Flying High
In Oregon | The Flying
Colors of Spring | The Antique
Loop
Travel in a Winter Wonderland | The
End Was Only The Beginning...
The Road Less Traveled | Gorgeous
Gorges and Hot Hot Springs
Home Made in Oregon
- Naturally! | The
Bountiful Harvest - All Year Long!
Flying High In Oregon
300 Miles · 4 Days
While Oregon is not the birthplace of Amelia
Earhart or the Wright Brothers, it is the home
of the world's largest airfreight company, Evergreen
International Aviation. The Pacific Northwest's
rich history as a shipping and trading route (and
former headquarters for Boeing in Seattle) has
brought a love of airplanes and other forms of
transportation to the area, which can now be enjoyed
by visitors worldwide.
From 1905 to 1920 Oregonians witnessed some of
the world's most daring airship and airplane exhibitions.
Renowned aviators or "Birdmen" spent
considerable time in Oregon performing at thrilling
exhibitions throughout the state. These flights
galvanized Oregon's attention on the development
of aviation and set the stage for the dramatic
events that followed.
By 1930 Portland had an airport and regular transportation
services. The 1930's were also the era of Tex Rankin—a
triumphant barnstorming figure who was often accompanied
by women wing walkers as well as women pilots.
Start in Vancouver, Washington with a visit to
the Pearson Air Museum and Officers' Row, including
the Ulysses S. Grant and George Marshall Houses.
Head south to the Portland suburb of Milwaukie,
with a delicious homestyle American lunch at The
Bomber Restaurant, a Portland-area landmark since
1947, boasting a real, vintage B-17 bomber, "flying" above
the restaurant. Leave a little time to see the "Wings
of Freedom" museum just outside the restaurant,
including the restored nose of the B17. For the
truly adventurous, spend the afternoon in Molalla
jumping out of a plane at 10,000 ft, with a parachute
and a knowledgeable instructor attached - Skydive
Oregon). Check into a local B&B or riverfront
hotel for the night. Travel to McMinnville via
Wilsonville, Woodburn or Salem. Drive through the
rolling hills and wine country (and you might need
some good wine after your skydiving experience!
to the Evergreen Aviation Museum, for a look at
many fine vintage aircraft including Oregon's newest
acquisition, The Spruce Goose. Enjoy McMinnville's
lovely city parks, Linfield College campus and
old town, 3rd St. including the rooftop bar at
McMenamins' Hotel Oregon. Use scenic hwy 18 west
to the beautiful Oregon Coast and detour a few
miles north to Tillamook and enjoy the Tillamook
Air Museum before eating a dinner of local seafood
and cruising the Pacific Coast Hwy south to Newport
or Lincoln City for a night at a cozy beachfront
B & B or hotel. After an easy drive south to
visit the cute harbor town of Florence, turn in
at Hwy 126 to Eugene and the Oregon Aviation Museum
in the state's second largest city and stay the
night before heading back to Portland.
The Flying Colors
of Spring
Begin your trip in the village of Sandy, 20 miles
east of Portland in the foothills of Mt. Hood,
and experience the unique Oral Hull 5-sense Garden
of Enchantment, maintained by and for blind people.
Have a whiff of lavender, a taste of stevia while
listening to wind chimes and water features. Loop
around to Hwy 211 and visit Philip Foster Farm’s
Heritage Garden, an 1847 National Historic Register
farm with heritage apple orchard, garden and the
oldest lilac tree in Oregon. Twenty miles west,
in the breezy city of Portland, take a stroll in
Washington Park, home of the International Rose
Test Garden, with hundreds of varieties of roses,
yielding spectacular blooms from late May through
July, and the Japanese Garden, once heralded by
a Japanese ambassador as being the most authentic
Japanese garden in America. Enjoy one of many cafes
on nearby 23rd St., a shopping, eating, people-watching
mecca. Check in at your Portland area hotel and,
the next morning, stop at the Classical Chinese
Garden, in the heart of Portland’s China
Town. Though only a city block, you will forget
you are in Portland and feel magically transported
to the Orient. Drive south the next morning on
Hwy 43 to the Berry Botanical Garden, a former
private garden with beautiful grounds and a fascinating
seed library. Continue south to the town of West
Linn, for lunch at the Tualatin River Nursery & Coffeehouse,
an old farmhouse converted into a nursery, café and
garden art center. Take a stroll along the Tualatin
River after lunch and visit a True-Value Hardware
Store with a nursery oasis hidden in the back of
the store. Keep south to the town of Canby, where
flower farms abound, bursting with ribbons of tulip
and daffodil color in March/April, and peonies
in May/June. Check in at a local area hotel for
the night and the next day, take scenic Hwy 213,
past Molalla to the charming town of Silverton
and the astounding new Oregon Garden, boasting
65 acres of manicured, wetland, Pacific Northwest,
rose, water, conifer and other amazing gardens.
Arrange to spend the day exploring this Oregon
treasure before dining in Silverton and heading
for home.
The Antique Loop
Sophisticates, pack-rats and junk collectors alike will enjoy
antiquing from Portland to the Northern Willamette Valley via Oregon's
countryside...
Sellwood is Portland’s premiere antique
district, with over 10 blocks of antique stores,
malls and restaurants. Whether you’re shopping
for dishware, collectibles or a new armoire or
entertainment center, bring your pick-up truck,
SUV (or moving van) to truly benefit from the interesting
home furnishings to be found here. Enjoy a hearty
ethnic lunch of Greek, Italian, Mexican or pan-Asian
food and hit the shops again (on Friday night,
don’t forgo evening wine tasting sessions
at Vino). Head a few miles to Lake Oswego on Hwy
43 and check in at one of Lake Oswego’s many
lodging properties, then check out a performance
at the Lakewood Center for the Arts (www.lakewood-center.org).
The next day, scour Lake Oswego for upscale, elegant
antique and home decorating shops, and don't miss
the new Lake View shopping district. (Plan at least
one extra day during the Lake Oswego Festival of
the Arts, mid-June.) Loop around to I-205 more
antiquing at Sunnyside Commons, an antique mall
and restaurant housed in a complex of restored
1903 houses. Check in at an area hotel (ask about
seasonal lodging packages) and sleep well, because
the next morning will take you out into the Oregon
countryside. Drive on Hwy 224 to Estacada, via
an antique store called “Pack Rat’s…”(and
great baked goods and lattes at Harmony Baking
Co.) Take scenic hwy, 211 20 miles south to Molalla
and don’t miss the fun, fabulous Jan’s
Katch All Miniature Town and Collectibles. Loop
around to Aurora, a charming town that is on the
National Register of Historic Places. In other
words, the town and the contents of its stores
are unique antiques. Check in at a quaint B&B
before a last day of shopping and fine dining in
Aurora. Then head home to arrange your new purchases.
Walking (Skiing,
Boarding, Shoeing, Sledding and Sleigh Riding)
in a Winter Wonderland
60 Miles · 3 Days
Whether you love to partake of winter sports
day and night, hole up by a fireplace with a good
book and cup of cocoa or do a bit of both, you
needn't go far.
Begin in Welches and arrange a dog sled tour
around nearby Frog Lake. Head east to Government
Camp, where lodging choices include several inns,
motels and B & Bs for romance or personal retreat.
Now is the time to explore Oregon's winter wonderland.
Mt. Hood SkiBowl offers skiing and snowboarding
with a vertical drop of 1,500 ft, ski-school, inner
tubing and horse-drawn sleigh rides for singles,
couples and families (offers childcare). Enjoy
a thoroughly alpine meal of sauerkraut soup and
beef goulash at Multorpor Ski Lodge East and go
out again to experience the largest night skiing
area in North America! End the evening with a home
brewed craft beer at Mt. Hood Brewing Co. Timberline
Lodge, the historic 1937 hotel dedicated by FDR
and featured in the movie The Shining sits at the
6,000 ft elevation level, perched on the side of
Mt. Hood. Timberline's roaring 2-story stone fireplace
is the perfect hot chocolate spot. Or get your
own fireplace room and watch the snow pile up outside
your window. The adjoining ski area boasts a 3,590
ft vertical drop for skiers and boarders, from
a high elevation of 8,540 ft. Timberline offers
snowshoeing and ski school for kids. For cross-country
skiing, try one of Summit Ski Area's 15 groomed
trails near Government Camp. This ski area also
has inner tubing and lessons for the beginner.
At a 320 ft vertical drop, this is the place to
learn how to ski! On the east side of Mt. Hood
is Mt. Hood Meadows. With a 4,000 ft vertical drop,
Meadows caters to families and singles alike, with
a ski school, childcare and plenty of nightlife
- 9 restaurant operations and 2 bars.
Whatever your interest in taking a winter escape,
Mt. Hood has something for you. (And, for snow-shy
drivers, there is shuttle service from Portland
to Welches, Government Camp and Timberline.)
The End Was Only
The Beginning...
30 Miles · 2 Days
Oregon City, 15 miles southeast of Portland on
the Willamette River, was a promised land for the
pioneers. As capital of the Northwest Territory
(spanning to the Rockies, current-day British Columbia
and N. California), this is where they came to
stake their claims and start their new lives.
Start your exploration with a living history
interpretation at the End of the Oregon Trail Interpretive
Center, where interpreters take you through the
process of loading up and heading out to Oregon.
Then, travel to the hilltop district and Museum
of the Oregon Territory, where the lives of the
early settlers are displayed. Take the 1-mile walk
along the bluff promenade overlooking Willamette
Falls, site of the first magazine and newspaper
recycling plant under Oregon's maverick governor,
Tom McCall in the early 70s. Ride the 90 ft Oregon
City Municipal Elevator, one of 2 municipal elevators
in the world, to the downtown area, where hobby,
antique, model train shops and used furniture stores
await you as does McMenamins' fine brews and pub-grub
in a restored 1-room church with river views. Ride
the elevator back to the hilltop and continue to
the end of the promenade and 7 th St. for a tour
of the Dr. John McLoughlin House. Dr. McLoughlin
was known as "the Father of Oregon" for
his hospitality toward the bedraggled pioneers.
Across the street, take time to browse the Oregon
City Antique Mall (one of 25 antique stores in
Clackamas County) and café. Continuing up
7 th, visit the Carnegie Arts Center, a fine-art
gallery, children's museum and coffee house in
a historic brick library. Visit two more historic
homes, the Ermatinger and Stevens-Crawford Houses.
Check in at a cozy historic B & B or one of
two riverfront hotels. Groups or large families
can arrange for an Indian salmon bake dinner and
evening Willamette River tour in the summer months.
The next morning, take a tour of the Willamette
Falls Locks Museum on the west side of the river,
site of the oldest lock system in the west. Then
continue to Willamette Falls Drive - a great shopping
street - and make a lunch stop at Tualatin River
Nursery, an old farmhouse that doubles as a garden
art center and café. Follow lunch with a
look at the greenhouse or stroll on the lush, green
banks of the Tualatin River before heading home.
The Road Less Traveled
180 Miles · 3 Days
Many pioneers took the Barlow Road around Mt.
Hood and you too can follow this "alternative
route" to the end of the Oregon Trail. The
Columbia River was a treacherous white water ride
to the end of the Oregon Trail, on a wooden raft
loaded with wagons and supplies. No wonder it claimed
the lives of 10% of its travelers. So, when Sam
Barlow and Joel Palmer carved their toll road around
Mt. Hood to Oregon City, it was an instant success.
The Barlow Road Driving Tour on an audio CD is
available at the Regional Visitor Information Centers
and many museums in the area.
Starting in the windsurfing mecca of Hood River
on I-84, wind your way up Highway 35 through the "Fruit
Loop," a glorious landscape of green hills
and rolling fruit orchards with snowcapped Mt.
Hood in the background. The Barlow Rd. sites begin
with Barlow Pass Summit on Hwy35 and Pioneer Woman's
Grave. Continue to Laurel Hill on the South side
of Hwy26, 1 mile before Government Camp. Take a
short walk to the upper chute of Laurel Hill, where
wagons were emptied and lowered on a pulley. Head
up to Timberline Lodge for a look at this historic
hotel and the Palmer Glacier. Joel Palmer climbed
this glacier to scout the route to the valley.
Ride the Magic Mile chair lift for your own stellar
views of the Cascades. Visit the W. Barlow Tollgate
before Rhododendron. This was the last tollgate
to be operated on the Barlow Rd. Stop in the charming
town of Sandy for lunch, antiquing, wine-tasting
and more great Mt. Hood views from Jonsrud Point.
Drive past rural farming towns to the Philip Foster
Farm, a National Historic Register 1847 Pioneer
farm, boasting the oldest lilac in Oregon. Here
try your hand at pioneer-era laundry, weighing
and measuring and building with Lincoln Logs. Next
is Damascus and a stop at the Pioneer Craft School,
where modern crafters are taught to do things in
the old way. Continue to Carver and the oldest
pioneer cabin in Oregon. Finally, stop in Oregon's
original capital, Oregon City - at the End of the
Oregon Trail Interpretive Center, Museum of the
Oregon Territory and Willamette Falls Locks Museum
for glimpses of early settlers' life on the Willamette
River.
Gorgeous Gorges
and Hot Hot Springs
180 Miles · 3 Days - Some roads will be closed for winter
They did not designate the West Cascades Scenic
Byway a National Scenic Byway for nothing! Each
view is more breathtaking than the last on this
winding road from Estacada to Eugene. And any local
will tell you the fabulous fishing, rafting, camping
and boating are some of Oregon's best kept secrets.
Begin your drive in the small town of Estacada
in the Mt. Hood National Forest, 20 miles east
of Clackamas. (Before you leave Estacada, don't
miss the eleven public murals on the sides of various
buildings or the morning lattes and muffins at
the locally owned Harmony Baking Co.) The upper
Clackamas River Gorge, several miles east, consists
of a dark blue river (boasting Class 3-4 rapids
in spring and summer and 5 qualified rafting outfitters
who run the river) flanked by a breathtaking wall
of Oregon evergreens! Just past Ripplebrook Ranger
Station, detour to Bagby Hot Springs for a short
hike in to a natural hot spring. Continue down
service road 46 to Detroit Lake for fishing, camping,
water skiing and boating. Detour to Breitenbush
Hot Springs, a complex of mineral hot springs,
saunas, cabins and a welcoming day lodge. Continue
south on Hwy 22 through the dense Willamette National
Forest to Hwy 126 and follow the McKenzie River
to the Cougar Reservoir. Drive in along the reservoir
seven miles and take a short hike to Cougar Hot
Springs, which has five natural pools, perched
on a hillside, descending in elevation and temperature
to meet the cool waters below. Go west on Hwy 126
past the Goodpasture covered bridge to Eugene and
Springfield.
Home Made in
Oregon - Naturally!
40 Miles · 2 Days
Just southeast of Portland the Christmas tree
country of Oregon blends with the foothills of
the Cascades Mountain Range and Mt. Hood National
Forest. It is also rich with history and creative
tradition - from craft making to wine making.
Located between Mt. Hood and Oregon's original
capital Oregon City, primarily on US Hwy 26, this
area is highly accessible from I-5, I-205, downtown
Portland and Portland International Airport. The
scenic route, on Hwy 224/212, allows for sweeping
landscapes of locally-owned tree farms, old barns,
nurseries, grain elevators and some "hidden
treasure" attractions…
The foothills of Mt. Hood are unique and vital
communities for arts, crafts and gardening with
opportunities to watch art, wine and food being
created, truly a homemade Oregon experience.
Sandy is part of the historic Barlow Road, the
last leg of the Oregon Trail, and also part of
the scenic Mt. Hood/Columbia River Gorge Loop.
Take Hwy 212 east from Clackamas, into the rolling
farmlands and Christmas tree country. Stop at a
pioneer-era craft school in Damascus, which still
produces crafts for sale. Schedule your trip to
fall on a graduation day at Guide Dogs for the
Blind in Boring, a unique and memorable experience
of the bonding between blind people and their faithful
companions. Head in to the charming village of
Sandy, with a tour of the Maiden Bronze Foundry
and Gallery, the largest bronze foundry in the
U.S. Also in Sandy, enjoy fabulous views of Mt.
Hood from Jonsrud Point, over the Sandy River.
Visit the Garden of Enchantment at Oral Hull Park
for the Blind, a 5-sense garden planted and maintained
by blind and sighted volunteers. Have a taste of
stevia plant and walk among the fragrances of lavender.
Stop in at Wasson Brothers' Winery and taste their
speciality - sweet Oregon berry wines. Let the
sweetness continue at the Oregon Candy Farm, east
of Sandy, where you may watch the candy maker through
a large glass window, spinning confections in the
old tradition. Try your hand at trout fishing,
a very popular pastime among Oregonians, in the
casting ponds of Rainbow Trout Farm (April-October.
Equipment and tackle provided) and finish your
day with miniature golfing at the Mountain Air
Mini Golf and hiking in the Wildwood Recreation
Area, a BLM park and preserve with unique wetlands
stream watch viewing and indigenous plant life.
The Bountiful Harvest
- All Year Long!
70 Miles · 2 Days
Fall is the time when Oregon's trees turn brilliant
shades of red, yellow and gold, the corn is shucked,
the pumpkins grow, the vine grapes ferment and
the harvest comes in. And, in the Northern Willamette
Valley, it is truly a bountiful harvest! But every
season is a bountiful harvest for this area. In
Winter, this is the Christmas Tree Capital of North
America, boasting Christmas tree farms for as far
as the eye can see. Early spring brings daffodil
and tulip fields and late spring brings peonies
and other colorful blooms.
Begin your trip in the farming town of Canby
(come in from the west on the historic 6-car Canby
Ferry), with harvest festivals at Fir Point Farms,
Hoffman's Dairy Garden and The Flower Farmer. Pumpkin
patches, corn mazes, spooky tunnels and petting
zoos are all part of the family-oriented fun! Ride
the miniature scale train at The Flower Farmer,
out to the night-time pumpkin patch. Or stop by
Hoffman's in October for the Giant Pumpkin Weigh-off
and Festival.. Stop by St. Josef's Wine Cellar
for a taste of Europe, in its setting, décor
and its red and white wines. Enjoy (or take out)
a meal cooked with locally grown, home-made products
at Tres Café in Canby's quaint downtown
area. Enjoy the beautiful blooms at Swan Island
Dahlias, the nation's largest dahlia farm, through
mid-October and order your bulbs for planting next
spring.
Starting in November, this is the place to pick
out a good holiday wine (at St. Josef's) and the
perfect Christmas tree at one of the wonderful
Christmas tree farms. That way you can take a bit
of rural Oregon home for the holidays, along with
great memories of fun and a rich experience.
And, of course, spring is a beautiful time, with
tulips and daffodils in March-April, at the Wooden
Shoe Bulb Co. near Woodburn and the Pacific Peony
Farm coming into full bloom over Memorial Day.
The Flower Farmer's fields bloom from May to September,
ushering in the dahlias and, once again, the autumn
harvest.
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