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Beavers and Ducks

What do they have in common? They both like water. No, that’s not it. They are both team names for Oregon Universities? Yep, that’s it! It’s fitting that they are both named after creatures that love the water because Oregon is full of it. Many lakes and rivers, beautiful beaches, and very wet air. More on that later on.

Camping Sign

I hit the road Saturday, April 28 and drove about 550 miles to a campground on the Russian River near Cloverdale, which is 80 miles north of San Francisco. Set up my tent and hit the sack.

Russian River Campsite

A nice enough place, I spent Sunday airing out my gear and taking a walk down to the river.

Russian River

Monday night I planned on camping at Harris Beach State Park near Brookings, OR. It was only about 300 miles away so I took my time to check out the strange stuff along the roadside.

Confusion Hill Grandfather Tree One Log House

Just south of Oregon is “Trees of Mystery”. It’s also where the air started getting wet.

Trees of Mystery 1 Trees of Mystery 2

With Paul waving me on, I headed to my campground.

Harris Beach Sign Harris Beach C005

I had planned to stay here two nights, but instead I took campsite photos while hoping the rain would end. It finally stopped and I set up my tent and read a book in my car until bedtime.

Harris Beach was named after the Scottish pioneer George Harris who settled here in the late 1880s to raise sheep and cattle. The park offers sandy beaches interspersed with eroded sea stacks. So I decided to check out the stacks the next morning before I left.

Harris Beach 1 Harris Beach 3

Very nice stacks!

Since I only stayed one night, I had three stops on my way to Bullards Beach State Park. In order:

Alfred A. Loeb Sign

My first impression of Loeb was the scent of the myrtlewood forest … a crisp, bay leaf aroma. The park is nestled in a grove of these lovely trees. Many of the trees in the park are well over 200 years old. The Chetco River swirls and dances just beyond the park.

Alfred A. Loeb River View

I really liked the campsites and this park in general. It’s only about 12 miles east from Harris Beach, but feels world’s apart. This is what a campsite looks like.

Alfred A. Loeb 029

Next up:

Humbug Mountain Sign

The park and campground are dominated by Humbug Mountain (elevation 1,756 feet) and surrounded by forested hills. The campground enjoys some of the warmest weather on the Oregon coast as the surrounding mountains offer protection from cool ocean breezes. Many visitors enjoy windsurfing and scuba diving. Hiking to the top of Humbug Mountain is a major activity. Here is a side view of the mountain and a campsite.

Humbug Mountain View Humbug Mountain 076

I stopped at Cape Sebastian to admire the view.

Cape Sebastian 3 Cape Sebastian 4

Then:

Cape Blanco Sign Cape Blanco 005

This campground is great just by itself, but a walk to to the tip of the cape gives you views like this:

Cape Blanco 3 Cape Blanco 8 Cape Blanco 12 Closeup

I finally arrived at my campground for two nights:

Bullards Beach Sign

Bullards Beach is a large, family-oriented park located just two miles north of Bandon. The campground is nestled among shore pines and well protected from the strong ocean breezes. Well known for excellent fishing and crabbing opportunities on the Coquille River, the boat launch facilities are well-used during the summer and fall seasons.

What I liked the most, however, was that the sun finally came out of hiding. I quickly dried my tent:

Tent Drying at Bullards

It started to look like rain so I got my tent fly ready.

Bullards Beach Campsite

And then:

Bullards Beach Rain

Wednesday morning was not that wet, so I drove out to Sunset Bay State Park. Stopped by this place first. Can you guess where it is?

Bandon Clubhouse

If you are a golfer, you have heard of it.

Bandon Sign

It recently surpassed Pebble Beach as the top golf resort in America.

My GPS was showing a shortcut to Sunset, so I followed it since they are never wrong. Looks interesting.

Shortcut

GPS is having fun.

GPS

Didn’t make it. The road did not go through. Sheesh. Headed back to camp and took some pictures of flowers near the mouth of the Coquille River. Made me feel better.

Wood Flowers 2 Wood Flowers 4

I think this is a cool effect by using an open aperture and changing the focal plane.

Focus 1 Focus 2

I left Thursday morning, visiting seven campgrounds on my way to Florence and my campsite for the next four nights.

I stopped at William M. Tugman and Umpqua Lighthouse State Parks. I also looked at five campgrounds in the Oregon Dunes National Recreation Area. I carried my umbrella at each stop, and not just to look suave.

I fully deployed here at South Jetty campground in Florence.

Florence Campsite 1 Florence Campsite 2

Woke up this Saturday morning and it was cold and wet. But did it get me down? No Way! It was TACO TIME!!!

Tacos 1 Tacos 2

It’s not all bad, though. I wrote the blog here:

Florence Office

Shot some pool:

Florence Recreation

And might go swimming later:

Florence Pool

Look for these campgrounds to be posted soon on our website.

Become a fan of CampsitePhotos.com on Facebook, follow us on Twitter or Pinterest for future updates!

Regards, Park Ranger

One Reply to “Beavers and Ducks”

  1. Gaylin Weber says:

    What a wonderful trip!! Thanks for all the info and photos! It really helps to have all of the visuals. I think we’re going to do the same exploration this July!
    BTW: which section of the campground at Bullard’s was that?! NICE!!

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