Paddle the Columbia: Skamokawa to Cathlamet, Washington

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 ~ 7 miles, 3 hours ~



Note: we are not supplying boats so you must bring your own boat (canoe or kayak).

If you do not have a boat, you may be able to rent one at the Skamokawa Paddle Center but you must be able to transport the boat back to the launch after the paddle.

If you are planning to rent a boat, please arrange it in advance with the paddle center (www.columbiariverkayaking.com)

Be sure to pack a lunch, water, and sunscreen. And, of course, you must wear a PFD.

We need an RSVP by June 27th (Wed before the event). Please include your cellphone number in case we need to scrub the event in the morning due to conditions. Please RSVP to Margaret Miller at 360-423-4760.


Details

8:30 a.m.   Meet at Longview YMCA, 15th and Douglas. Avoid any Interstate delays.
                  Sign waiver with Mark Johnson, pay $3.00 per boat take-out fee to Mark
8:45 a.m.   Caravan leaves to meet Margaret at Elochoman Slough Marina, Cathlamet
9:30 a.m.   Margaret Miller goes over float plan with the group.  View take-out place.
                  Restrooms available.  Arrange shuttle after the paddle.
      Additional waiver signing. Collect remaining take-out fees and pay at office.
9:45 a.m    Depart Marina for Skamokawa Vista Park.
10:00 a.m. Arrive Skamokawa Vista Park (Restrooms)
                  Stop at kiosk to study story of Lewis and Clark Expedition in that area.
                  Pay $1.00 per boat into slot in box at ramp.
                  Put in at Skamokawa Creek. Wait for all paddlers to put in. Take photos.
                 Take a lunch, water, snacks, sunscreen.
                 Paddle Steamboat Slough, Columbia River,
 11:30 or so  Lunch at Hornstra Beach
12:30 or so  Depart Beach for Elochoman Slough Marina.
                 Paddle Elochoman Slough,
1:30 or so    Take out at Elochoman Slough Marina.
                  Shuttle to Skamokawa Vista Park to retrieve vehicles

Optional: wine and cheese at Margaret’s house, 1812 E. State Route 4
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Tour of Lewis & Clark Trail Sites Near Astoria and Seaside

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The Oregon Historic Trails Advisory Council (OHTAC) has asked our organization to lead them on a tour of several important sites along the Lewis and Clark Trail near Astoria and Seaside. Several chapter board members will be acting as guides and interpreters for this tour, and we are inviting interested chapter members to come with us and share your knowledge with OTHAC members, or just enjoy the outing. If you want to come, please RSVP to Chapter President Mark Johnson (markbarb2@comcast.net) before May 29th.

Here is our planned schedule:

  • 8:30-9:15 am - Dismal Nitch rest area - view and discuss bronze statue 
  • 9:30-10:15 am - Station Camp/Middle Village
  • 10:45-11:30 am - Salt works, Seaside
  • 11:45 am-12:45 pm - Lunch on your own
  • 1:00-1:45 pm - Indian Beach, Ecola State Park 
  • 2:15-2:45 pm - Necanicum Estuary (site of Clatsop houses and Clark visit) 
  • 3:15- 5:00 pm - Fort Clatsop 
  • 7:00 pm - Dinner Wet Dog Cafe, 144 11th Street, Astoria 503-325-6975
The OHTAC is composed of nine volunteer citizens appointed by the governor. Its responsibility is to serve as Oregon’s official liaison with other states, associations, federal departments, bureaus, recognized tribes and committees concerned with Oregon’s sixteen designated historic trails and to plan and coordinate activities which foster state and national recognition of the significance of Oregon’s historic trails.
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Clackamas County Field Trip

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Discovering the Lake Missoula Flood In Clackamas County — 

All-Day Tour — Charter bus to depart: at 8:00 AM and will return at 5:00 PM

The Lower Columbia Chapter of the Ice Age Floods Institute invites you on an all-day bus tour of Lake Missoula Floods evidence in Clackamas County. Lake Missoula Floods (LMF) expert Rick Thompson, who has extensively studied and mapped features in the area left by the cataclysmic Missoula Ice Age Floods, will lead the tour.

Highlights of the trip include: Being the first to see a newly discovered spillway between the Clackamas Valley and the Willamette Valley. Baker Cabin where the Lake Missoula Flood created a short-lived waterfall and carved holes in the basalt which the Native Americans later used for grinding stones. A bird's eye view of the Carver Gap and flood channel. The reputed second largest glacial erratic in Oregon. Canemah — a scabland on the east side of the Willamette River. Willamette Falls which is a receding waterfall.

As part of the trip you will enjoy: 1) outstanding and knowledgeable field trip leader, 2) your own copy of a very detailed and well-illustrated Field Trip Guide booklet, and 3) comfortable deluxe chartered bus with microphone system for lectures while in route.

Cost: $46 for institute members / $62 for non-members.

For inquiries: Contact Sylvia Thompson at: Sylvia@Gigaflood.com or 503-257-0144.
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The Columbia River Gorge - Garden of the Corps of Discovery

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Posters are now available for this joint Event with the Washington and Idaho Chapters.

Click on the thumbnail to open a PDF, then just choose save from the File menu, and you are ready for print.
Read more ...
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A Student in the Pacific Northwest: Sacagawea Travels the Columbia River

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A Presentation by Dr. Robert Carriker.

In 1805-1806 Sacagawea was the same age as college students would be today and, like them, she exhibited a curiosity about the natural world and the people that she encountered in the Pacific Northwest. Using maps, illustrations and direct quotes from the journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, this presentation looks at the many ways that the Indian woman who accompanied the Corps of Discovery, contributed to its success and gained an education in the process

Dr. Robert Carriker currently serves as the Distinguished Professor of College of Arts & Sciences at Gonzaga University. He is the author and co-author of several books including "Ocian in view! O! The Joy!": Lewis and Clark in Washington State and America Looks West: Lewis and Clark on the Missouri.
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Paddle to Squaxin Island 2012 (practice)

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Canoe Family Fundraiser

Clatsop-Nehalem Confederated Tribes
Paddle to Squaxin Island 2012

Practice with Warm Springs Canoe Family in Seaside, Oregon.
  • Canoe Landing at 5:30 p.m. at Quatat Park, Seaside, OR.
  • Song and Dance Presentation at Seaside Convention Center at 6:00 p.m.

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“Wintering Over” at Fort Clatsop

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fort-clatsop-places2_1
Lewis and Clark National Historical Park presents a free special living history program during the Saturday and Sunday of Martin Luther King, Jr. weekend. On Saturday, January 14, and Sunday, January 15, the Fort Clatsop replica will come alive from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. with members of the Lewis and Clark Expedition during the park's 11th annual presentation of "Wintering Over: snugly fixed in their huts."
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Getting to Know Sacagawea

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Lewis and Clark National Historical Park, Fort Clatsop is pleased to announce the next installment of its In Their Footsteps free speakers series. This program is Getting to Know Sacagawea by Elita Tom on Sunday, December 18, at 1:00 p.m. in the Netul River Room of the Fort Clatsop Visitor Center.

Read more ...
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Oregon Chapter Christmas Dinner

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The 12th annual Oregon Chapter' Christmas Dinner will be held Sunday, December 4th from 4:00 to 8:00 at the Tualatin Heritage Center, in Tualatin, Oregon. The cost is $10.00 per person. Meat, drinks and table service are furnished. Please bring a dish to share. There will be a silent auction, please bring items to be auctioned off. All proceeds go to the Chapter's Education Fund.

RESERVATIONS ARE NECESSARY.
The center is located at 8700 SW Sweek Drive.

Dr. Al Furtwangler will our guest speaker. His topic is "The Heritage of Lewis & Clark in Oregon:

RESERVATIONS CAN BE MADE BY E-MAIL AT hohnbaum@aol.com or by telephone 503-390-2886 or by mail at 6916 Wheatland Lane N. Keizer, OR. 97303.

I need to know how many reservations are needed and the names of the party.

Hope to see you there.
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The Air Gun of Meriwether Lewis on Brunot’s Island

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”The Air Gun of Meriwether Lewis on Brunot’s Island” will be presented by Dr. William K. Brunot and Michael Carrick at 7:00 p.m. on Saturday, October 15 at the Beaverton Historical Society’s Beaverton History Center. Donations accepted.

12412 SW Broadway St., Beaverton
503-430-0106
www.historicbeaverton.org

The program will be repeated at 1:00 p.m. on Sunday, October 16, at the Fort Clatsop Visitor Center.

503-861-2471
www.nps.gov/lewi/planyourvisit/directions.htm

When Captain Meriwether Lewis left Pittsburgh on August 31, 1803, his crew of 11 included three young men whose identity has been unknown until recently. Who were they? Why did Lewis’ party stop that afternoon at Brunot’s Island, only three miles downstream, and what happened there? Which Brunot’s Island residents were involved in an accident with the air rifle demonstrated by Lewis? New research by William Brunot, a descendant of Dr. Felix Brunot, the island’s owner, provides surprising answers to these questions.

Michael Carrick, former president of our chapter, specializes in research and identification of pre-1900 firearms and swords. Mike will discuss the innovative air rifle used by Meriwether Lewis and show an air pump and reservoir kit of the type issued to Austrian army soldiers of the period. Lewis likely had a similar kit for his air rifle.
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