CLICK HERE FOR THOUSANDS OF FREE BLOGGER TEMPLATES »

Saturday, August 9, 2008

Yaquina Head Bird Mania


Today we went to the coast. Since we have a membership at the Oregon Coast Aquarium we tend to head off to Newport pretty often. Typically we go to the Aquarium, the Brewery and Hatfeild Marine Science Center. But today we went somewhere new, Yaquina Head. 


The head is just north of Agate Beach, where we frequently take the dogs to run along the long sandy beach, and look for treasures at low tide. Yaquina Head is managed by the BLM and is the site of an old light house first lit in 1873. Bird and Jan went into the lighthouse while I hung out on the back deck and watched some whales. There are several other awesome features at Yaquina. One is Cobble Beach which is a freakish place covered with nearly perfect round basalt cobbles that sing as the tide rolls in and out. Another lovely feature is Salal Hill, a 1000 ft trail that brings you to a great lookout over the ocean and lighthouse. It was totally worth the seven dollar parking fee. We saw many lovely harbor seals, whales, and tons of bird (Brandt's Cormorants, double crested Cormorants, brown Pelicans, white crowned sparrows, common Murres, and pigeons Guillemot


Needless to say I took plenty of photos and posted a good smattering of them on photobucket.
Tomorrow it's back to the grind, but today was a magically delightful day of seacoast, history, poetry, dog play, and hiking. 

2 comments:

Sara Jameson said...

We love Yaquina Head, esp. the lighthouse and walking on the beach. We are lighthouse nuts and visit when we can. If you get a chance, go up to the top (not all lighthouses allow this) and admire the Fresnel lens prisms. Amazing technology and beautiful. Also a great view. And if you go up the coast to Depoe Bay, you can very often see whales from the resident pod right from shore. We are really looking forward to a few days at Port Orford (south) as soon as classes are over.

Unknown said...

Nice and beautiful article that is important for us.
dog waste bags