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Oregon Anniversary {1 Year}

         It's been a year since our arrival to our new west coast home and here's my first update! I just found a draft from October where I vowed to myself I'd write a monthly update and here we are. And now I have the task of summarizing a whole YEAR. How to cover it all? "Plan some themes for a couple different posts? Organize your thoughts? ... Just start writing and figure it out?" Let's do this. You can click here to read about our roadtrip out here (also 1 year late), and you can check out Dylan's flickr for more pics. 

Oregon Arrival 

      On May 15th, 2020, we saw our first signs for Pacific City. We drove through national forests, by picturesque rivers, on one way bridges, until we spotted the big old ocean rock in the distance (Haystack Rock), and drove up to our little blue house. We were kind of skeptical before arriving about what the town and house would be like-- exploring Google maps before had given us some doubts, but both were better than expected. We enjoyed setting up our first house just the way we imagined- had to invest in a few more pieces of furniture after our studio living... hellooo, comfy couch. 

Our "village" has only 1,000 people. When I drove passed a sign the other day that said "Population 15,000," I said, "Wow! This is a big town!" Pacific City's known for their Dory boats and Cape Kiwanda. The coast has seafood aplenty with crab, oysters, rockfish, cod, salmon, clams... We still haven't gone clamming yet, but you'll see people pulled over on the side of the road, walking with shovels and buckets in hand in the bay areas diggin up clams. The beaches, as we were just reminded on our anniverary hike yesterday, are so rugged and secluded. We don't always think about the uniqueness in being able to walk for miles on the beach and be the only people there with rugged dunes, cliffs, and capes all around. 

  

Trekking along 

    The hikes here are endless and gorgeous. Two places nearby are Bob Straub, Sitka Sedge, and Whalen Island that we frequent often. These, along with many, look like fairytales. One is even called Hobbit Trail with good reason. Bright green moss cushioning the trees and covering the ground, funky shaped limbs that make you imagine ittle gnomes and fairies scattering about. All different kinds of mushrooms popping up...  You find yourself in wonder often. I even found a surprise hike right out of our house the other day! I was skeptical of the "coastal hikes" thinking they'd just be flat near the ocean, but you can walk through dense forests and mountains and on down to the ocean in one hike.  



Our first experience with Redwoods was in Jedidiah State Park where we camped with the tent top open to see the giant trees. Our blooper on this trip was not taking enough food on a hike and waiting for way too long at a thai restaurant, getting max hangry, opting for burritos instead... Dylan's sucked. Grumpy moods continued and hindered our stargazing views on the river. We had a much brighter, happier next day luckily.

 

 Mosier Plateau in Columbia River Gorge

Work Life 

    Found my dream job. Speech-language therapy is fantastic. I get to work with kids from little tots to adults at 81 meeting in their homes, parks, and farms, and work on all kinds of speech and language difficulties. It has been so rewarding. Driving is exhausting, as I work mostly in Salem (1.5 hours away), but at least I get to drive through national forests along the river and one way bridges? My supervisor is fantastic and I couldn't ask for a better first job as an SLP. 

    Dylan's job has been an interesting change from Mayo, with more "west coast" style emergencies it seems- fish hooks in hands and eyebrows, gaff hooks, logging injuries... also lots of alcoholism apparently. But pretty good gig for the most part it sounds. 

Visitors 

        Two neighbors from Neptune were actually our first visitors last June. Then we had brother Chris an fam, the Krupka family, Mom and Dad, and Joe and Sarah from my crossfit gang 2x... Mom and Dad gave us good luck with a giant gray whale spotting in Depoe Bay. Chris and Liesl brought the whale sightings at Cape Kiwanda, and Adaleigh brought me camping adventures in our backyard. Christina and Evan brought our elk friends on our Cascade Head hike. Dana and Martin brought us wildfires... thanks guys! ;) (Also obviously fun times with this crew). Joe and Sarah brought us no animal sightings I don't think, but good hikes and tasty seafood delights. 




I cannot find any pictures with Joe and Sarah, but it happened. 

Bend

We've gone to Bend two times now, once for Thanksgiving weekend and once to cross country ski  snowshoe- skis were all rented out.We hiked Smith Rock State park and Tumalo Falls the first trip. Tumalo was a winter wonderland. 

Our blooper on our second Bend trip was that Dylan sleepily told me he would grab my hiking boots while I had my hands full. Once we got there, we discoverd no hiking boots, only my All Birds. Now I had already been in a bad mood for other reasons (dog stresses), so this was like the haystack/needle/insert appropriate idiom. But we got to snowshoeing and my spirit returned. Dylan found it was more comfortable to just hike in his boots. 

Colorado 


        We took a last minute, quick trip to Colorado to visit and ski with the fam. Mom got to come up too, so it was an excellent trip. Man, Adaleigh just zooms right on passed you down those mountains and Chris is an extra speed demon. Dylan and I really enjoyed the "Family Slow Zones." In typical Chris (and my) fashion, we squeezed in hike and lunch in Boulder before our flight home. 
  

Social Life 

...is lackingI think I've actually developed some social anxiety, folks. I used to easily walk myself into a bar, cafe or wherever alone and chit chat with whoever. Now I think things like, "Should I ask if they're comfortable with me joining their group?... what will I talk about? It's already been a year since we moved so I can't use "I just moved from Florida" as an easy talking point... That's old news... What do people talk about with other humans?" I think moving to this small of a town would've already had a its own bit of apprehension with joining people's friend groups, but with the added weirdness of spreading a virus? 

Going from the lively Neptune Beach to here has also been quite a change as well where I may go a couple days without even seeing neighbors on walks.

Tide Pool Haiku (this makes sense to put right here, right?) 

What's this all about? 

Purple spikes, green goo, starfish 

Tidepools are legit!

Portland 

        I love Portland. As with many cities that we  visit, some of our first expressions were "Man, I think we could move here! This place is great!"  This held true with our first time here, but are repeated everytime I go. So many fantastic parks right in the city, restaurants and cafes with outdoor seating, beautiful and colorful victorian homes,  sweet little gardens and friendly neighbors chatting about. Yeah, there's areas where the downtown streets are lined with homeless people's tents, and I guess the protests going on, but we never saw them, and we haven't experienced what the residents have, but it certainly seems pretty darn great. will have this wisteria on our future home!

Motorcycle Ridin'

           Well this has been unexpectedly fun. Wasn't stoked on the idea at first, but it's given a new perspective when riding through our area smelling the Tillamook cows (one time got behind a truck literally filled with cow poop falling out with every bump), hearing the rivers rush by, and driving up the BLM roads. The other day I hopped on not knowing where we were going, and we just rode for an hour and a half from our coastal town, passed the farms, along the Litlte Nestucca river, no one else on the road, through giant Christmas tree forests, then saw vineyards popping up! "Where are we?" I wondered, as I felt no understanding of my place in space. We arrived to the little town of Carlton and sat outside in the sunny weather for some tasty dins, walked around the small town checking out the restaurants and wine tasting spots. We shall certainly return to that quaint little spot. 


Surf Report
        You will have to consult Dylan for the surf report, and if you do, do a little qualitative research to get a good idea of the waves. Sometimes I get a "Man, the surf here is so good!" "This is so much better than Florida surf!" Other times I hear disappointment. Sometimes the waves break great, other times they close out, are mushy, funky, they "throw you..." I'm not entirely sure the overall verdict here.
 
Seasons
   "But it's so cold and rainy!" so many people said when they heard our plans of moving out here. Well that's only kinda accurate. I guess depends on who you ask. But here's your weather report comin' at ya from the Oregon coast.

Spring

- The blooms! It's blooming here! Our backyard has bright yellow trees, purple bottle brushes, and red blooms aroud the fence with purple _____, piece lillies, and a fig tree next to the house. 

- Salem has certainly been a beaut to enjoy the colorful parks. Between sessions I've been squeezing in walks/jogs at Bush's Pasture Park to run through foresty meadows surrounded by purple camas flowers. 

- Wonderful sunny, cool weather (40-65)

- Cherry blossoms in Salem and Portland 

Summer

- Berries on all the trails. Blueberries, raspberries, salal, huckleberries, cloud berries...

- Green green green

- Bonfires on the beach every night 

- Perfect temps only up to like 70

- Horse poop all over the beaches :( 


- Our first summer was a wacksadoodle summer with bizarre weather patterns with super dryness, extra wind, wildfired spreading. The Krupkas had come all the way to visit for a whole week, but wound up cutting it short so they could find somewhere cleaner to breathe. What a glitch in their trip! Our skies turned foggy orange, our skin felt tingly walking outside, surfers still went out...          



We stayed in Newport (1hr south) when Dylan's hospital evacuate to there. Hobie and I had some weird walks aroudn with max foggy skies and scary seals noises on the docks. Warfs? 

One of our favorite hikes, Cascade Head last June

Fall

- Leaves actually do their thing here! The coast didn't have as much colorful foliage, but driving into work in Salem was always a head turner. Streets lined with all fall's glory, views from patients' hilltop windows of all the colors...

This was around the same Cascade Head hike in November

Winter

- Sunsets at 4pm made us laaazy. 

- Storm watching 

- Took advantage of the cozy weather with candles, decorations, warm beverages... 

- A lot of restaurants shut down for winter breaks (double whammy with Covid)

- Probably more fun with friends. 

- It snowed on the beach! Dylan was actually surfing when it started to snow... 


Loaded that cute little Christmas tree right into my car from a patient's tree farm after session

Storm watching at Cape Falcoln 

Weather Conclusions: 

- Winter didn't get so cold here, but it certainly stays a good amount of chilly and windy.

- Socks, sweatpants and sweaters are pretty much always cozy in the house. 

- "Always. bring. the rain jacket," we repeated numerous times before heading out for hikes. 

- We don't burn our feet and paws in the summer! Big win.

- "Let it rise in a warm place" means "get out the space heater."

-  "Room temperature" does not mean the same thing as Florida's room temp-  we can leave the butter out and it doesn't melt away! Coconut milk turns into coconut cream.

The wiiiind... This is at old Bob


Oregon Conclusions: 
Hiking: 10/10 
Nature: 9/10 (docked for logging scenes. pretty sad looking)
Beaches: 9/10 (docked for horse poop and allowing cars on the beach but otherwise totally stunning scenes_ 
Abby's job: 9/10 (commute is only downfall) 
Dylan's job: 8-9/10 
Housing market: baseline 9/10, currently 1/10
Social life: 1/10 
Family/friend missing meter: Significant impairment

Oh here's one crazy beach. The one with the tidepools! 
'

That may be my most ridiculous post yet. Maybe I'll give a monthly update from now on? For mine and your sake?

Comments

  1. Another great read. Thanks Abby, loved the photos and the perspective you have from someone who is seeing the areas I do with new eyes.

    ReplyDelete

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