Cape Arago Lighthouse, Coos Bay July Road Trippin’ Advertising Supplement to the Lewiston Tribune, Moscow-Pullman Daily News and Whitman County Gazette Boise River Greenbelt, Boise Cape Mares Lighthouse, Tillamook Bay July Road Trippin’ Mt. Rainier trail in Grand Park, Wash. Creek on bike trail near Driggs, Idaho 2015
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Cape Arago Lighthouse, Coos Bay
July Road Trippin’
Advertising Supplement to the Lewiston Tribune, Moscow-Pullman Daily News and Whitman County Gazette
Boise River Greenbelt, Boise
Cape Mares Lighthouse, Tillamook Bay
July Road Trippin’
Mt. Rainier trail in Grand Park, Wash.
Creek on bike trail near Driggs, Idaho
2015
Cape Blanco Lighthouse: The Sturdy Sentinel Location: Nine miles north of Port Orford Tower first lit: 1870 Current status: Automated since 1980 Nestled 256-feet up on a chalky-white cliff jutting a mile-and-a-half out into the Pacific Ocean, this brick structure bears the title of oldest standing lighthouse on the Oregon coast, and she’s located smack dab on the westernmost point in all of the state. Open April through October 10-3:30pm, closed Tuesdays.Coquille River Lighthouse: The Inland Guidepost Location: Entrance to the Coquille River Tower first lit: 1896 Current status: Deactivated in 1939; lit ceremonially each December Head to Bullards Beach State Park to gaze upon this conical brick and stucco beauty, which boasts a 40-foot tower and a foundation hewn from locally sourced stone.Umpqua River Lighthouse: The Second-Chance Beacon Location: Above the Umpqua
River, at the entrance to Winchester Bay Tower first lit: 1894 Current status: Automated since 1966 This stucco and brick column is actually the predecessor of the Oregon coast’s very first lighthouse. The 65-foot tower looms 100 feet above a serene stretch of sand dunes. Open daily May through October, 10-4pm. Heceta Head Lighthouse: The Watchtower Restored Location: 12 miles north of Florence Tower first lit: 1894 Current status: Automated since 1963 Poised at the edge of the 1,000-foot high Heceta Head, its 56-foot tower looms 205 feet above the ocean. Heceta Head offers bed and breakfast accommodations in the assistant light keepers house. Open daily during high season; tours available by appointment year-round.
Yaquina Bay Lighthouse: The Time Tested Tower Location: Yaquina Bay State Recreation Site Tower First Lit: 1871 Current status: Deactivated in 1874; Restored in 1996 as a privately maintained navigational aid This 42-foot-high wooden structure has certainly
withstood the test of time as well as the notorious ravages of the coastal elements. Today it’s the second-oldest standing lighthouse on the Oregon coast, and purported to be the oldest standing structure in Newport. Open daily except for holidays; hours reduced October through May.
Yaquina Head Lighthouse: The Commanding Column Location: Three miles north of the entrance to Yaquina Bay Tower First Lit: 1873 Current status: Automated since 1966 This conical brick bastion, looming 162 feet above the ocean on a narrow spit of land jutting due west, boasts a 93-foot tower accessible by 114 steps straight up. It’s the tallest lighthouse on the Oregon coast, and known for its unique flashing beacon pattern. Open 11-4pm closed Wednesdays in high season; hours reduced October through May. Cape Meares Lighthouse: The Humble Beacon Location: 10 miles west of Tillamook, at the southern entrance to Tillamook Bay Tower first lit: 1890 Current status: Deactivated in 1963 The humblest among Oregon’s lighthouses, this brick and iron octagon rises just 38 feet from
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J u l y R o a d T R i p p i n ’ M o n d a y, J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 52
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M O N D A Y, J U L Y 2 0 , 2 0 1 5 J U L Y R O A D T R i p p i N ’ 3
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J u l y R o a d T R i p p i n ’ M o n d a y, J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 54
“We invite you to Duck into the Spokane
County Interstate Fair, September 11-20! “
Ride the rides all 10 days! Eat your favorite Fair Foods! Check out the Mutton Bustin’! Enjoy two-nights of PRCA Rodeo.
Be entertained by cast
members from Duck Dynasty – Willie, John Luke, Sadie, Godwin and Martin. ROCK out to Grandstand concerts with Air Supply, Craig Morgan and Dan + Shay, The Guess Who and Orleans, and Cheap Trick!
Finish the week out with truck and tractor pulls and two-days of demolition derbies.
Watch free family shows on the North stage! The Fair is ALL about livestock! Cows—Rabbits—Horses—Goats—Pigs—Llamas and more. ALL of your favorite farm animals
on display to enjoy and learn about!
And back by popular demand — the Farm Adventure —Every farm animal you can imagine is up close and personal for you to see, touch and even feed!! And new this year, a huge Exotic animal display.
And Belly laughs guaranteed with the All-Alaskan Pig Races as they compete to race for the fastest pig!
See you at the Fair!”
Coeur d’Alene Casino Resort Hotel
Vacation is waiting. Less than two hours away, tucked into the lush forestry of Worley, Idaho where the open sky meets the prominent peaks of Mt. Tch’mutpkwe is the rustic and beautiful Coeur d’Alene Casino Resort Hotel. The picturesque surroundings, variety of activities and natural landscape make the resort the perfect place for a weekend getaway or a weeklong adventure.
The abundance of accommodations offered at the Coeur d’Alene Casino allows visitors to create their own unique experience and customized vacation. Guests can visit the luxury spa for relaxing and healing treatments, test their luck on the casino floor, or enjoy a round of 18 holes at the Circling Raven Golf Club, continually voted a “Top 100” golf course by every major golf publication in the U.S.
What’s more the resort casino offers a full calendar of entertainment from comedy to concerts and exquisite dining options for everyone’s taste. Enjoy a hearty, upscale meal with live music from Chinook Steak, Pasta & Spirits or visit the Red Tail Bar & Grill for casual, yet intimate dining.
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See website for live music schedule, golf and gaming events, spa, hotel and food specials.
Events
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16th Farm To Fork Chinook Meadows | 10 am | $10
20th Mixed Martial Arts 7 pm | GR $60 • R $40 • G $25
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CARNIVAL – ENTERTAINMENT – RODEO – FAIR FOOD
29th Annual PRCA Rodeo Sept. 11 – Tough Enough to Wear Pink Night 7pm Sept. 12 – 7pm10 Nights of Grandstand Entertainment Including Cast Members from Duck Dynasty, Air Supply, Craig Morgan and Dan + Shay, “The Guess Who and Orleans,” Cheap Trick, Truck/Tractor Pulls and Demo Derbies
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M O N D A Y, J U L Y 2 0 , 2 0 1 5 J U L Y R O A D T R I P P I N ’ 5
When the town of Pendleton in North Eastern Oregon, popu-lation 13,000, grows to more than 60,000 during Round-Up week can there be any secrets? Well maybe, but there are a few things a person should know if they have always wanted to visit the Pendleton Round-Up.
Celebrating 105 years September of this year the Pendleton Round-Up and the companion event, the Happy Canyon Indian Pageant, kick off performances on September 16 and each continue through the week with the last performances September 19. Clearly by week end the town of Pendleton is about ready to bust at the seams as travelers from literally every-where come to enjoy everything Round-Up week has to offer. The evening night show of The Happy Canyon Indian Pageant starts at 7:45pm portrays the settling of Eastern Oregon, a show that will be celebrating 99 years in 2015. Add the VFW’s Cowboy Breakfast each morn-ing in Stillman Park and the Westward Ho! Parade on Friday and a couple of American Indian Beauty contests and there is plenty to fill each day. But, what about those secrets?
First it’s no secret that trying to find a place to stay in Pendleton during the week of community excitement is like looking for a needle in a haystack. Motels are full, dry camps for tents and RV’s at public facilities around town managed by the Chamber of Commerce are full, heck even the extra beds in accom-modating residents are full. Shhhhhh…but with persistence you still might find a place to stay from Wednesday through Saturday. So if you keep calling on availability and you have the opportunity to break away at a
moment’s notice you could find yourself in Pendleton.
For a true secret remem-ber it is Round-Up week so the crescendo of excitement really starts building on the first Saturday of Round-Up week, in 2015 it is September 12. On Saturday the Dress Up Parade in the morning gets the hubbub started. Saturday night is the Concert in Happy Canyon arena which has featured country stars for a couple of decades and this year is no exception when Scotty McCreery comes to town.
On Monday there is Slack for barrel racing, on the largest pattern in professional rodeo. Entrance to the Round-Up grounds is free, and the world famous Let’er Buck Room, one of the best western bars in the world, opens its doors for the week. You can follow a day of watching Slack with a night of the Professional Bull Riders at the US Bank PBR Classic in Happy Canyon arena.
Tuesday do it all over again with Slack starting at 8:30am and going all day as all the other timed event cowboys – steer wrestling, tie-down roping, and team roping - do their best to catch a steer or calf in the famed Round-Up grass arena. For these three events cowboys must compete in “two goes” so almost every cowboy in the timed events will compete on this day. Entrance is General Admission again for an easy $2 bucks. The real secret for Tuesday is not only can you see the best of the timed event cowboys but you can literally rub shoulders with them in the stands and in the Let’er Buck Room. And you aren’t finished yet because you can take in a second night of the PBR.
If you are yearning to see at
least one official performance then stay for Wednesday and watch the first performance of the Pendleton Round-Up, enjoy a family barbeque in the Round-Up arena after, head to Main Street for a while and come back for the Happy Canyon that night. Wednesday is when Happy Canyon’s backroom bar Goldie’s opens up after the first night of the Pageant so you can kick your heals up with a little dancing and put a few chips down on the table for traditional gaming in the back room of Happy Canyon.
So now the secrets are out, come to Pendleton early, help spur the excitement for one of the most exciting weeks there is in professional rodeo and for that matter in any commu-nity and leave town as the herd rushes in.
Wait there is one more secret. If you are set on coming to Pendleton for the performances
of Wednesday through Saturday then start planning early. Get your motel room or your RV spot in January and then buy your tickets for each day. Most folks don’t know it but you can buy tickets for the Pendleton Round-Up and Happy Canyon 15 months in advance. So if you want tickets for 2016, the Centennial Year of the Happy Canyon, you can get
your tickets now.
Best Kept Secrets of the Pendleton Round-UpBy: Carl Culham, Publicity Director, Pendleton Round-Up
Photo by John Laptad
For more information folks can contact the Pendleton Round-Up
and Happy Canyon office by calling 541-276-2553,
1-800-457-6336 or by visiting www.pendletonroundup.com
or www.happycanyon.com
your tickets now.
SEPT. 16-19, 2015
and HAPPY CANYON
happycanyon.com
™
For Tickets1-800-45-RODEOor www.pendletonroundup.com
Plan Ahead!2016 tickets also on sale now!
J u l y R o a d T R i p p i n ’ M o n d a y, J u l y 2 0 , 2 0 1 56
Bill Chipman Palouse TrailLength: 7.1 miles Surface: AsphaltThe Bill Chipman Palouse Trail stretches 7.1 miles through the rolling wheat fields of the Palouse region, offering a convenient, paved connection between Wash-ington State University and the University of Idaho.
Boise River Greenbelt Length: 23 miles Surface: Asphalt, Crushed StoneThe Boise River Greenbelt follows its namesake river among towering trees, con-necting downtown Boise with neighborhoods and the business district. Leading out of the city both north and south.
Ed Corkill Memorial River Trail Length: 5.3 miles Surface: AsphaltOnce a Northern Pacific Railway line that trans-ported goods, mail and passengers to and from the communities of Kendrick and Juliaetta, the Ed Corkill Memorial River Trail now provides a recreation and active transportation con-nection between the two Latah County communities. The former rail corridor was converted to a smooth asphalt trail upon the line’s abandonment in 1997.
Indian Creek GreenbeltLength: 0.6 miles Surface: Asphalt, ConcreteThe Indian Creek Greenbelt is an asphalt path along Indian Creek that links sev-eral of Kuna’s recreational amenities, including a skate park, BMX racetrack and baseball fields.
Latah Trail Length: 16 miles Surface: Asphalt, GravelThe Latah Trail travels for 12 miles between Moscow and Troy on a 10-foot-wide paved path, paralleling State Route 8 until Howell Road, where it winds north through a forested to Troy’s City Park.
Lewiston Levee Parkway Trail Length: 12.3 miles Surface: AsphaltThe Lewiston Levee Park-way Trail, part of the Clearwater and Snake River National Recreation Trail, starts at the entrance to the day-use area in Hells Gate State Park in Lewiston and descends the Snake River on the Idaho side, then turns and runs up the Clearwater River on the levee to Loco-motive Park. It crosses on the Memorial Bridge to Clearwater Park and ascends the north shore for nearly 4 miles to end just past Goose Pasture. Along this scenic route, you will find inter-pretive plaques describing the historic journey of Lewis and Clark as they traveled through the area on their way to the Pacific coast.
Milwaukee Road Rail-Trail (Pearson to Calder)Length: 36.1 miles Surface: Crushed Stone, Dirt, Grass, GravelThe Pearson-to-Calder Trail, part of the Idaho Milwaukee Road Rail-Trail system, passes through the scenic St. Joe River Valley and connects the popular Route of the Hiawatha with the towns of Avery, Marble Creek and Calder in north-ern Idaho.
North Idaho Centennial Trail Length: 24 miles Surface: AsphaltThe North Idaho Centen-nial Trail is a non-motor-ized, multi-use trail that meanders 24 miles between scenic Higgens Point State Park on Lake Coeur d’Alene (6 miles east of the city) and the Idaho–Washington border, where it joins the Liberty Lake Stateline Trail. The North Idaho Centen-nial Trail hugs the shores of Lake Coeur d’Alene and parts of the Spokane River, offering spectacular scenery along the way.
Continued on page 7
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M O N D A Y, J U L Y 2 0 , 2 0 1 5 J U L Y R O A D T R i p p i N ’ 7
North Valley Rail TrailLength: 5.9 miles Surface: Asphalt, DirtThe trail currently stretches between McCall and a point west of the unincorporated community of Lake Fork, using a portion of a long-abandoned Union Pacific Railroad corridor. Plans call for the eventual completion of the rail-trail along the length of the Long Valley, ultimately stretching more than 30 miles from McCall to Cascade.
Prairie Trail (ID) Length: 4.2 miles Surface: AsphaltThe Prairie Trail is a spur off the popular North Idaho Centennial Trail, a 24-mile scenic pathway from Coeur d’Alene to the Idaho–Wash-ington state line
Stoddard PathwayLength: 2 miles Surface: AsphaltThe Stoddard Pathway is a 2-mile trail on the eastern side of Nampa, Idaho. The trail was built on a former rail corridor—hence its alternative name, Rails to Trails—that was converted to an underutilized dirt path in the 1990s.
Trail of the Coeur d’Alenes Length: 72 miles Surface: AsphaltFew long bicycle trails come any better than the Trail of the Coeur d’Alenes. The trail covers 72 entirely paved, wheelchair access-ible miles through scenic mountains and valleys in Idaho’s Panhandle. The area has a rich mining, railroad-ing and Native American history, too, and there are plenty of places to stop to enjoy the scenery and visit local attractions.
Weiser River National Recreation Trail Length: 84 miles Surface: Asphalt, Ballast, GravelThe Weiser River National Recreation Trail is a feast of desert canyons, evergreen forests and alpine mead-ows, following the former right-of-way of a Union Pa-cific Railroad line between Tamarack and the town of Weiser. Other highlights of the trail include 62 historic rail trestles and wildlife such as deer, waterfowl, quail, turkeys, herons and eagles.
Wood River Trails Length: 33.7 miles Surface: AsphaltKnown to locals simply as “the bike path,” the Wood River Trails is a system of
paved multi-use trails con-necting the communities in Idaho’s Wood River Valley.
Victor to Driggs Rail-Trail Length: 7.7 miles Surface: AsphaltThe Victor to Driggs Rail-Trail is nestled in a valley of eastern Idaho, surrounded by the beautiful Tetons.
Located on Highway 77 in Albion, Idaho, Marsh Creek Inn has 12 rooms with cable TV, telephones & refrigerators. Enjoy BBQs, Dutch oven cookouts, horseshoes, croquet, shing, and boating nearby at the Snake River. While you're there, visit Shoshone Falls. Complimentary coffee and muf ns available. Thirty miles away is the City of Rocks National Reserve, a landmark on the Oregon and California trails. Rock climbing and camping are popular activities in this area of unique granite formations. Enjoy an evening by the re in our rustic lobby, which is located in a restored log house that was originally built in 1879.
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Oregon Lighthouses continued from page 2
its perch 217 feet above the ocean. This lighthouse is accessible along a scenic trail with panoramic views of marine life. Open daily April through October, 11-4pm. Cape Arago Lighthouse: The Latest Lookout Location: Gregory Point, 12 miles southwest of Coos Bay Tower first lit: 1934
Current status: Automated since 1966 This 44-foot-tall lighthouse towers 100 feet over the ocean at the edge of a small, fist-shaped island near Coos Bay. This lighthouse is not accessible to the public, but head to the overlook just south of Sunset Bay Campground to catch a good gander. And keep an ear pealed: Cape Arago’s signature foghorn is sure to surprise you.
Tillamook Rock Lighthouse: The Iron Lady Location: 1.2 miles off Tillamook Head, just south of Seaside Tower first lit: 1881 Current status: Deactivated in 1957 This iron, brick and basalt beauty was erected atop a rocky islet to guide ships piloting toward the treacherous entrance to the Columbia River. Tilly is privately owned, but visitors can catch prime views along the Oregon Coast Trail or at Ecola State Park’s main viewpoint. She’s also visible from Cannon Beach and Seaside proper.
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Coquille River Lighthouse
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