Heceta Lighthouse
Florence, Oregon - We had a great day.
True, any day in our RV is a great day - but we had great weather and
enjoyed a spectacular day on the Oregon Coast. The sun was shining this
morning in Eugene and DT was able to get in run on Pre's Trails before we
hitched up and headed out on Highway 126 to Florence. We checked into a
quiet RV park,
Heceta Beach RV Park, just north of town and then walked down to the
beach. This is Oregon and the Memorial Day crowds were terrible at the
beach. Upwards to ten people were crowding the sandy shores.

Memorial Day crowds in Florence, Oregon
Today we wanted to tour through Heceta Lighthouse - named
after Portuguese explorer Bruno Heceta who explored this area as an employee
of the Spanish Navy in 1775. Now pronounced HA-cee-ta (rhymes with casita),
it was more commonly pronounced as HECK-ah-tah when I was a child. (A local
told us the pronunciation changes with the tides...) Anyway... Bruno was
hired to map the Pacific shore up to the frozen bits, but since the current
just flows south, he only went as far north as the mouth of the Columbia
River. Bruno Heceta did conclude the water was very shallow here - 150 feet
- and years later when other explorers came to check his markings, they
decided he was right and named this coastal head in his honor. The shallow
(150' is shallow) waters make this a great spot for grey whale mothers to
temporarily leave their calves as they head to deeper waters for a meal -
and today we witnessed a baby waiting for his/her Mom just below the
lighthouse. The baby (this was one big baby!) came up for air (every three
or four minutes) for hours this afternoon just below the lighthouse and we
were very lucky to see the calf spout numerous times.

Where's Momma? Baby Grey Whale waits for dinner. Photo by DT
The path to the
Heceta Lighthouse is about 1/2 mile over a gravel trail. In the spring
the surrounding forest is stuffed with fabulous foliage and the walk quickly
passes. On the way to the lighthouse, the trail passes by the Lighthouse
Keepers Quarters, which is now a Bed & Breakfast. The house is haunted, but
the girl in the gift shop assured us the ghost is only active/upset when
there are renovations - otherwise, all is quiet at the inn.

The pretty path to Heceta Head Lighthouse

Keepers Quarters
This lighthouse was built between 1892-1984 and was lit with
kerosene. Three Lighthouse keepers were employed full-time on-premises. The
light shines 21 miles out to sea (as far as the curvature of the earth will
allow). In 1963 the lighthouse was fully automated and turned over to the
State of Oregon Parks Department. With today's GPS navigational systems so
prevalent, the lighthouse today is only used as a supplemental beacon.

I saw the light

Inside the lighthouse: the staircase and a room with a view
The Oregon State Parks Department offers free lighthouse
tours - 9 people at a time. We were lucky enough to have Ed (from Tucson) as
our guide and he gave us a wonderful tour of the tower and answered our
questions about the daily life of the keepers. If you are ever a few miles
north of Florence, we urge you to stop by this fabulous lighthouse as it is
an interesting part of Oregon History. If you plan enough ahead, try to
arrange for a night-time tour of the light house to see the lighthouse in
the best possible... er, "light".

Heceta Lighthouse

Queen Anne Lace on the lighthouse trail

Wild Iris blooming near the lighthouse

View south from Heceta Head

Another crowded Oregon beach
Just south of the lighthouse, you will find hundreds of sea
lions basking in the sun. At this point you can visit the Sea Lion Caves, or
simply view the sea creatures from several view points along the rocky
shore. From this vista, the lone baby grey whale was easy to spot, and DT
and I pointed-out the whale to tourists from Taiwan, France and Russia (in
Chinese and English).

Oregon Phat Boys

Heceta Lighthouse from the vista point

Yes, this is Oregon
A few miles north of Florence you will find the
Darlingtonia
Botanical Gardens. A very small (18-acre) park, Darlingtonia Botanical
Gardens preserves the only carnivorous plant in Oregon - the
Darlingtonia californica, also called a cobra lily. Strange
cobra-headed plants lure insects into their hollow tubular leaves and devour
the helpless creatures!

Insect eating plants
After
a rest, we went into Old Town Florence for dinner where we dined at the
Waterfront Depot - an old train station turned into a restaurant - with a
great view of the bay bridge. The cocktails were divine, the appetizers were
good, but the dinner fell apart. The bartender actually made me a mojito
with sugar cubes, fresh mint, fresh limes, rum and soda water. It was
perfect. We tried fried Halloumi Cheese with garlic, capers and cilantro. I
was suspicious of the cilantro, but can't pass up fried cheese. It was
salty, crispy and simply wondrous. DT ordered the seared tuna tapa. It was
tuna, but it was not seared. It was over-sautéed. I had grilled Alaskan wild
salmon with a Caesar salad. The salad was completely normal and uninspired
and the salmon was from an anorexic fish and severely over-cooked. DT
ordered a fish mélange in an Alfredo sauce over linguini and he said it was
delicious - (even though the salmon in his dish was not Alaskan, nor wild).
Mixed bag here. Great bar, pretty restaurant. Our advice: order a cocktail
and appetizers.

Tom mixes it up at the Waterfront Depot
RV Park:
Heceta Beach RV Park