Day 2 part 1 - Rockaway Detour
Aug. 19th, 2024 09:23 amThe Oregon Coast Scenic Railway trip I was there for is 3 hours at night, all the way to Wheeler, but they run a regular day service between Garibaldi and Rockaway which is much closer. I figured 2 train trips is better than one, and also seeing 2 coast towns is better than one. So, I did a day trip up to Rockaway.
The part of the coast they run on is mostly bays and wetlands. So it's coast, but it's also views of bars and hills across the water. (The maritime definition of bar, think sand bar but here it's mostly rock.) The reason the rails exist is because of how hard to navigate by boat the shallow bays and dangerous bars are. The views are great and my photos will not do it justice. I don't like having my camera out the whole time when I am there to experience something. I saw great potential shots, but I'd have to hike out to those spots to get them.
Mostly I was chill with this, but there was one sea stack I really liked and tried to get a good picture of. I did not.
This sea stack was the one one I liked:

Tried again on the way back:

No come back I love you:

Yeah, swings and misses. Things is about trains is that they just keep moving.
However, the sea stacks in the area that are a big deal and is considered tourist attraction is The Three Graces:

Yeah, sometimes in Oregon we just give things names to try to make them sound cool.
The interior of the train car I was in:

Rockaway has wide beaches of fine white sand, the sort of thing people expect from beaches. It's also a larger town and caters more to tourists. I arranged to have a few hours there, but I hadn't really looked into it much. It's a cute area, but less my speed. It does have some unique sea stacks off the coast, though:

It was a hazy day, so I couldn't get great pics of them. I mostly wandered south to get closer in hopes of better pics. I also wanted to visit a bit of old growth forest that I saw brochures for, but it wasn't on my map apps and the guy in the tourist info place said it wasn't walkable from there. Turns out, if I'd walked one more block south I'd have hit it. Also, if I'd walked on a different road south I'd have been there in no time. I am always the one going on about the need for paper maps in Oregon. I am used to google and apple both being a hot mess here, but I did think the tourism office would be reliable. I should have known better and gotten an actual map when I knew I'd be going there. This is very much on me, I've got a whole list of personal anecdotes about why, yes, even in 2024 you need paper maps in Oregon. The map apps got way worse in 2019, and I've been hearing scuttlebutt that they've recently gotten new issues. Still, it was a nice ramble and I got more time on the train.
Rockaway is on the actual ocean, bright and sunny, lots of shops and new construction, quite a contrast to Garibaldi where the bay traps fog and rain clouds, is muddy and also still pretty industrial.
I caught the train back to Garibaldi around 4, and went to the dock to get some fresh crab off the dock to add to my food supply. Google had lead me to believe Garibaldi didn't have a grocery store, only a liquor store. The liquor store did turn out to have a small food market attached to it but there maybe ten items I could eat in the whole place, so it's good I'd packed food for the weekend. I did pick up an avocado and went back to my hotel for a room picnic. Having to bring food and not being able to try local restaurants does suck, but I've had some very nice room picnics:

Crackers from home, avocado from the store, crab and spicy cocktail sauce from the dock.
Food takes up about 30% of my pack when I travel to places like the coast, which makes packing very tricky. But, it probably keeps my costs down a good bit.
The part of the coast they run on is mostly bays and wetlands. So it's coast, but it's also views of bars and hills across the water. (The maritime definition of bar, think sand bar but here it's mostly rock.) The reason the rails exist is because of how hard to navigate by boat the shallow bays and dangerous bars are. The views are great and my photos will not do it justice. I don't like having my camera out the whole time when I am there to experience something. I saw great potential shots, but I'd have to hike out to those spots to get them.
Mostly I was chill with this, but there was one sea stack I really liked and tried to get a good picture of. I did not.
This sea stack was the one one I liked:

Tried again on the way back:

No come back I love you:

Yeah, swings and misses. Things is about trains is that they just keep moving.
However, the sea stacks in the area that are a big deal and is considered tourist attraction is The Three Graces:

Yeah, sometimes in Oregon we just give things names to try to make them sound cool.
The interior of the train car I was in:

Rockaway has wide beaches of fine white sand, the sort of thing people expect from beaches. It's also a larger town and caters more to tourists. I arranged to have a few hours there, but I hadn't really looked into it much. It's a cute area, but less my speed. It does have some unique sea stacks off the coast, though:

It was a hazy day, so I couldn't get great pics of them. I mostly wandered south to get closer in hopes of better pics. I also wanted to visit a bit of old growth forest that I saw brochures for, but it wasn't on my map apps and the guy in the tourist info place said it wasn't walkable from there. Turns out, if I'd walked one more block south I'd have hit it. Also, if I'd walked on a different road south I'd have been there in no time. I am always the one going on about the need for paper maps in Oregon. I am used to google and apple both being a hot mess here, but I did think the tourism office would be reliable. I should have known better and gotten an actual map when I knew I'd be going there. This is very much on me, I've got a whole list of personal anecdotes about why, yes, even in 2024 you need paper maps in Oregon. The map apps got way worse in 2019, and I've been hearing scuttlebutt that they've recently gotten new issues. Still, it was a nice ramble and I got more time on the train.
Rockaway is on the actual ocean, bright and sunny, lots of shops and new construction, quite a contrast to Garibaldi where the bay traps fog and rain clouds, is muddy and also still pretty industrial.
I caught the train back to Garibaldi around 4, and went to the dock to get some fresh crab off the dock to add to my food supply. Google had lead me to believe Garibaldi didn't have a grocery store, only a liquor store. The liquor store did turn out to have a small food market attached to it but there maybe ten items I could eat in the whole place, so it's good I'd packed food for the weekend. I did pick up an avocado and went back to my hotel for a room picnic. Having to bring food and not being able to try local restaurants does suck, but I've had some very nice room picnics:

Crackers from home, avocado from the store, crab and spicy cocktail sauce from the dock.
Food takes up about 30% of my pack when I travel to places like the coast, which makes packing very tricky. But, it probably keeps my costs down a good bit.