Monday, April 25, 2011

Oregon Coast Day Two - Harbor Seals, Old Growth Forests, Clear Cutting, and Dunes - April 16, 2011


Harbor Seals
Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area
Yaquina Head Outstanding
Natural Area
I am out the door by 9:00am, headed to Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area. It is 49 degrees. Fog sits low and a heavy mist blankets the world. As I enter the park, I smile at its name. Apparently the person who named the park was pretty impressed by its treasures. I head first toward the lighthouse. The largest lighthouse on the Oregon Coast, it was first lit, I learn, on August 20, 1873 and is a functional light to this day, though now it is automated and no longer in need of attendants. Just below the lighthouse I discover steps that lead down to the rocky beach. Indeed, the beach is composed entirely of dark blue, almost black, oval rocks, called cobblestones. Some of the stones are as large as my fist. The rocks are composed of fine-grained basaltic lava, created when the lava was chilled and cooled quickly. I am delighted at my find.

Cobblestones
The fog is so thick that I cannot see very far. I note various shapes and sizes of sea stacks beyond the beach, but I cannot see far. Signs tell me that there are also tide pools in this area when the tide is low. However the tide is rising at present and I am unable to find any accessible pools. In the absence of a view, I am struck by what I hear instead. Above the roar of the ocean I hear birds calling. And as the waves ebb and flow, they jostle the cobblestones, which strike against each other, sounding somewhat like wind chimes that are made of both metal and wood, a quite pleasant tinkling sound.


I head down from the bluff to Quarry Cove. As I look across the cove, examining the broken vertical basalt that makes up the hillside, I am startled to see - harbor seals, reclining on rocks in the middle of the cove! Harbor seals! I am delighted. I have never before seen harbor seals. I am surprised at their coloring. I had always thought of seals as being dark grey or black. But these seals are varying light shades, and are spotted and mottled. They are quite funny looking, with short little fore-flippers, long heavy bodies, and short little feet set close together, looking barely functional.

I learn that seals, along with walruses and sea lions, are called pinnipeds, from latin words meaning winged feet. Harbor seals weigh 250 - 300 pounds. They have no ears, just round faces with large eyes. Closest to me is a rock upon which ten or so recline on their sides. As I watch, the water rises with the incoming tide, and they jostle for position. New seals climb on as some slide off. I can hear them talking, some making a groaning noise, some what sounds like a honk. I am fascinated.
 
I spend about an hour watching the seals - taking dozens of photographs as I do. There is no one present but me, probably a result of the early hour and the rain. The seals are aware of my presence, and one or two regularly gaze directly at me. But I am far enough way that they do not seem afraid. I am struck by the innocence in their faces. While watching them trying to position themselves on the rocks, I think that they must be among the most innocent, and most defenseless, creatures on the planet. I know they are quite agile in the water, I see them moving swiftly through the water even now. But they have no hands or feet which can grasp, and they cannot easily move while on land, can only bounce along on their bellies. Fortunately they are protected by the Federal Marine Mammal Protection Act. I change positions, take more photographs. A cream-colored seal continually checks back with me. I feel a connection taking place.
When we acknowledge that all of life is sacred and that each act is an act of choice and therefore sacred, then life is a sacred dance lived consciously each moment. When we live at this level, we participate in the creation of a better world. ~ Scout Cloud Lee
Seal Rock
It is now past 11:00, and I must move on. Just below Newport I find Yaquina Bay Lighthouse, followed by Seal Rock.. At Seal Rock, the sand is a deep orange color. The rocks jutting up are made of vertical slabs of basalt such as that which I had seen at Yaquina Head, though all seems to be crumbling.
  
Yaquina Bay Lighthouse
Just south of Seal Rock is Driftwood Beach, a wide sandy beach below some dunes. There are no rocky hills in this spot.  I am in a tsunami zone once again. I watch a very happy dog walk his people along this beach. I had been told that the coast was much prettier below Newport, and I am finding this to be accurate. I move on.


Driftwood Beach

Cape Perpetua - Cades
Cove Trail
Cape Perpetua - Devils' Churn

Soon I find Cape Perpetua Scenic Area and the Suislaw National Forest. At 800 feet, the Cape Perpetua Headland is the highest point accessible by car on the Oregon Coast. Sitka spruce forests can only grow within three miles of the coast, as conditions further inland are too hot and dry. Cape Perpetua is considered a rather unique ecological area as the temperate spruce rainforest transitions down to the sea. Trails take one from the parking areas along Hwy 101 down to the ocean as well as up to the top of the mountain.  I wander the Restless Waters Trail from the overlook of Devil’s Churn - where waves boil through narrow opening in the rocks - down to the beach, then pick up the Cave Cove Trail, a little over a mile and a half of hiking through a Sitka Spruce Forest. 

When I return to my car, I discover a road that spirals to the top of Cape Perpetua.  It is a ghostly drive through foggy forests. When I head back down, I notice a side road with a sign indicating "One lane road with turnouts." Oh, it is always hard for me to resist those one lane roads up and down mountains and through forests . . . The decision is made quickly, I turn left.  I find myself traveling through mixed countryside that brings a conflict to the fore and affects my ability to enjoy the areas of beauty I see.

Between sections of old growth spruce, Douglas fir, and Western hemlock I find myself driving through areas in which the forest was clear cut many years ago - and never re-planted. The hillsides are scarred, with stumps ranging from inches to a foot or more jutting from the ground. Short grasses or shrubs grow amid soil quite bare in areas. The hillsides are ugly.

I wonder why clear cutting? And why were the forests not re-planted? Who determined that savaging the land in such manner is okay. Seeing the land so damaged causes me pain. It hurts even worse as I drive through the old growth stands. Trees here are 150 feet or more tall. Trunks are massive. The undergrowth is thick and rich. White trillium are blooming.  The canopy stretches across the road, with trees intertwined. These are the trees which were cut.

White Trillium
I keep driving east, wondering where I’ll end up. I’m not sure exactly where I am. Signs at a trailhead indicate that I am on Forest Road 55. But my map does not show this road, so I’m not sure where I’m headed. The road turns from paved to gravel. Then the road worsens, as the dirt beneath the gravel is chewed up. My best guess puts me 8 or more miles from Hwy 101.

I keep going. I am curious. And soon I find myself in woods that are currently being harvested! Branches and small logs from cut trees are piled together, feet high. But it does not appear that in this area clear cutting is taking place. There are bare areas amid trees left standing. I am confused. I thought I would feel better. But I don’t, as I realize that the best of the trees, the largest, the most majestic are the ones which have been harvested. Complexity.

I begin to question our need for constant consumption of wood products, for lumber. I recall the many places I have visited, homes made of redwood and cedar. Is it worth raping the land in this way to have log homes? What about furniture? Complexity. I know from reading that these practices, both clear cutting and selective cutting, not only kill the trees but damage the land in various ways. They also affect entire ecosystems. Complexity. It hurts. I turn and head back. I need to seek out beauty once again.  But I know these questions will not leave me. I know I will be faced with these sites and these conflicts again, particularly over the next several days.

Cape Perpetua - Gwynn Creek
Just south I discover the Gwynn Creek beach area. This area is stunning, quite stunning. There are no people here. Where are all the people? I have the beach to myself, and I walk for a bit, savoring its beauty.

Cape Perpetua - Gwynn Creek


Then I discover Strawberry Hill Wayside, where I find more seals on rocky outcroppings. These are further away than were the seals at Yaquina Head. But I can hear them. I move on, and I discover Washburn State Park. I pass signs indicating elk can now be found in the area.

Heceta Head Lighthouse



Strawberry Hill Wayside
Harbor Seals









Humankind has not woven the web of life. We are but one thread wthin it. Whatever we do to the web, we do to ourselves. All things are bound together. All things connect.  ~Chief Seattle


I discover Heceta Head Lighthouse. The Heceta Head Lighthouse is purportedly haunted. Its ghost is Rue, wife of an assistant light keeper in the 1890's and mother of a young girl who drowned. Rue committed suicide and has haunted the Heceta Head Lighthouse ever since, looking for her lost daughter. Complexity.

Oregon Dunes National
Recreation Area
Just south of Florence I discover the Oregon Dunes National Recreation Area. This area is fascinating. According to educational material, the dunes stretch 40 miles from Florence to Coos Bay. Some dunes tower 500 feet above sea level. Though fifty years ago the dunes were bare, grasses have begun growing and the dunes are now comprised of mixed ecological areas.  On the east
Oregon Dunes National
Recreation Area
side of the dunes, a natural wetlands has begun developing.

Some areas in the park are open to offroad use of recreational vehicles. Some are closed, for foot traffic only. These are the largest expanse of coastal dunes in North America. I question, should we allow off highway vehicle use? Complexity. Five marked trails allow one to cross the dunes on foot to access the ocean. I hike up a trail to the top and survey the expanse. Once again, there are no people here. Where are all the people? It is not cold. It is no longer raining. The land is beautiful. I am fortunate to be able to see it like this.

I am exceedingly tired at this point and find myself bypassing parks, wanting to "bunk in" for the night. I think my fatigue is as much emotional as anything else. I am a bit overwhelmed by all the beauty I have seen, satiated at this point. I am overwhelmed by the amount of forest destruction I have seen. And I am overwhelmed by the complexity of the issues I have contemplated. I head to my hotel in Coos Bay and turn it all off for the night. I don’t even eat dinner, just crawl under the covers. Tomorrow is another day. I will start again.

Donna
April 16, 2011




 

Saturday, April 23, 2011

The Oregon Coast Day One - Wind, Rain, Seastacks, and Rainforests - April 15, 2011


Arcadia Beach

There are no easy answers. Not to most issues of substance, I think. I ponder this thought as I head across highway 26 from Portland to the Oregon Coast. I have been attending the annual conference of the American Association of Suicidology. At the last session I attended, researchers and clinicians addressed the question of predictability, i.e., can you accurately predict that someone will make an attempt to take his/her own life? What factors might provide clues that such an attempt is likely to take place? What factors might provide clues that such an attempt is likely to take place imminently. Some in the room expressed a desire to develop an protocol, an instrument, some standardized means of evaluation by which clinicians can predict that an attempt is imminent. I shake my head. I do not believe it is possible. Human behavior is not so predictable.  I agree that human behavior is somewhat predictable sometimes. I know that there exist lists of signs and indicators that someone might be suicidal. But I also know that some persons may exhibit such behaviors and yet make no attempt. And I know that some persons who take their lives exhibit no such signs. I appreciate the desire of these experts in suicidology to prevent such tragic loss of life. But I also know that we will never be able to predict with accuracy either way. Human behavior is a complex weave of internal and external factors, some of which we can never be in touch.

I will think further on these thoughts as I explore over the next couple of days. I had recently been apprised of the words of H.L. Mencken, "For every complex problem there is a simple solution . . . and it is wrong."  I agree with Mencken.  I know that the older I get the less black and white I see.  I have also discovered that I prefer color - in all its complexity - vivid color. Yes, let me see color!

I have five days to explore and plan to use every minute of it.  I have never before visited the Oregon Coast but have been told that it is quite magnificent. Many persons have told me that it is much more stunning than the Washington coast, which I love. I know that when I peruse the map, the Oregon Coast looks like it is composed of one state park or recreation area after another, down the length of the state. How many can I visit?

Road to Seattle Mountain Natural Area
It is raining as I head out, but I am not disappointed. I know that cloudy and rainy days offer photography opportunities that are limited by sunny ones.  I think on complexity. Some wish always for sunny days and curse the rain. But I know that it is difficult to photograph the forest on a sunny day - there is too much interplay of light and shadow to fully see . . . I know also that colors are more vivid beneath the clouds and the rain, that too much light washes out color. I welcome the clouds and the rain.
South Fork Rock Creek

As I drive west from Portland, I drive through rolling hills, farmland, orchards - and Christmas Tree Farms! Christmas tree farms always bring a smile to my face.  Soon I find myself in Northwest rainforest, dominated by coniferous trees, Sitka spruce, Douglas fir, Western and Mountain hemlock, Western red cedar, and Lodgepole pine. It is early spring and the hardwoods interspersed among the evergreens - maples and spruce - are only just beginning to bud. Because of the high annual rainfall, these woods are marked by mosses and lichen growing on tree trunks and a ground cover of fern. These are seriously tall trees!  I am anxious to be among them. I look for pullouts or parks that will give me an opportunity to wander among them, smelling, touching, and seeing.  

Skunk Cabbage
I see my first deer-crossing sign. Another smile. It is 11:15, and it is 40 degrees. I enter the Tillamook State Forest. I see my first snow at around 1500 feet, patches at the base of trees. I enter the Clatsop State Forest. Finally I find a rest area at Sunset Springs. This one has a trail that winds across the South Fork of Rock Creek and through the woods. I explore. The banks of the creek are lined by gnarly birch trees. Signs indicate that this area has been hit hard by fires in the past. The trees certainly look lush today.

I continue on. Soon I see signs for the Seattle Mountain Natural Area. I make the turn. The picnic area and mountain itself are 7 miles from Highway 26, on a one lane winding road. At least it’s paved. The road undulates and curves, and I am "forced’ to drive only 20 or so miles per hour. I drive through lush, lush forest. I can see in the distance some areas that have been logged, badly, where the ground looks ugly and scarred. I know I will face strong feelings about logging while I am out here. But for the moment I am under dense canopy, so I put those thoughts away. Complexity. I cross the Necanicum River. I pass areas of standing water in which grow the pretty but odiferous, yellow skunk cabbage. Hah! I know that the root of this plant is food for bears, who eat it after hibernating, as a cathartic or laxative. 
Necanicum River

Off the Road to Seattle Mountain
Natural Area
Finally I reach the end of the road, which is the trailhead for the path to the top of rocky Seattle Mountain. Though I sometimes hike alone, I trust my intuition, and this isolated area does not feel safe today. So I turn around and head back. I enjoy the drive. I am in my element. And I suddenly find myself slamming on my brakes and skidding across the road, to keep from hitting the doe who has bounded up the side of the mountain from my left, crossed the road, and headed into the forest to my right. I sit for a few minutes to let my heart rate return to normal. I smile. My first wildlife encounter of this trip. I am in my element. And I travel on. I am passed by only two cars on the 14 mile roundtrip into this forest.

Arcadia Beach
I finally reach the coast at Cannon Beach.  I am excited to explore this area which has been recommended by several people. But I am disappointed. The beach is flat and surrounded by houses, restaurants, and shops. It looks not much different from beaches on the east coast. I move on. And soon my expectations are gratified. First Tolovana Beach Wayside Park, then Arcadia Beach. Arcadia Beach is what I have been looking forward to! Vertical columns of rock called seastacks jut from the ocean floor. Rocky hillsides stretch down to the sea. Small caves are cut into the rock at the beach level. Mountains rise one behind the other along the coast to the south. Yes!

Arcadia Beach
 I move on. The rain has intensified. It is hard to see very far. I pass signs indicating that I am in a tsunami zone. These signs carry more meaning than they might at a different time. The road turns inland. I pass signs for Cape Lookout. But the coast is too far away to explore those beaches this afternoon. It is late and I want to spend the night in Newport. I pass dairy farms. And as I enter the town of Tillamook, I pass the Tillamook Cheese Factory and visitor center. I note its presence for a future visit. It has warmed a bit. It is 3:30 and is 52 degrees.
 

Boiler Bay
Highway 101 winds along the Pacific once again. Though visibility is limited by the rain, I turn into Boiler Bay State Scenic Viewpoint. As I exit the car, I am buffeted by high winds and pelted by rain. I learn that the area is named for a ship that sank in 1910, the J. Marhoffer. Apparently one can see the ship’s boiler at low tide. I would have thought the park had been named after the boiling action of the ocean as waves bounce off the rocky outcroppings.

Boiler Bay
I watch ocean swells move in, one after the other, not just waves but swells, the ocean rising as it reaches land. Though I am thoroughly soaked below my jacket, I wander the edge of the cliffs, just to see what I might see. I am rewarded as I find a cave next to a waterfall which plunges into the ocean. As I return to my car, I smile at the dozens of gulls and the handful of geese that have settled on the grass in the parking area. The wind is too stiff to fly, and these guys hunker down.

Rocky Creek State Scenic
Viewpoint

Now I find Rocky Creek State Scenic Viewpoint. Here the wind is so ferocious that I am hit by foam being blown up from the shore. I endure it happily. I laugh as I pull into Cape Foulweather. This spot was discovered by Captain James Cook on March 7, 1778. It is the first geographic location named by Captain Cook as he began his exploration of the Pacific Northwest. Apparently it is not unusual for winds of 100mph to buffet this area. I think Captain Cook must have been here on a day similar to mine. I move on.

I discover the Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area. I note that this park is operated by the US Bureau of Land Management. I note a lighthouse high on a bluff. And I see signs for a rocky beach. But the rain is too heavy and the wind too stiff to explore this park this evening. I will return tomorrow morning.

Yaquina Head Lighthouse
Yaquina Head is just north of Newport, my stop for the night. I check in to the motel. Then I ask the desk clerk to tell me what is the best local restaurant - not a chain - in the area. She directs me to Georgie’s Restaurant. I dine on shrimp at an oceanside table (indoor) and I reflect on the day. I still have four to go. They promise to be outstanding.

Donna
April 15, 2011©