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Tuesday, September 20, 2011

The Oregon Coast

Wednesday afternoon, Thursday, and Friday morning were spent exploring the Oregon Coast.  In particular, Despoe Bay, Lincoln City, and Newport. 

Our first look at the coast and the Pacific Ocean after leaving Portland was Oceanside.




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Wednesday night, we stayed at a beach house on Bella Beach in Despoe Bay with John's sister and parents, the groom, and a few cousins.  Bsaurus and Malone had a blast playing on the beach and in the hot tub!
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We enjoyed lunch Thursday at Roadhouse 101 in Lincoln City and tried our luck at throwing dollar bills on to the ceiling.

Bsaurus says "GO pack GO" and mine is still all folded up
John's is still folded too...we tried too hard!
Malone tried and tried and hers ended up stuck on a chair instead of the ceiling

After lunch, John, the little girls, Andrew (our niece's husband), and myself went for a hike.  Our destination, Drift Creek Falls and the suspension bridge.  Originally, we were planning on leaving Bsaurus with her grandparents since the disaster of last year's old growth cedar hike was still fresh in my mind.  Bsaurus insisted she wanted to come even after I informed her that this hike was longer and no one would be picking her up and carrying her.  Much to my delight, she enjoyed the hike (2.4 miles)!

 John and the little girls

Andrew

 Malone

 The boys and little girls walking out across the bridge

Drift Creek Falls

 me, with a white knuckle grip on the bridge railings



The intrepid hikers almost done with their hike

Following our hike, we headed back to the beach house to pack up and relocate to Lincoln City.  Prior to arriving in Oregon, a visit to a tide pool was high on my list of places to visit.  Flipping through the visitor guides, I found that  Road's End Wayside, was our best bet.


 The girls playing with some kelp that washed up

Heading down to the beach, you cross over a small creek covered in stones.  Then the beach is wide and sandy.  I didn't know where exactly the tide pools were located so we started strolling down the beach. 

it's a long walk
We kept walking and walking.  John a bit slow as he was checking out the swell.  There isn't much in the way of sea shells.  Mostly there are just stones. 

 Off in the distance are cliffs that jut out into the ocean.  Since the beach so far had been only sand, I figured the rocky point was our best bet for tide pools.  But it was still a long way off.

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It was near 7pm and the sky had been overcast and the conditions foggy most of the day.  But as we were walking the sun peeked out as it began to set.
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And the farther we walked, more and more patches of blue sky appeared.

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As we came upon the 2 rocks in the foreground of the picture above, we saw that they were covered in barnacles.  

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We quickly walked the short distance from the 2 rocks to the rocky point and found the tide pools!
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sea anemone
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starfish

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lots of starfish!
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The sun was quickly slipping beneath the horizon and fog was once again rolling in so it was time for to head back towards the car.

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Our total combined mileage on the hikes was about 5 miles. There were a few complaints before we got to the tide pools but otherwise the girls were in good spirits the entire day.

After a quick bite to eat at a pizza place close to the hotel and a relaxing soak in the hot tub, my hikers soon fell fast asleep.

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Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Where to this time??

Oregon!

Why?

A wedding!

How do we get there?

An Airplane!

Who's on this trip?

Mom, Dad, Malone, and Bsaurus!

We arrived at our home airport at 5:20 am EST and landed in Portland, OR at 10:45 am PST. 

The girls did great on the plane. 

After picking up our rental car, we decided to head north into Washington State and visit Mount St. Helens National Volcano Monument.  Surprisingly, Bsaurus for all her warnings about Hawaii and the volcanoes, had no problems with this excursion.  Perhaps she's over her fear of volcano eruptions?

The further north we drove, the heavier the cloud cover got.  We were concerned that we wouldn't be able to see anything when we got  to our destination, Johnston Ridge Observatory.  Just when we were about to give up and head back south, we came around a corner and were right above the cloud cover.


Mt. St. Helens


Mount St. Helens

Bsaurus and Malone

Further up the road, you could see the effects from the pyroclastic flow when Mount St. Helens erupted. 



It's a bit unnerving that 31 years later it is still this desolate.

you can see the tree fall from the pyroclastic flow behind Malone


It was quite the excursion and one we are glad to have made.