In this video, my brother joins me in northwestern Oregon to visit a number of historic sites associated with the Lewis and Clark expedition! (Click here if you can’t see the video below.)
Thanks once again to Grady from Suboverland for loaning me the Suburban! Check out his stuff here:
* Suboverland YouTube channel
* Suboverland website
DATE FILMED: Early November 2020
GPS COORDINATES & LINKS
* Jetty Observation Tower: 46.226517, -124.014218
* Wreck of the Peter Iredale: 46.178364, -123.981110
* Lewis and Clark National Historic Park (Fort Clatsop replica): 46.134525, -123.880153
* Undaunted Courage book
* The Saltworks: 45.984537, -123.931896
* Trailhead for Clatsop Loop Trail: 45.931113, -123.978453
* Indian Beach: 45.929952, -123.978566
* Cannon Beach: 45.88437, -123.96560
* Campsite: 45.36047, -118.30234
OTHER LINKS
* Adventure Know-How – My membership site that offers access to a map of my campsites, monthly bonus videos, and more.
* Kamchatka Gear (My online store)
* Gear I use
* SUV RVing the book (Amazon affiliate link)
* Instagram (@SUVRVing)
* SUV RVing Facebook group
* My second YouTube channel (It’s about minimalist fly fishing)
Really different series. Enjoyed seeing the coast & learning about Lewis & Clark. Liked seeing your brother again too.
All great video’s of the Oregon coast. As you said there are other places. Please consider Silver Creek State Park and its 10 waterfalls. The 3 John day fossil bed parks south of John day plus the town of Fossil high school where for a small donation you can dig fossils behind the school yard. Glass Buttes where there is more obsidian that you can imagine. The Webb observatory of the lava flow from Mt Washington. The gondola in Joseph, Oregon that goes to the top of a mountain in the Wallowa mountains for hiking to views of the Wallowa’s. And one dandy you missed on the coast. In the Newport and Depoe Bay area there is a marine biologist Carrie Newell and her dog Kida who for years have tracked the local and passing whales , gives names to each and does fascinating whale research. See http://www.oregonwhales.com. The Otter Crest Observatory is great for observing whales and the OPRD Whale Watching Center on the North side of the Depoe Bay bridge and great for seeing the local year round whales.
PS. Carrie Newell’s book A Guide to Summer Resident Gray Whales along the Oregon Coast ( A nature unlimited ink book) is a bit hard to find but fabulous for us locals.