a 70-200mm lens to bring to me what might have failed to be seen in previous visual encounters with the exact same places. The point this opens is that our perspective is often myopic. but more important than our vision being nearsighted, we need to look at our minds and those 86 billion brain cells whose capacity we cannot fathom. What if that gray matter in our skull is like the impossibly giant ocean, but instead of a great diversity of impressions and life, it were filled mostly with goldfish, plastic trash, and a fixed view that everything we know and will ever know is already mostly had? Well, if they are the brains of John and Caroline Wise, we will not relent in trying to discover what’s hidden in the places right before our faces as we share the idea that the onion-like layers of life experiences are near infinite while the time we’ve been afforded to glean them is but a brief interlude on the stage of the universe.

Battle Rock Wayside Park in Port Orford, Oregon

As above, does not always convey equally to, so below. While the height differential is minimal, just a short walk down a sandy trail and the changes offered to the senses are tremendous. Above, we cannot touch the shore, the surf, nor hear the world around us in quite the same way; we must go forward inching our way closer to touching the abyss of unknowns. Will the water be cold, the sand soft, and the sounds sharp or pleasant? We’ll not know, and should you accept conventional wisdom, you might come to believe that the Oregon coast would be too cold and hostile for your comfort or enjoyment at this time of year. I’d counter, even dare you to glance over the more than 100 posts on this blog that detail our experiences and see what we’ve captured and enjoyed. You can trust that we’ve heard, more times than we can remember, the voices of uncertainty that challenge our discretion about heading to such an inhospitable destination. I believe these are the same people who are able to convince themselves that most everything outside of their narrow routines could be fraught with discomfort and danger. Discovery is, after all, a dangerous curve that could challenge current beliefs, blinding one to mistaken certainty as though they’d looked into the sun.

While I’ve only been so fortunate to be looking into this face of love for the past 33 years, those eyes that have been searching for knowledge, truth, and deep experiences have, in effect, been cultivating love in her heart her entire life. Instead of crashing into the wall of disappointment that love would never be found and shared, Caroline and I discovered one another and learned how to negotiate bumps on the shore, the gray clouds that occasionally obscure the sun, and have catered to each other’s insatiable thirst for the wow moments available to those who enjoy smiling. When I look into those eyes, I don’t only see a wife looking back; I see a long history of her delight in all the other things I’ve caught her smiling at, such as sand dollars, forests, rainbows, rocks, yarn, art, old people holding hands, a kite taking to the sky, her mom laughing, and words printed on a page. I’m fairly certain that Caroline doesn’t hold any secrets about the universe; I don’t believe she cares about having all the answers, but what I want to feel she has an abundance of is an intense curiosity that’s amplified by having someone with whom to share the experiences that arise from that.

Battle Rock Wayside Park in Port Orford, Oregon

What if I told you that the sun setting does not bring darkness but offers inner illumination of the heart for those who witness its descent below the horizon? How can I make such a claim? Caroline and I have watched the sunset countless times by now, and every time we do so, our smiles are beaming at one another for the rest of the day, which can only be explained by hearts bursting with energy fed by the sun, or do you have a better explanation?

Battle Rock Wayside Park in Port Orford, Oregon

And what about those who just keep on seeing more sunsets? You guessed it, we likely have to giggle with each other at some point to let go of the abundance of beauty we were absorbing.

Battle Rock Wayside Park in Port Orford, Oregon

As for the effects wrought from gazing upon silver blue and golden orange water in those waning moments of the sun? We have not quite worked out how perfection cubed influences what is already beyond the charts of total wowness.

Battle Rock Wayside Park in Port Orford, Oregon

With senses aglow with the giddiness of having experienced a fantastic sunset at a wonderful spot nearing the end of our daylight hours, we were able to continue our adventure south. The dark silvery-gray sheen of the sea on our right, with a thin line of red-orange warmth of civil twilight, kept the purr of happiness moving along with us as the road ahead grew darker. Only an hour left before reaching the next magical place on our travel map.

Yurt at Harris Beach State Park in Brookings, Oregon

The crescendo hits as we drive into Harris Beach State Park and check into yurt C-26. The heater was already on, so the only thing left to do was drag our stuff in and make our bed before heading out for dinner while something might still be open. At this point, our elation nearly falls off a cliff as we’d be a whole lot happier to dip into an ice chest and crate of things from the car, but that was sacrificed in order to claim the extra time along the coast gained with flying up, so back to the car we reluctantly crawl.

Yurt at Harris Beach State Park in Brookings, Oregon

I have always loved pulling up to these tables for a writing session in the various yurts we’ve rented over these many years. Tonight, though, I find myself lethargic, apathetic even. As the pen meets the paper, the mind feels like the tide is going out. Sure, we are nearly 15 hours into this day, and a myriad of reasons can easily be identified, including last night’s late arrival, the difficulty found in sleeping on the first day out, a timezone change, my recent COVID recovery, and of course, that taskmaster called aging but none of these factors are welcome here on our vacation. I have demands, one is that I find productivity in the exercise of word transference from the mind through pen upon the open notebook that won’t be filling itself.

If I can find 10,000 steps, I should be able to locate a couple of thousand words that emerge from an experience that took in countless impressions. Instead of playing with a flow of words, I’m being drawn to the great outdoors, where stars beckon our imagination with silent calls to stand in awe of their magnitude filling the expanse of the inky sky we can hardly comprehend. The wind picks up and shakes bits and bobs from the trees that fall upon our yurt, nearly tricking us into believing it could be raining, though we know full well that the clear star-filled sky is the canopy set high over this campground tonight.

The rumble of crashing waves blends with the occasional passing of vehicles out on the highway, not that we expect the world for merely $50 a night but from our perspective, we are getting just that – the world. This form of perfection may not fit other’s ideas of luxury but for the two of us here this evening, our shared time is too fleeting not to understand the gift of the incredible when we find ourselves within it.

In my tired mind and body, I can find no profundity to wring out the intensity of today’s experience, which remains elusive to my right hand. Instead, I flick my wrist and see the clock ticked into the next hour, which can be perceived to be later than it is, at least back in Arizona. Now, I’m struggling to continue this splashing of ink onto paper and must concede that it’s time to splash a sleepy mind upon the waves of dreams that lay over the horizon of wakefulness. If I’m fortunate, tonight’s sleeping adventures will sneak in from the ocean, blow in on the breeze, or simply emerge from the delight of two traveling nerds deeply in love taking refuge in a cozy yurt.

Detour to Oregon

Caroline Wise and John Wise flying to Eugene, Oregon

We’re on the plane; it is a full flight, and priority boarding is our friend. While TSA pre-check works wonders for me, Caroline dealt with the slow-motion line, taking her 20 minutes to get through security compared to my 30 seconds. Guess what we’ll be applying for in December.

In little more than 2.5 hours, we’ll be touching down in Eugene, Oregon, and until then, I’ll either be here with my pen falling on paper or I’ll crack open Bruno Latour’s After Lockdown – A Metamorphosis, his last book before passing away earlier this year.

Not sure about this book as it’s not a happy, fun read, not that one should expect that with Latour, but this claustrophobic realization that no matter where we go, we are always within. There is no way to externalize ourselves, and so in that respect, we are like a termite in its mound or Gregor Sansa becoming an insect in Kafka’s Metamorphosis.

Intuitively, I’ve always known this (or I should have), but when I go somewhere, as we are doing this evening, I’m hoping that being outside of my routine, I’ll discover something out there that will unlock some intrinsic value waiting to be uncovered within me. When I read, I wish that the words conceived outside of myself will bring me illumination through insights gleaned by others, but if the text read by me has no ability to find context, I may as well have looked at characters I cannot decipher, like the termite. I must look at the universe around me and try to make sense of what I’m capable of comprehending. A termite thrust into the sea cannot survive in a world that is too alien. Likewise, I cannot be thrust into someone else’s paradigm if I have nothing tethering me to their reality.

Flying to Eugene, Oregon

Good thing I only have 111 pages to go with a mere hour to continue reading. Meanwhile, Caroline is knitting while listening to an ebook, certainly a lot more meditative and probably a lot less demanding. Should Latour grow too heavy, I also brought along After Finitude – An Essay on the Necessity of Contingency by Quentin Meillassoux. Only now am I recognizing that both titles are dealing with something that “comes after.” Then, I think this may have been subconsciously deliberate as I prepare for where my life goes after I turn 60 next year.

I’m experiencing one of those horrible moments in life when one realizes the vast ignorance they inhabit and how long it has taken to see what should have been obvious. Latour is describing how Gregor (from Kafka’s Metamorphosis) sees his family as being the other, their own kinds of insects who make horrible sounds in their respective dwellings. Gregor is becoming normalized to the reality of being an insect; his world makes sense, but the giant two-legged things are grotesque when it comes down to it. Well, this is how I often see the average person in my own life. As my fellow humans fail to explore curiosity, I see them devolving into absurd caricatures of what it means to be human.

A termite mound without termites is a hill of mud; termites define the mound. Humans make up earthly reality; without us, this is a sphere of water, dirt, and various plants and animals. We define the concept of people, cities, and culture, which means we also define haves and have-nots, addicts, and the rich and famous.

Only two hours into the flight, but it felt like we were flying to Europe. This is until the engines slow, and we feel the beginning of our descent. I’ve made it to page 27 with Latour and am at peace as I’m not bludgeoning myself at the moment. I hope to keep reading this over the next few days, as I can always appreciate a book that exposes my shortsighted stupidity.

Signature Inn in Eugene, Oregon

We have arrived in Eugene and simultaneously inside Kafka’s Metamorphosis. At least that’s the view in the local Super Walmart at 10:00 p.m. This store is more a homeless shelter than a place to pick up the things we need for the next days. To characterize these unfortunate misfits as having emerged from a zombie apocalypse doesn’t feel too far-fetched or hostile as the tragedy that has befallen them leaves little other descriptive terms. They are Gregors becoming cockroaches. We get what we need, while the two kids in the store on a Thursday night didn’t score any cash after begging from us, and quickly, we just want to move to the exit. Not that the exit was any better, as with rain falling, the roof is an escape from the elements for the homeless population congregating here. Now we just have to hope that our car hasn’t been broken into.

After finding everything intact, we head for the motel without a lot of hope as our first impression of Eugene post-Covid is sobering. The Signature Inn checks all the boxes; it is awesome, really. Our room is clean, really clean; there are free snacks, water, and juice next to the TV we won’t use, and the bathroom is well equipped. We can be happy about this situation at the Signature Inn as this is where we’ll be staying for the last night at the end of our vacation.

Near and Far – Trip 19

Banana Slug Sticker

Our 22nd visit to the state of Oregon will see me trying to shift my gaze, the one that peers through the lens of the camera. To the extent I’m able to bring greater intention to where I direct my focus, I’ll be traveling with a macro and a telephoto lens. Those lenses help me capture things near and far, but only if I’m able to stop trying to see everything all at once. I need to look further and deeper as a reminder to see beyond the end of my nose while also trying to uncover things often disregarded in the back of my head or behind it. Extending our scope in familiar territory is never easy because of the inclination to take a little too much pleasure in the things we’ve previously known and enjoyed. Do we then tend to want to stroke fond memories instead of uncovering the unseen and unfamiliar?

I wrote the above on September 28th in order to create a mantra for myself so that once November 17th arrives and we depart for Oregon, I’d have it in my head to follow this exercise. The camera gear and writing instruments are packed and ready to go, but I’m not quite sure about my headspace. Is it due to my encounter with Covid? Or am I distracted by the requirements that surround traveling? I’m nearly always imbued with an underlying sense of things undone that need tending to instead of taking time for a coffee and writing because that’s a part of my daily routine. Instead, I could be at home ensuring that everything’s ready to go and all that’s left is to wait for the Uber to bring us to the airport, but on the other hand, who cares what’s missing as long as we are checked in for our flight and have our documents, lodging, and car are reserved, and our few essentials are packed. Those things that’ll be inevitably forgotten are easily acquired along the way.

Yet, I’m distracted by urgencies and uncertainties. My dislike of those two states creates a strong desire to accept that those things are a normal part of my way of going into a shift of routine, even for the brief weekend getaways. And so, I put myself into doing something typical of any other day to convince myself that today is like any other day, but in seven hours, we’ll be in an airport.

In 12 hours we’ll be in Eugene, Oregon, and then in about 22 hours, we’ll be encountering the coast of Oregon at the town of Florence. At this point, everything changes. There will be an imperative question: did we have breakfast in Eugene? If not, it’s time to eat; beyond that, the only option is to decide on which beach we want to start exploring the romantic conditions of memories that have accumulated over the many years we’ve been walking along the sea. Should we turn north, we could take a walk in the Carl G. Washburne State Park on the rainforest trail on one of the two days we are promised to have clear skies and sunny conditions compared to all other days where cloud cover and rain are forecast.

Only 10 miles north of our favorite rainforest trail is the Devil’s Churn (part of Cape Perpetua), and while we’ll be in the general area of both of those places for four days while we take shelter in Yachats, the sun will be gracing both tomorrow. From there, it’s only a 3.5-hour drive south to the yurt we’ll be sleeping in down in Brookings, and well, that sounds like a perfect day, and we’ll still have ten more days ahead of us to capture experiences.

In keeping with my mantra, this is my attempt to focus on what’s out on our horizon and then use a macro filter taken from our familiarity with the environment to see a level of granularity of how our first day out might unfold, but I don’t want to look beyond that as the optics aren’t so clear and there needs to remain space for spontaneity.

Memories Of A Place

Chaga Chai tea from Green Salmon Coffee Shop in Yachats, Oregon

As if there weren’t enough photos already on this blog about our many visits to Oregon, this little placeholder is just one more addition to our memories. Last November when we were in Yachats, we stopped at the Green Salmon Coffee Company and in addition to picking up coffee beans for us and some friends, Caroline snagged a box of this Chaga Chai Spiced Mushroom Tea. The packaging was all she needed to see to know that we’d be leaving with some and now that she’s nearly out of it, I scanned the image to immortalize our memory from Yachats. There’s really nothing else to add to this other than pointing out that we sure would like to be up on that coast right now.

Exit Ahead

Heavy, gray clouds obscure the bright blue sky above, but it’s a better view than we were experiencing the first hour of driving south when all was black. Our first photographic pullout is the Winema Lake Viewpoint in Neskowin. When the roads are wet, narrow, and winding, and the sky is dark, the path feels precarious and is only made more so by those who race up behind us, familiar with its contours and obviously annoyed at the person impeding their move forward. I’d like to claim that we were driving slowly to savor our dwindling time out here on the coast, but it was dark, and in any case, we intended to leave in the dark as we’d covered this part of the coast yesterday. Now it’s time to really slow down and take things in, even if the people behind me are shaking their fists in a futile effort to get me to step on the gas.

Dreams awaken soon with our first pitstop at a discreet corner, where we find this sign leading us to a part of a trail we’ve not hiked yet. I’m posting this as a hopeful reminder that while we’ve hiked the other end of the trail at Cascade Head, we’ve not walked this 3.7-mile (6 km) rainforest trail. Something new already for next time.

I must admit a bias while on Highway 101 driving north or south: what is on the west side of the car holds the most interest for me. On the west side of the car, the giant Pacific Ocean is to be found. On the east side of the car are more homes, businesses, forests, lakes, rivers, and boring stuff. Well, until Caroline spots this sign for the Darlingtonia Wayside. First of all, a wayside is nothing like a State Park and is certainly 1,000 miles away from being something similar to a National Park; it is a lowly wayside. Except, this wayside is a spectacular one because it has an enchanting forest trail over to this Darlingtona thing it is pulling our attention into…even if it is on the east side of the road.

Witness the cobra lily, aka the Darlingtonia. Then, like a cobra striking its victim, engaging in further research on my quest to learn more about this plant, I find that the location has a new designation not yet reflected in the signage of the wayside. It is now all grown up and has become the Darlingtonia State Natural Site. I stand corrected about the meek value of this place and am in awe of the mighty Darlingtonia plant.

I think I heard them murmuring, “Nom nom nom” as we stood on the platform overlooking them: they are meat-eaters. Maybe they eat insects, maybe they eat flesh? I asked Caroline to climb over the banister for a closer look and see if they had a nice scent, but she refused. Maybe she knew what evil might lurk in my cold heart?

This is familiar, yet not, and that’s because we are not looking at the boat dock that I’ve photographed dozens of times already. We are looking north on the Umpqua River in Gardiner.

During this late fall Oregon road trip, we learned early on about the pleasures of our seat warmers. Having them in Arizona seemed like a weird indulgence when we bought the car back in December 2018, and last year’s trip up here was had when we were still flying places so our own car wasn’t present. This brings me to another luxury we eschewed in our old Prius: the maps on the dash screen. This time around, we’ve grown somewhat accustomed to looking at the maps instead of purely relying on our phones and this has proven to have great utility. By zooming in on the map so that it moves along with our driving, we are able to spot small side roads that don’t appear in a wider overview of the route. Seeing those small roads approach, we can move around on the map to see if there’s a connection to our highway further ahead or if we’ll have to turn around. This road pictured is called Wildwood Drive and winds its way along the 101 for about 2 miles. It’s a beautiful little path in the woods south of Reedsport.

The next small road led to Saunders Lake and brought us to a fork in the road that, while a dead end, we decided to drive in any way just to see what was out along it. Houses and cabins were about it.

And this old train track that’s grown over and rusting.

Arriving in North Bend, we are now 188 miles (302 km) south of where we woke this morning and more than halfway down the state of Oregon.

A few minutes later, we seamlessly merge into Coos Bay, the largest city along the coast with a population of 16,415 (I think I shared this last year, too), but we are not sticking around long. The yarn store Caroline wanted to visit is closed, though it’s supposed to be open, and then on the way out of town, she spots a burger spot that she says we’ve enjoyed before. Lunch was had at the Shake N Burger, and sure enough, upon getting home, Google’s timeline showed me that we last visited the place on November 25, 2019. I may not share it a lot here, but Caroline’s memory is impeccable; it’s a trap where nothing escapes, except where she just set something down a few minutes before.

Bandon has one of the greatest rocky coastlines in all of Oregon. It’s no wonder that this place has taken on a kind of luxury vibe akin to Cannon Beach, 231 miles north.

Sure, we’d like to live here in retirement, but you’d have to be a millionaire these days to put roots down in Bandon. In November, the average sale price of a home in this area was $422,000, which, with utilities, insurance, and maintenance, is going to cost about $2,100 a month, while rents are not that much lower. Fortunately for those wealthy enough to call this place home, they have a workforce of nearly 30,000 in the area just north from which they can pull in labor.

Horseback rides at sunset among the monoliths are one of the amenities of life on this corner of the southern end of the coast. I shouldn’t be too whistful as at least Bandon hasn’t turned into the famous 17-mile Drive in Carmel By The Sea that charges people for the right to pass through.

The tide is seriously low today, offering us a great look at rocks we’ve not been able to see before.

More evidence of our mad-dash race to collect more experiences here on our last day on the coast.

By now you should see the attraction of what has drawn so many people to Bandon. Besides the cold, blustery days of winter, there’s the issue of heavy fog in the summer, but by and large, the coast of Oregon is our dream climate. It’s probably a good thing we’ll not be making this home as it can forever remain the fairy tale place where, for a week or two a year, everything is perfect.

I’m pretty certain we’ve seen this witch’s claw of rock before, but I can’t be certain. Maybe part of it broke off in between visits and it is only now this shape? Out of curiosity, I searched Lightroom for all photos that have been tagged “Oregon,” though I can’t be sure I’ve done the best job tagging them, and I see that I have 19,623 images to look through to make an accurate determination if this has already been seen. Well, today, it is one more detail to throw in the grab bag of blogged-about memories, hoping that it might be part of the magic key so that when I look at these images again in some years, the whole picture of where we’ve been and what we’ve done will all snap into focus.

Or maybe it’ll be this reminder from Port Orford, only 62 miles from the exit from Oregon, that will produce the sigh of satisfaction that during our time here, we succeeded in seeing all the major sights during all weather conditions and variations in lighting. There’s a thought of hanging out until sunset right here, but that’s an hour away, which leaves enough time to drive another 35 miles south to capture the sun dipping below the horizon at Meyers Creek Beach near Gold Beach, where our vacation of Remote Self-Isolation began 16 days ago.

The shark tooth towers over the sand. This prehistoric fossil of an ancient predator remains as a reminder of the giants that once ruled the earth.

Denial is a powerful tool for remaining delusional about reality. I look at the two people in this selfie, and I know that one is approaching 60 years old and the other in her mid-50s, but I can’t help but know that their inner children are still looking out, albeit with some sense of maturity and a small amount of knowledge. Someday, we’ll likely feel old and tired; it seems to be the way of people, although there are those who just up and die, forever content that they were living with vigor until they never woke again. By the way, I know I’m an irrational romantic and that life and death are a lot messier than I choose to see them, but with time short for all things indulgent, I believe I can allow myself the opportunities when they arise to seize perfection and go with it.

As we were walking around the base of the shark tooth and the surf pulled way out, Caroline was able to pass between it and another large rock jutting out of the sand. In the golden radiance of our setting sun, her silhouette walking through the temporary passage struck me as one of those moments of perfection where I can see her in a light that will frame her in just this way but once in my lifetime. While this is true regarding every photo I’ve ever taken of her, this adds to those treasured images of her riding the bow of a dory in the Grand Canyon, camping in the wilds of the Yukon, snowshoeing in Yellowstone, and smiling at me in her jammies while knitting a pair of socks for me late one night in a yurt just up the coast.

While the low tide is great for us who find it endearing to walk amongst the sea life that should be underwater, these barnacles might be looking forward to the return of their natural environment that has temporarily disappeared. I try imagining what it would be like if, on occasion, the air was pulled off the earth for a few hours, and we’d have to hold our breath and wait for its return. Come to think about it, I already feel this way about far too many people’s intelligence, it was pulled away and is yet to return.

Linger to see it all. Walk around to capture every angle. The view from one location is not the same as from another.

This small crack consumed the sun. We can attest to the truth of this as we were on hand to witness it fall in. How it will find its way back to us tomorrow is one of life’s mysteries. Without the benefit of our nearby star, we drove south to California finding shelter along the sea, but our hearts still walk in dreams along the beaches of Oregon.