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Updated Weekly. Newport Hotels, Lodgings - Hotels, motels and inns here can be a mix of interesting things, while its vacation rental scene is packed full of delights ....
Oregon fishing families face climate change impacts The Pacific Ocean is changing, and with it, life in coastal communities from Astoria to Brookings. Tracy Loew, Salem Statesman Journal Published 5:22 pm UTC Jun. 2, 2021 For four generations Kevin and Taunette Dixon’s families have followed the rhythm of the sea: Harvesting groundfish, such as cod and pollock, early in the year. Pink shrimp beginning in April, sometimes followed by albacore in the fall. Then, Dungeness crab, Oregon’s biggest and most lucrative fishery, just in time to bring in holiday cash. It’s been the same for fishing families up and down the Oregon Coast. ....
Mo’s Seafood and Chowder holds on to celebrate 75th anniversary on the Oregon coast Updated 6:38 PM; Facebook Share Dylan McEntee had been on the road for nearly 10 hours, pulling a trailer loaded with Mo’s chowder and cobbler en route to Utah where customers awaited their orders. Taking a rest stop with his family near Eureka, Nev., Dylan heard a knock on the window, and turned to see the sheriff. It didn’t look good. “He asked me, ’ Do you have chowder in that trailer?’” said Dylan, whose great-grandmother Mo Niemi founded Mo’s Seafood and Chowder. “I said, ‘I do.’ He said, ‘Oh, my wife would kill me if I didn’t buy some.’” ....
Into the Wilds and the Calming / Healing of Newport, Central Oregon Coast - Newport is like one big taste tester for beaches, whales, upscale fun, chaotic waves, more ....
Big deal available; lodgings not listed anywhere else (Newport, Oregon) – The beaches of Oregon’s coastline are well known and their alluring facets in insane abundance. There’s little that beats them. Except maybe – at times – the boardwalks and piers of these coastal towns. Where civilization meets the primitive, wild waters and builds structures that hover over them, there are experiences to be had in these places that can’t be had on the beaches. Here’s a few examples. North Bend Boardwalk. Tucked off to the side of the small yet comely south coast burgh of North Bend sits its boardwalk, skirting the edges of the great river. A few hundred feet of concrete and tiled walkway are decorated by plants and ornate, old-timey lamp posts. In the water in front of you, rickety, tattered remnants of an old dock structure sit, with pilings now hosting birds and saltwater life – holding up their world instead of whatever mankind had put there before. ....