BEACH
NEWS YOU CAN USE
Covering 160 miles of Oregon coast
travel: Seaside, Cannon Beach, Manzanita, Nehalem, Wheeler, Rockaway,
Garibaldi, Tillamook, Oceanside, Pacific City, Lincoln City, Depoe
Bay, Newport, Wadport, Yachats & Florence.
Spring
is here. Are you ready? |
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Oregon
Travel Secrets: Coastal Spring Auto Tours
(Oregon Coast) - It's probably no secret that Oregon's
coast is a bit temperamental in the weather department. Spring,
in fact, has an unusual yo-yo quality where conditions can change
quickly from sunny to downpour - often several times a day, and
within a half hour.
So what do to when Mother Nature decides to rain
on your beachy parade? Sometimes, a tour around various coastal
spots from the comfort of your car is in order, giving you shelter
from the storm as well as the option to run out for a bit when the
weather clears.
There are several
"auto tour" possibilities that give passengers the best
views as you crawl along Oregon's winding, curvy Highway 101, and
a quick shot to the beach should the weather let up for a bit. Then,
when the squalls return, many places along these tours have quick
access to the parking lot, thus minimizing the bad hair day effect
coastal weather is renowned for.
Cape
Perpetua Auto Tour
Whether it's rain or shine, the area around Cape Perpetua is a consistent
wow-inducer. Just south of Yachats, a few hundred feet south of
the Devil's Churn parking lot, you'll find the entrance. The sign
is clearly marked here: take the road on the east side of the highway
to get to the Interpretive Center, to go to the top of Cape Perpetua
and its trails or to take the 19-mile, 45-minute tour around the
mountain and back to Yachats.
Stay straight,
and you soon have the choice of taking the big Auto Tour and scenic
route, or wind your way up the small mountain to the top. You'll
meander through a thick rainforest before ending up back in Yachats.
The tiny, twisting ride to the top provides an enormous
reward, however. Here, you've risen 803 feet above the sea and the
panoramic view is awe-inspiring - augmented by an atmospheric stone
wall encircling the viewpoint.
South
of Yachats
It's the kind of drive that could be your last: it's so tempting
to keep looking out the window that it needs a lot of discipline
to keep your eyes on the road.
This
mere 25-mile stretch between Florence and Yachats is filled with
numerous tight curves atop high cliffs which create a never-ending
cavalcade of amazing ocean views. If the weather is rough, there's
plenty to see along this route. And if it's anything but rough,
it's among the most pristine and uncrowded sections of all the Oregon
Coast.
First up, south of Yachats, you begin the climb
towards Cape Perpetua and the Devil's Churn, as blackened basalt
shelves meander between you and the sea in various, unidentifiable
shapes. For the next 20 miles or so, the road rises and falls, interspersed
with rocky landscapes and sandy beaches dotted with boulders and
basalt structures.
Some have bluffs and some are fairly flat, but all
are rather bereft of human presence. At Strawberry Hill, climb out
over a large headland with steps embedded in the rocks and sand,
and wander down to a sandy stretch of various colors and textures,
where boulders and formations create a kind of labyrinth. Tide pools
reign supreme here.
There's the cobblestone surrealism of Bob Creek
Wayside, where at low tide, weird mushroom-like rocks emerge that
are covered with crusty marine life and starfish. At Rock Creek
Campground and Roosevelt Beach, there's sand and small sea stacks,
with a patch of basalt that cradles an idyllic, babbling brook.
A bit south of there, spots like Muriel O. Ponsler Wayside are all
sand, and it's about where the landscape flattens out to seemingly
endless beaches.
Just north of Florence, you'll hit the incredible
views near Heceta Head Lighthouse and Sea Lion Caves, where a myriad
of pullouts allow you to gaze in awe at the wildlife covered cliffs
and dramatic waves slamming into bulging structures at the bottom.
From
Cannon Beach to Manzanita
Cruise around a half dozen bends, winding along stunning cliffs
that enter a lush, forest canopy, only to reemerge along more stunning
viewpoints. The ocean explodes in front of you all over. Separating
you from the beaches located at the bottom of various 100-foot-plus
plunges are various manmade barriers constructed of stone, sometimes
grey and other times black basalt - like leftovers of a castle.
The
curves begin just south of Cannon Beach, twisting along various
bends as you drive past pullouts and spots like Hug Point, Arcadia
Beach and Arch Cape that never cease to amaze. Soon, you'll enter
the Arch Cape tunnel, which opens up to a brief glimpse of panoramic
ocean views, then entering the forests of Oswald State Park. Here,
check out the surfing mecca of Short Sand Beach, some wondrous trails,
primitive campsites and a couple of hidden beaches tucked along
the road.
Just south of
all the parking lots, you emerge from the forest with more scenic
stunners overlooking the Pacific and the charming burgh of Manzanita.
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