Saturday, April 2, 2016

Day 74 - Fort Stevens State Park - Astoria, Oregon

As I tried to get to sleep last night people kept arriving with bright headlights and loud voices, I may as well have been in a Walmart parking lot! Okay, not quite, when sleeping in a Walmart parking lot it is almost bright enough to read all night. After a shower, I ate breakfast in my car as there were tons of mosquitoes and other insects all around outside, I had to try and slap them away from my door anytime I opened it. We then headed to the beach to check out the shipwreck and go for a nice walk. Around the shipwreck was quite crowed and full of children, but it was much more peaceful further down the beach. Luna was terrified of the shipwreck, it ranked up there with waterfalls for how scary it was, so we did not spend much time at it. We spent several hours walking along the beach, a couple with a black Labrador and a Golden Retriever stopped so that Luna and the Lab could play, Luna was desperately trying to initiate play with him and he played a little bit, but with not much enthusiasm. It was wonderful to see Luna immediately initiating play with a new dog! We sat for awhile to enjoy the ocean and I threw sand for Luna to chase, trying to aim it so she wouldn't be able to get it in her mouth, but the silly pup would come and bite at it while it was in my hand as if certain there was something there other than sand. It was a nice beach, although, unfortunately vehicles are allowed on it so there were plenty of tire tracks and I had to keep Luna close to me quite a bit as big jeeps and SUVs would be going by every 5 minutes, but seeing as dogs are technically supposed to be on-leash, I can't complain ;) The leash laws do not seem to stand for much here, there are more off-leash than on-leash dogs at every beach I've been to and here there were even off-leash dogs playing right at the shipwreck with tons of people around. One local said to me that Oregon absolutely loves dogs and it seems that is very true, it is wonderful! Oregon also has a ton of state parks, most not costing anything to visit, I love that! They also have set rates for all the state parks with self pay with an option to pay by credit card (which is extremely handy when I am almost out of cash and almost finished my time in the US), all the campgrounds also have showers, which is incredible! In the afternoon we headed to Astoria, where, overwhelmed by being in such a busy area, I just got a motel for the evening to get away from the business and figure out what hikes I want to do tomorrow around Oneonta Gorge, which is much farther than I realized from where I am! We went for a walk around by the water across from the motel as the sun began to set. We are right beside a long vehicle bridge that leads to Washington across the water.

Have I ever told you guys that I love this dog? 

Because I really do, I love her so much!


The entire visible shipwreck.

Watching the shorebirds.

Being silly.

Very silly.

Concentrating partially on the camera, I accidentally sent this sand in a way that she would be able to catch it, look at those crossed eyes!




Wingardium LeviLuna


The bridge to Washington from Oregon. (iPhone photo)

Day 73 - Seaside - Fort Stevens State Park, Oregon

I stayed at my motel trying to finish getting caught up on my blog, but was not quite able to get the day before finished when I had to leave at 11:00 am. I headed slightly back South, thinking perhaps I’d check out Ecola State Park and spend the night there, not realizing until I got there that it had no camping and was a fee park. I decided to check out Cape Falcon instead and went a little ways down the trail which was very beautiful, but with bushes whacking us on either side, all I could think about was ticks and other insects/arachnids and when our muddy path was entirely obscured by downed trees and bushes, I decided to turn back. A little ways down the road I found a more popular Cape Falcon trail area that likely would have been quite nice, but I decided to head on, this place looked a little too crowded. I was only 7 miles from Manzanita by this point and decided to head there, having loved the little town and enjoyed the beach, not really knowing why I spent so little time there. The town is just lovely with little stores along the main street with stores with signs saying “nostalgic candy” and “Eco-friendly, fair trade” (with pretty chimes and wooden toys in the window) and so many dogs! We spent several hours walking along the beach, at one point coming across a very deep dip in the sand that I encouraged Luna to swim in, she did very reluctantly around 5 times, swimming across it to me, getting rewarded and told what a wonderful dog she is, then repeating, but by the 5th time she was done and trotted farther away than she normally would, turning around and waiting for me to finish up there, she was so done! Laughing, I started running through the waves and this, as I expected, she could not resist, she came bolting back happily to run with me. She chased a sea gull a couple times, but does not find sea gulls as fun to chase as the tiny shorebirds, particularly if there are an overwhelming amount of sea gulls, then it seems it is a bit too intimidating. I lay in the soft, warm sand and Luna began digging right beside my head right after I lay down, sending sand flying in to my ear and all over my face, it did not help with the whole relaxing on the beach thing I had going on. After finishing up in Manzanita, we headed back North, it was around 3:00 pm when I parked in a McDonald’s parking lot (I have not seen a McDonalds for a long time, so I’m glad there was one there to use the wifi!) to consult my phone on whether there were any state campgrounds between me and Astoria, I found Fort Stevens State Park and headed there. I got a site and spent the rest of the evening there. I read for a little while, then fell asleep, trying to fight off the migraine that had kept me up all night and had not entirely gone away by morning. I woke up at 5:00 to Luna growling at a passing dog, in the middle of some dream about looking down on a red rock slot canyon filled with water. I fed Luna and heated up my supper, having to chase off a raven that had taken off with my packaged, just-add-water dinner, when I left the package on the table while the water boiled, fortunately it seemed it was a little heavy for the bird and with the distraction of me coming at him, he couldn’t hold it and dropped it not far off, I kept a close eye on my dinner after that.

Cape Falcon


Manzanita Beach, iPhone photo of Luna soaked from her swim.

Day 72 - Nehalem Bay State Park - Seaside, Oregon

Once up and at it, I headed North towards Hug Point and Cannon Beach. Driving almost immediately past Manzanita, I decided to check out the beach there, having heard good things. The little town was lovely and the beach had quite a number of dogs running around on it, so I stopped and we had a short walk before continuing on to our destinations. Hug Point was absolutely beautiful, it has been my favourite beach so far, it’s nice and long, sandy and has many cool caves and a waterfall. It’s a bit busier than some of the beaches I have been to, but not overwhelmingly so (at least, not on a week day in March, even during spring break), but there were quite a few dogs off-leash, so I felt comfortable letting Luna off-leash despite there being people around. We walked a long ways South down the beach, then walked farther back the other way, checking out the caves and the waterfall on the North side of the beach. As we walked, I stayed in or near the water as usual and a big wave came up, sending water up to my knees, Luna had had her back turned when this happened, so when she turned around and saw me suddenly so deep in the water, a look of intense concern came over her face and she bolted out to me, then trotted back to shore, as if showing me the way to safety, despite being scared to go that deep in the water, what an incredible dog she is. We next headed to Cannon Beach to see Haystack Rock, this place was a little too crowded, so we did not spend long, Haystack Rock was pretty cool though, particularly with the plant life on top of it. Heading out, I drove past a Motel 6 in Seaside and decided to spend the night there, having almost no charge on my camera, phone or computer and very little driving time to charge them. By the time I decided to call it quits on the computer for the night, I had quite a bad migraine. With a cold cloth over my head to soothe my pounding headache and to block out the light of the smoke detector, I tried to get to sleep. Sometime after midnight, I gave up, the pain just kept getting worse and was getting hard to bear, so I went out to my car and got ibuprofen, tiger balm and melatonin which thankfully relieved enough of the pain and got me sleepy enough that I was out not too much later. 


Hug Point

Wading in the ocean.






The fog rolled in while we were at Hug Point.



Luna seemed to think she was supposed to stay and pose there for a photo, even though I hadn't asked her too :)




Thousands!

This cave was full of these!

The famous Cannon Beach and Haystack Rock.

A family asked me to take their photo then offered to take ours. Ignore the woman squatting in the background. Haystack is to the right, just outside of the photo.

Haystack Rock.

Friday, April 1, 2016

Day 71 - Beachside State Park - Nehalem Bay State Park, Oregon

After breakfast and a shower, Luna and I headed to the beach. I left my camera in the car as I love running and playing in the water with Luna and the camera slamming against me is definitely distracting; as it turned out, leaving the camera behind was a good call on this particular morning. Wearing my shorts, I started running in deeper water than before, not realizing that this beach had a bunch of small, deep dips in it. My smile as wide as the Pacific as I ran through the waves with Luna at my side, the ground suddenly disappeared beneath me and I went sprawling, laughing as I went down. From my hips down was entirely soaked along with my arms and much of my torso. I moved to shallow waters and kept running with her for a little ways. My entire front sopping wet, I thought that, although it was quite funny and fun to have tripped in such a manner, it was too bad that all the dog treats and my keys would be soaked, checking my pockets I was extremely impressed to find that they were entirely dry, good job jacket! We walked for a long while longer, before turning back. We went a little farther out in the waves than usual as I was soaked already. Luna does not like going to past her belly in water and in the ocean with the waves coming at her, she is even more conservative, however I experimented with running partway in and walking in to a deeper area of the ocean that was slightly above her belly and she gamely joined in, then trotted quickly back to shore as soon as I turned around. Sometimes if I have waded deeper in to the ocean than she feels comfortable, she will wade out to me, look at me with concern, then turn around and trot back to shore and repeat, as if asking me to follow her back to where it is safe, I always give in fairly quickly. 

We left Beachside State Park a little after 12:00 pm, continuing North up the coast. We stopped a couple times along the way. Our first stop was to check out Devil’s Punchbowl (there seems to be a lot of places named this in North America), then our next stop was to check out a beautiful overlook that I was hoping would lead to the gorgeous beach (waterfalls et al) just North of it. At this stop, before I even got out of my vehicle, I saw two or three sea lions and a bald eagle as well as the frequent sea gulls. As soon as I had gotten out of my car I saw a whale. We went and sat on the thick bed of grass overlooking the ocean and Luna immediately began rolling in it ecstatically as if she’d missed grass desperately! She has not been around thick grass for awhile, but has certainly been around more grass than most Albertan dogs during the winter! We had a few more whale and sea lion sightings, which I greatly enjoyed. We did go for a little walk to look for an entrance to the beach that I had seen, but no luck there and seeing as no one was on the beach, I am quite certain that there is not an entrance anywhere for it, or only private entrances. 

Traffic was actually quite bad, to my surprise, it was as if the entire afternoon was some kind of Oregon Coast rush hour, with tons of slow drivers keeping long lines of traffic back, finally when we got to a turn off that led to Portland, the road was quite clear. I got some groceries at Safeway in Tillamook, where I had planned on spending the night, thinking that my destinations were closer to it than they are, realizing they were a ways away, I headed on. My previous days in Oregon have been filled with constant camp sites and state parks, but today was void of them in comparison. As I passed a state campsite a little after 6:00 pm, I saw a sign for Cannon Beach, which I thought was past the other places I wanted to visit, nope, it was 20 minutes away, so I turned around and found the campground. Having been driving 55 mph all day on the winding coastal highway, I was driving too fast as I entered the campground, perhaps almost 15 mph when I should have been at 5 mph, I had just realized that and was braking when a heavyset woman in a baggie pink shirt and white shorts, her blonde hair pulled up in a ponytail, her face contorted with rage yelled at me with as much anger as a person could muster “Hey! Slow down!”. I knew I was in the wrong to have been going too fast and I truly had not meant to be speeding at all, but I did not feel like I deserved to be yelled at that harshly for it. I immediately wanted to leave the campground and not have to walk past her to pay the fee, particularly as the place was unpleasantly packed with people and RVs, but I was unable to locate anymore state parks en-route to Cannon Beach on a quick online search, so I just hoped she would not recognize me and had all manner of retorts, both horribly mean and very positive going through my mind, fortunately, as I walked by with Luna as my emotional support, she did not appear to recognize me. My good mood was out the window for the rest of the evening as I tried to reason with myself that it really didn’t matter in the grand scheme of anything whatsoever. It’s just that, like anyone and particularly as the perfectionist I am, I despise being wrong, I loathe messing up and I hate making such a ‘big’ mistake that I get yelled at viciously. It has helped significantly to type this down and really see that tomorrow is a new day, that should be entirely free of that woman once I am out of this campsite. 

Around 6:45 pm I headed out for a walk on the beach to watch the sunset. There were a couple other off-leash dogs on the beach, which is always nice, it’s good for Luna to have the socialization and it makes me feel better about letting her off-leash, which I do at almost every beach, the exceptions being if they are highly populated, if they are, I don’t stay long anyway and there has only been one of those in Oregon that I’ve visited briefly. I did speak with one woman with a black and white Border Collie/Heeler/Hound mix, they were from Portland, having some time away from what has become a very busy and much less friendly city apparently. As the sun disappeared behind the ocean, Luna and I made our way back, I was uncertain where we had entered exactly as all the grassy dunes along the beach are identical. I found one dune with a sign on it and went through there, only to find that it led to the day use area and I was not sure if I had gone too far or not far enough. Deciding that I had not gone far enough, I headed back down the road as the light faded, finally finding a path back in to the horse camping area (unfortunately there were no horses there this evening) and back to my campsite. 
Devil's Punchbowl.

One of the whales.

That look you get when you see grass for the first time in forever ;)

So happy!

Back to being serious.

Nope, not done being happy.


Ok, I'm done.

Nope, this is too exciting.

"That was awesome!"




What kind of animal is that in the tree? Some kind of possum?