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Difference between revisions of "Yaquina Estuary Hike"

From Oregon Hikers Field Guide

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[[Category:Oregon Coast]]
 
[[Category:Oregon Coast]]
 
[[Category:Easy Hikes]]
 
[[Category:Easy Hikes]]
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[[Category:Universal Access Hikes]]
 
[[Category:Family Hikes]]
 
[[Category:Family Hikes]]
 
[[Category:All Season Hikes]]
 
[[Category:All Season Hikes]]
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[[Category:Urban Hikes]]
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[[Category:Wildlife Viewing Hikes]]
 
[[Category:Wildflower Hikes]]
 
[[Category:Wildflower Hikes]]
 
[[Category:Hikes]]
 
[[Category:Hikes]]
  
[[Image:MikeMillerParkLoop1.jpg|thumb|400px|Hiking the spruce/hemlock forest, Mike Miller Park ''(bobcat)'']]
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[[Image:YaquinaEstuary1.jpg|thumb|400px|Beach along the Estuary Trail ''(bobcat)'']]
[[Image:MikeMillerParkLoop2.jpg|thumb|250px|The pond, Mike Miller Park ''(bobcat)'']]
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[[Image:YaquinaEstuary2.jpg|thumb|250px|Tree lupine ''(Lupinus arbustus)'', Estuary Trail ''(bobcat)'']]
[[Image:MikeMillerParkLoop4.jpg|thumb|250px|Rough-skinned newts, Mike Miller Park ''(bobcat)'']]
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[[Image:YaquinaEstuary3.jpg|thumb|250px|Back channel on King Slough ''(bobcat)'']]
[[Image:MikeMillerParkLoop3.jpg|thumb|250px|Large Sitka spruce, Mike Miller Park ''(bobcat)'']]
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[[Image:YaquinaEstuary4.jpg|thumb|250px|Paintbrush owl clover ''(Castilleja ambigua)'', Estuary Trail ''(bobcat)'']]
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[[Image:YaquinaEstuaryMap.png|thumb|400px|The Estuary Trail in red; possible loop return in white ''(bobcat)'' Courtesy: ''Google Maps'']]
  
 
{{Start point|Hatfield Marine Science Center Trailhead}}
 
{{Start point|Hatfield Marine Science Center Trailhead}}
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* Trail log:  
 
* Trail log:  
 
* Hike Type: In and out
 
* Hike Type: In and out
{{Distance|0.7 miles}}  
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{{Distance|0.9 miles}}  
 
{{Elevation gain|10 feet}}  
 
{{Elevation gain|10 feet}}  
 
* High Point: 10 feet
 
* High Point: 10 feet
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=== Hike Description ===
 
=== Hike Description ===
The one-mile Mike Miller Park Educational Trail circles a square of donated forest in Newport's South Beach area. While the area has been logged in the past, some large old growth Sitka spruce still tower over a lush and mossy understory. There are usually interpretive brochures available at the trailhead. Two newer trails lead off the loop trail to double the distance of the outing: the Wilder Trail on the north side of the property leads to a newly created suburb, and the Emery Trail, named after Will Emery, the benefactor who donated the land and has helped to pay for trail development in this area, heads south from the loop to connect with 50th Street. A trail is proposed from here to lead back along 50th to the [[Mike Miller Educational Trailhead]].
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Oregon State University's Hatfield Marine Science Center sits on low ground near the NOAA Marine Operations Center and the Oregon Coast Aquarium. While the exhibits in the Visitor Center here do not match those of the Aquarium, they do complement them and entry is free. In addition, a short interpretive trail leads around the shore and enlightens the visitor on the importance of estuaries and the teeming life forms that inhabit them. Yaquina Bay is essentially a drowned river mouth and the second-largest such ecosystem on the Oregon Coast. Time your visit for low tide, when the mud flats will host flocks of hungry shore birds.
  
The trail begins at a rock jetty at the far end of the parking lot for the Marine Science Center. Check out the map of the estuary here. The paved tread leads off to the right and crosses a footbridge before avoiding a short washed out area at a cobble beach. A sign here explains the Yaquina Estuary system. Shrubby willow, wax-myrtle, shore pine and Sitka spruce dot the open area. The paved trail resumes, always a few yards from the beach and heads in along King Slough. At a shelter, there’s an interpretive panel on the mud flats. In season, people may be clamming here when the tide is out, a time when shorebirds will also be foraging on the flats. At a junction, keep left (Going right takes you into the Marine Science Center complex) and pass a willow thicket. Walk by a picnic table and reach a wonderful [[King Slough Boardwalk|elevated boardwalk]] over a swampy arm of the estuary vegetated by saltgrass, glasswort, plantain and owl clover. After the boardwalk and the last information signs, the trail hits a road with No Trespassing on the left and the Marine Science Center complex on the right.  
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The trail begins at a rock jetty at the far end of the parking lot for the Marine Science Center. Check out the map of the estuary here. Get views across the water to the [[Bay Boulevard Trailhead|Newport Bayfront]] and back to the [[Yaquina Bay Bridge]]. The paved tread leads off to the right and crosses a footbridge before avoiding a short washed out area at a cobble beach. A sign here explains the Yaquina Estuary system. Shrubby willow, wax-myrtle, shore pine and Sitka spruce dot the open area. The paved trail resumes, always a few yards from the beach and heads in along King Slough. At a shelter, there’s an interpretive panel on the mud flats. In season, people may be clamming here when the tide is out, a time when shorebirds, especially whimbrels and sandpipers, will also be foraging on the flats. At a junction, keep left (Going right takes you into the Marine Science Center complex) and pass a willow thicket. Walk by a picnic table and reach a wonderful [[King Slough Boardwalk|elevated boardwalk]] over a swampy arm of the estuary vegetated by saltgrass, glasswort, plantain and owl clover. After the boardwalk and the last information signs, the trail hits a road with No Trespassing on the left and the Marine Science Center complex on the right.  
  
 
You can return along the Estuary Trail or go right and then left on 25th Street to walk out to the paved Tsunami Evacuation Trail which runs alongside OSU Drive to make a loop back to the [[Hatfield Marine Science Center Trailhead]]. You can also visit the Oregon Coast Aquarium from here by going left from 25th Street.
 
You can return along the Estuary Trail or go right and then left on 25th Street to walk out to the paved Tsunami Evacuation Trail which runs alongside OSU Drive to make a loop back to the [[Hatfield Marine Science Center Trailhead]]. You can also visit the Oregon Coast Aquarium from here by going left from 25th Street.
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=== Maps ===
 
=== Maps ===
{{Hikemaps|latitude=44.60180|longitude=-124.05204}}
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{{Hikemaps|latitude=44.62320|longitude=-124.04374}}
* [http://www.co.lincoln.or.us/parks/page/mike-miller-park Mike Miller Park Trail System (Lincoln County Parks)]
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* [http://hmsc.oregonstate.edu/files/visitor-center/visit/docs/map-hmsc-bldgs.pdf Hatfield Marine Science Center (Oregon State University)]
  
 
=== Fees, Regulations, etc. ===
 
=== Fees, Regulations, etc. ===
* No fees
+
* Admission to Visitor Center is free (donation suggested)
* Dogs on leash
+
* No pets permitted
* Campground, picnic area, restrooms
+
* Guided nature walks in the summer
  
 
{{TripReports|{{PAGENAME}}}}
 
{{TripReports|{{PAGENAME}}}}
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=== Guidebooks that cover this hike ===
 
=== Guidebooks that cover this hike ===
* ''75 Hikes in Oregon's Coast Range and Siskiyous'' by Rhonda & George Ostertag
 
 
* ''Best Easy Day Hikes: Oregon's North Coast'' by Lizann Dunegan
 
* ''Best Easy Day Hikes: Oregon's North Coast'' by Lizann Dunegan
 
* ''Hiking the Oregon Coast'' by Lizann Dunegan
 
* ''Hiking the Oregon Coast'' by Lizann Dunegan
 
* ''120 Hikes on the Oregon Coast'' by Bonnie Henderson
 
* ''120 Hikes on the Oregon Coast'' by Bonnie Henderson
 
* ''Day Hiking: Oregon Coast'' by Bonnie Henderson
 
* ''Day Hiking: Oregon Coast'' by Bonnie Henderson
* ''100 Hikes/Travel Guide: Oregon Coast and the Coast Range'' by William L. Sullivan
 
* ''The Dog Lover's Companion to Oregon'' by Val Mallinson
 
  
 
=== More Links ===
 
=== More Links ===
* [http://www.co.lincoln.or.us/parks/page/mike-miller-park Mike Miller Park (Lincoln County Parks)]
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* [http://aquarium.org/exhibits/estuary-trail Estuary Trail (Oregon Coast Aquarium)]
* [http://www.co.lincoln.or.us/sites/default/files/fileattachments/parks/page/531/mike_miller_pamphlet.pdf Mike Miller Park Educational Trail Interpretive Brochure (Lincoln County Parks)]
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* [http://hmsc.oregonstate.eduHatfield Marine Science Center (Oregon State University)]
* [http://alltrails.com/trail/us/oregon/mike-miller-educational-trail Mike Miller Educational Trail (AllTrails)]
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* [http://audubonportland.org/local-birding/iba/iba-map/yaquina Yaquina Bay (Audubon Society of Portland)]
* [http://www.wildernewport.com/tag/mike-miller-park"It's Wilder in South Beach" (Wilder Newport)]
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* [http://yaquina.info/ybn/bird/hmscbrd.htm Common Birds of Aquatic Areas Near the HMSC Estuary Trail (Yaquina Birders)]
* [http://www.wildernewport.com/developer-donates-land-for-mike-miller-park-2/ "Developer donates land for Mike Miller Park" (Wilder Newport)]
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* [http://hmsc.oregonstate.edu/feature-story/summer-brings-estuary-bird-walks Summer brings estuary, bird walks (Hatfield Marine Science Center)]
  
  
 
=== Contributors ===
 
=== Contributors ===
 
* [[User:bobcat|bobcat]] (creator)
 
* [[User:bobcat|bobcat]] (creator)

Revision as of 00:19, 17 July 2015

Beach along the Estuary Trail (bobcat)
Tree lupine (Lupinus arbustus), Estuary Trail (bobcat)
Back channel on King Slough (bobcat)
Paintbrush owl clover (Castilleja ambigua), Estuary Trail (bobcat)
The Estuary Trail in red; possible loop return in white (bobcat) Courtesy: Google Maps

Contents

Hike Description

Oregon State University's Hatfield Marine Science Center sits on low ground near the NOAA Marine Operations Center and the Oregon Coast Aquarium. While the exhibits in the Visitor Center here do not match those of the Aquarium, they do complement them and entry is free. In addition, a short interpretive trail leads around the shore and enlightens the visitor on the importance of estuaries and the teeming life forms that inhabit them. Yaquina Bay is essentially a drowned river mouth and the second-largest such ecosystem on the Oregon Coast. Time your visit for low tide, when the mud flats will host flocks of hungry shore birds.

The trail begins at a rock jetty at the far end of the parking lot for the Marine Science Center. Check out the map of the estuary here. Get views across the water to the Newport Bayfront and back to the Yaquina Bay Bridge. The paved tread leads off to the right and crosses a footbridge before avoiding a short washed out area at a cobble beach. A sign here explains the Yaquina Estuary system. Shrubby willow, wax-myrtle, shore pine and Sitka spruce dot the open area. The paved trail resumes, always a few yards from the beach and heads in along King Slough. At a shelter, there’s an interpretive panel on the mud flats. In season, people may be clamming here when the tide is out, a time when shorebirds, especially whimbrels and sandpipers, will also be foraging on the flats. At a junction, keep left (Going right takes you into the Marine Science Center complex) and pass a willow thicket. Walk by a picnic table and reach a wonderful elevated boardwalk over a swampy arm of the estuary vegetated by saltgrass, glasswort, plantain and owl clover. After the boardwalk and the last information signs, the trail hits a road with No Trespassing on the left and the Marine Science Center complex on the right.

You can return along the Estuary Trail or go right and then left on 25th Street to walk out to the paved Tsunami Evacuation Trail which runs alongside OSU Drive to make a loop back to the Hatfield Marine Science Center Trailhead. You can also visit the Oregon Coast Aquarium from here by going left from 25th Street.


Maps

Fees, Regulations, etc.

  • Admission to Visitor Center is free (donation suggested)
  • No pets permitted
  • Guided nature walks in the summer

Trip Reports

Related Discussions / Q&A

Guidebooks that cover this hike

  • Best Easy Day Hikes: Oregon's North Coast by Lizann Dunegan
  • Hiking the Oregon Coast by Lizann Dunegan
  • 120 Hikes on the Oregon Coast by Bonnie Henderson
  • Day Hiking: Oregon Coast by Bonnie Henderson

More Links


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.