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Yoakam Point Loop Hike

From Oregon Hikers Field Guide

Narrow bands of tilted rock at Mussel Reef, Yoakam Point (bobcat)
Chief's Island and the Cape Arago Lighthouse from Yoakam Point (bobcat)
Waterfall and cove on Yoakam Point (bobcat)
View to a cove and Bastendorff Beach from Yoakam Point (bobcat)
Trails at Yoakam Point (not a GPS track) (bobcat) Courtesy: Google Maps
  • Start point: Yoakam Point Trailhead
  • Ending point: Yoakam Point
  • Hike type: Loop
  • Distance: 1.1 miles
  • Elevation gain: 30 feet
  • High point: 70 feet
  • Difficulty: Easy
  • Seasons: All year
  • Family Friendly: Yes
  • Backpackable: No
  • Crowded: No
Falling

Contents

Hike Description

The Pacific shoreline south from the Coos River consists of an upturned marine terrace, once part of a large delta, that now manifests itself as a colorful set of cliffs and islands in vertical ridges of sandstone, siltstone, and shale. This is all part of the 40 million-year-old Coaledo Formation, and the tilted layers are most strikingly observed at Yoakam Point, a 25 ½ acre state natural site just north of Sunset Bay State Park. This is an undeveloped property, purchased in 1969, but a meandering network of user trails attests to decades of local use.

Take the trail leading into a woodland of Sitka spruce, waxmyrtle, salal, sedge, evergreen huckleberry, and red huckleberry. Keep left on the main trail, and see a house on your left. At another junction, stay left and pass above a pocket beach where a steep, slippery trail leads down a defile (there’s a rope here to aid your efforts). Emerge at a headland that offers views south to Lighthouse Beach, accessible to the public only by a single trail at its north end; Gregory Point; and Chief’s Island. The Cape Arago Lighthouse, deactivated in 2006, is the sole building on the island. Once part of a Coast Guard reservation, the island now belongs to the Confederated Tribes of the Coos, Lower Umpqua, and Siuslaw Indians.

Return to the junction near the house, and go left through the salal. Pass above a narrow cove with a waterfall pouring into it. This defile churns and foams with roiling breakers at high tide. The trail meanders through dark spruce and salal woods before swinging back towards the cliffs. Go left at another junction, and head out along a promontory above a narrow abyss to reach Yoakam Point. From here, you’ll get more views to the Cape Arago Lighthouse, the narrow rock ridges of Mussel Reef, Bastendorff Beach, and the Coos River’s South Jetty to the north. Mussel Reef is a smelt spawning ground from May to August.

Returning from this viewpoint, keep left as you hike along a clifftop. At one point, a broken rope attached to a spruce shows how some descend to a beach and cove just north of Bastendorff Beach. Make a left on a wider trail and, at another junction, go left through a salal thicket to find yourself above the Oceanside RV Resort. A steep trail leads down to the edge of the RV park and then out to one-mile long Bastendorff Beach. The clifftop trail continues to the highway.

Return to the previous junction, and stay left to arrive at the highway a few yards east of the trailhead.

Note that the 0.9 mile Bastendorff Bog Trail runs from the Sunset Bay State Park campground to the Yoakam Point Trailhead past a Darlingtonia swamp. Another extension to this hike would be to descend from the bluff above the RV park and hike Bastendorff Beach to the South Jetty.


Fees, Regulations, etc.

  • Open dawn to dusk
  • Undeveloped site with rough user trails only

Maps

Trip Reports

Related Discussions / Q&A

Guidebooks that cover this destination

  • none

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Page Contributors

Oregon Hikers Field Guide is built as a collaborative effort by its user community. While we make every effort to fact-check, information found here should be considered anecdotal. You should cross-check against other references before planning a hike. Trail routing and conditions are subject to change. Please contact us if you notice errors on this page.

Hiking is a potentially risky activity, and the entire risk for users of this field guide is assumed by the user, and in no event shall Trailkeepers of Oregon be liable for any injury or damages suffered as a result of relying on content in this field guide. All content posted on the field guide becomes the property of Trailkeepers of Oregon, and may not be used without permission.