Showing posts with label tide pools. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tide pools. Show all posts

IV(a). Hug Point

There are some great tide pools at Hug Point, and even though the tide wasn't super low when we went, it was low enough to see a lot of cool animals! (Last time we were there we saw a bunny! Although not, it must be admitted, in the tide pools. Either way, no such luck this time. But Gus does look a little like Ky in this picture!)
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The Southern Coast

 
Before when we've taken this trip we've always stayed on the upper end of the coast, and we love it there. We love the steam train, and Rockaway Beach, and we love to go to the Tillamook Creamery and get ice cream and cheese. But when I planned this trip I didn't even know if the Tillamook Creamery—or anything—would be open again after the pandemic closures! It was too sad to think of NOT being able to go there, and I found a rental house down on the Southern Coast that looked good, so I figured we'd just find new things to do in a new place!

But there was a general uproar when I said we might head down the coast without going up to Tillamook first. It turned out that the Creamery WAS open, and the coastal drive was just as fast as the other way, with the added bonus that we could eat at our favorite restaurant, The Fish Peddler, if we went up that way first. So that was settled! We took the loveliest route (bypassing Portland on small roads) to Tillamook Bay and then planned to drive all the way down the coast from there to Coos Bay where we were staying.
While we waited for lunch, we played on the rocky beach of the bay. Teddy discovered that when he lifted up any of the rocks, a whole bunch of tiny crabs would scuttle away. They were so cute! Junie managed to catch one in a shell:
And Gus was totally enthralled with them! He made cute squeaky noises at them to show how cute they were.
The daisies were out in full force as well!
Somehow I have driven up the lower part of the Oregon/California Coast (above San Francisco, and through Crescent City etc.) and I have driven the upper part between Netarts and Seaside, nearly up to Washington, but I have never been along the middle part of the coast. It was such a beautiful drive! Sam and I loved it. There are beautiful rocky cliffs and green forests, as on the upper coast, but as you get further south there is also a long stretch of sand dunes right along the beach, which was cool to see. And there are lots of bays and inlets and bridges, many built in the same Art Deco style.
We ended up driving back north a little ways (on another day) to find the sand dunes. It was a little tricky because everywhere seemed geared completely toward ATV's and not just people playing in the dunes, but we did finally find a spot where ATV's weren't allowed. (We actually looked into renting one for the big boys, and they were excited about that, but it turned out Abe couldn't drive anyone except himself, and Sam and I didn't want to have to leave the little kids behind and drive one, so that didn't work out either. The big boys were SUCH good sports about it! Even though they were disappointed.) We had a good time anyway, jumping around and digging in the sand.
Gus blundered around falling down every two seconds, and laughing about it. Sometimes he would just stay down and start rolling rather than try to get up again. He was THE DIRTIEST by the end. But he enjoyed every second of it!
Another fun thing on the southern coast, south of Coos Bay in Bannon, was this little wild animal park/zoo. They had quite a few cool animals like tigers and lions and gorillas, and the kids even got to pet a baby cheetah. There were lots of goats and deer to pet too. Gus and Ziggy and Teddy loved it!
A fox with his nose tucked under his tail—I didn't know they really slept like that!
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Oregon Coast Tide Pools at Hug Point and Cannon Beach

We were so lucky to have some extra low tides while we were in Oregon! I was excited when I looked at the tide charts because they were going to be so low. I do so like tide pools. I don't know if everyone else likes them as much as I do—the others didn't seem quite as keen on getting up at 6 a.m. to arrive at the lowest tide—but by golly I was going to make sure everyone got there and enjoyed it whether they liked it or not! And they did like it. Once we got going, anyway. Isn't that what mothers are for? :)
The drive up the coast is always so great. I LOVE this sort of scenery. Trees above cliffs and rocky beaches.
And daisies! Wild daisies everywhere.
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