07.29.18 Fall City to Fort Stevens
Traveling day. Got to Astoria around
2pm. Lots of traffic and very busy so decided to go directly to campground
instead of eating in town. In Warrington, spotted Vince (aka Boomerang) riding
the streets. It has been two years since we last saw Vince on the Northern Tier
ride. Vince just finished riding from Chicago to Oregon. Great to catch up
again and hear about all his bike adventures. Jim and Katie arrived and the
party begin with margaritas. Jo cooked an awesome pasta and meatballs dinner
including fried Schats bakery cheese bread, salad, and caprese salad. All this
followed by my moms brownies topped off with whipped cream. After dinner we all
walked to Peter Iredale wreak on the beach.
Day 1 Video Fall City to Fort Stevens
Day 1 Video Fall City to Fort Stevens
07.30.18 Fort Stevens to Nehalem Bay
It was a foggy-wet morning so the
group was slow to get moving and into the biking-hiking groove. Once the bikers
(Kevin, John, Katie, & Vince) had ridden away, the vans rolled out for Cape
Falcon with a short stop at Fred Meyers for fuel and Rainier beer for Vince
(IPAs aren’t his choice). We passed the bikers stopping to fix a flat as they
waved us on. We arrived at the trailhead with plenty of parking for the vans.
The Hikers (Jim, Janet, Jo and Bobdog) started off through a forest of huge
spruce trees. A steep cliff on one side of the trail made us sure to watch our
step. The trail was covered in roots so good balancing, hopping and foot
placement were important. As we rounded a corner, the beach appeared below with
sun/cloud bathers and surfers. A little further on a short side trail led to an
overlook of Blumenthal Falls. Not much water this time of year going over the
falls. Back on the main trail, we continued onto Cape Falcon. The trail at this
point had been cut through a jungle of salal. It created a wall of salal on
either side of us. We finally made it to the Cape with great views of the ocean
and Neahkahnie Mountain to the south. There must have been a school of fish out
there as hundreds of birds were sitting on the surface of the water and we
spotted a whale feeding in the same area. The whale would surface for a few
seconds and then disappear. We enjoyed the views and whale for awhile and then
decided it was time to head back. On the way back to the vans, I noticed Jo had
picked up the pace and when asked why she said the potato chips were calling
her. Back at the van, Jo broke into the chips while Jim and I compared the
mileage and elevation gain that the various apps reported to us. They all had
about the same mileage around 5 miles but the elevation gains were all over the
place from 700 ft to 1300 ft. Jim was also impressed by our WiFi booster seems
like a future purchase might be happening. The bikers by now had reached
Manzanita and were enjoying a few cold brews at the Sand Dune. The town was
packed with tourists so the vans headed to the campground. As we made our way
to our site, we dodged the dozens of kids riding their bikes all over the
campground roads. Jo cooked another great dinner. After dinner we took a short
hike over the dunes to the beach. The sand felt great on bare feet.
Day 2 Video Fort Stevens to Nehalem
Day 2 Video Fort Stevens to Nehalem
07.31.18 Nehalem Bay to Cape Kiwanda
Drove to Tillamook creamery as our
first stop of the day. The building has been newly renovated and now seems to
be an even bigger tourist trap. We took the self guided tour and waited in a
long line for our free cheese samples. Jo tried to milk a life size plastic
cow. Let’s just say that diary farming is not in her future. We then drove to
Cape Meares State Park for its attractions. We visited the Octopus tree which
is a Sitka Spruce that is probably over 250 years old. The tree instead of
having an upright central base grows like tentacles of an octopus upward. We
discovered a trail beyond the tree and set off on it to an unknown destination.
The trail wandered along the hillside with occasional glimpses of the coast and
eventually connected up to the road. We walked back up the road to the entrance
of Park. At the entrance was another trail leading to biggest Spruce in Oregon
that is over 750 years old. Standing 144 ft tall, 48 ft in circumference and 15
1/2 ft in diameter. Heading back down hill to the lighthouse as our final
destination in the park. The Cape Meares lighthouse is the shortest lighthouse,
but is inactive now. Back in the vans, we set off for Cape Lookout for a walk
along the beach. There was only one problem when we got there the tide was in
and there really wasn’t any beach to walk on. We enjoyed the waves for a bit
then headed toward camp at Cape Kiwanda rv resort. There we met up with
everyone and walked across the street for dinner at Pelican Brewery.
Day 3 Nehalem to Cape Kiwanda
Day 3 Nehalem to Cape Kiwanda
08.01.18 Cape Kiwanda to Beverly
Beach
Woke this morning to the sound of
sprinklers. Popped my head outside of the van to see John’s tent being sprayed
by one and apparently he had set his tent on top of one as well so it was a bit
of a wet morning for John. Packed up camp and everyone headed out. We drove to
Neskowin and ended up meeting the bikers having their second breakfast. We
hungrily ate the scrapes from their plates. Then it was off for a walk on the
beach at Proposal Rock. It was mostly cloudy but the sun popped out once and we
spotted our shadows so much for enjoying sunny beach weather. Along the walk,
we found a dead seal on the beach, a live seal playing in the surf and lots of
dead little crabs. Jim walked the whole 6 miles barefoot that’s quite a sand
pedicure. Bobdog got a little freedom but still ran along side of Jo. Back at
the car, we headed towards camp. We drove the Otter Crest Loop and enjoyed the
views. At camp Jo fixed another great meal and we enjoyed the Tillamook ice
cream we had bought a couple of days ago.
Day 4 Video Cape Kiwanda to Beverly Beach
Day 4 Video Cape Kiwanda to Beverly Beach
08.02.18 Beverly Beach to Port
Suislaw RV Marine
Started the day with a walk along
the river trail to Beverly Beach. Jim had fun using a new app called “Seek”
which identifies plants and more with snap of a picture. On the beach, we made
our way hopping and jumping over the pools of water. It was about 4 miles and
mostly cloudy. We then headed to Yaquina Head Lighthouse. They have a nice
visitor center here. We walked from the visitor center to the lighthouse.
Beautiful coastal views along the way and lots of seabirds. We spotted a couple
of whale spouts which someone said were gray whales. Jim and I took the stairs
down to the tidal pools while Jo and Bobdog stayed up top. As the tide was in,
there were no pools to explore but we did see a bunch of seals bobbing up and
down just off shore. The seals were watching swimmers who appeared to be on the
seal’s beach. As we headed towards the lighthouse, we could hear the calls of
hundreds of seabirds. Just off shore was a giant rock formation that was
covered with birds (cormorants, murres). Must have been a great nesting spot
for them. Next stop was Smelt Sands State Park bear Yachats to check out the
the waves crashing into rock crevices and spraying everywhere. By this time the
bikers were already at camp so we needed to get moving. We made a quick stop to
see Devils Churn near Cape Perpetua but not much wave action today. Our last
stop was Darlingtonia Wayside to see the plants that trap and digest insects.
We made our way to camp to find the bikers waiting for their gear. We never
really said we were their support van just a gear hauling van. LOL
DAy 5 Video Beverly Beach to Port Suislaw
DAy 5 Video Beverly Beach to Port Suislaw
08.03.18 Port Suislaw RV Marine to North Bend (Mark & Yulans)
Today, we hiked the Oregon dunes
trail. A 4.5 mile loop which goes through dunes, forest, wetlands and the
beach. We started off on the trail and made our way down to the dunes. Somehow,
we missed the start of the trail and ended up climbing up and over several
large dunes in search of the trail markers. Thanks to Google’s satellite view,
we were able to locate the direction of the trail and navigated to rejoin the
trail. Once on the trail, we continued over more dunes and thorough forest
until finally reaching the beach. The beach was like being on a deserted
island, there was no one in sight. Along the way we saw the Plovers (birds)
bathing in a pool of water. The shores had lots of broken shells most likely
from birds feeding. Luckily, I had brought water as our walk ended up being
over 2 hours long. Jo and Bobdog also walked for about the same time but they
couldn’t go with us because dogs were not allowed near the Plovers. Back at the
van we headed south making a stop at Winchester Bay to watch the birds play in
the Umpqua river. We wandered past the Umpqua lighthouse and arrived at Jo’s
brothers house. Mark and Yulan served a wonderful dinner (steak, rice, and
dumplings made fresh by Yulan).
Day 6 Video Port Suislaw to North Bend
Day 6 Video Port Suislaw to North Bend
08.04.18 North Bend to Humbug
Mountain
Mark prepared a huge breakfast
including eggs, ham, bacon, steak, sourdough toast and homemade jam. It was
delicious! We followed the bike route thru Charleston and over the Seven devils
rejoining Hwy 101 before Bandon. We then took Beach Loop Drive and checked out
the Views from Bandon State Park. Toured the New River BLM interpretive center.
Then checked out camping at Boice Lake county campground and Floras lake. Last
stop was Cape Blanco Lighthouse. Got a short walk in to the lighthouse and
spotted a couple of whales offshore. We picked up a couple of ladybug hitchhikers
on our windshield at the lighthouse and they hung on all the way to Humbug
Mountain State Park, surviving a constant 60 mph! We parked our 23 ft van in
the 93 ft campsite. Sure glad I’m not driving something that big around. Jo
started her special combination of fixings for burrito nite cooked in the
rice/slow cooker. We enjoyed our final evening of this bike ride trip.
Day 7 Video North Bend to Humbug SP
Day 7 Video North Bend to Humbug SP
08.05.18 Humbug Mountain to
California Border
Final day of the bike ride. Jim, Jo
and Janet did a short hike at Sisters Rock State Park so that we would be at
the border when the bike riders arrived. It was a nice trail that joined up
with a rutted road towards a cave and beaches on either side. We explored the
entrance of the cave but didn’t go in as waves were rolling through it. We made
our way down to the beach to check out a metal structure which someone had
drawn a cool design on. The beach also had huge logs with metal and bolts maybe
a pier sometime in the past. Jo and the beagle walked over a rock outcropping
to check out puffins and other shore birds. As they made their way back, Bobdog
wanted to go in a different direction and proceeded to pull Jo over onto the
rocks causing her to twist her ankle and cut up the back of her hand. We
offered assistance but she said no. So she slowly hobbled her way back up the
hill only to encounter park rangers who were working on the trail. The rangers
had gotten their machinery stuck in the middle of the trail so Jo had to shimmy
by with her lame ankle. The Rangers offered to help but Jo kindly refused and
said she could make it on her own. Once at the van, we doctored her up with
Benadryl spray for her hand and ice and ibuprofen for her ankle. We stopped for
lunch of Yulan’s homemade Chinese dumplings at Meyers Beach. The bikers riders
flew by as they descended from Cape Sebastian. Since Jo was unable to hike
anymore, we left Jim to explore on his own. Jo wanted donuts from Bakery by the
Sea so we headed for Brookings. Sadly, they were out of donuts so I bought a
pie, sweet bread bun and ciabatta bread. We hung out at county park and watched
the people playing on the beach and in the surf and then headed over to the
harbor to wait for the bike riders. The bike riders regrouped and rode the last
5 miles to the California border. After congratulations and victory photos, we
loaded the bikes and gear up and said our goodbyes to Jim and Katie. We stopped
for dinner at Superfly in Brookings and headed north towards home.
Day 8 Video Humbug Mtn to Calif Border
Day 8 Video Humbug Mtn to Calif Border