camping

Let's Go Hiking

Sunday, July 21, 2013 - 8:00am to 10:00am
Oregon Parks and Recreation Department
Address: 
10991 Wheatland Rd NE
Gervais, OR 97026
United States

Oregon State Parks boasts miles of hiking trails. Hiking is an easy sport to begin and is the perfect way for you and your family to go outside and get some exercise together. What better way to experience some of Oregon's most beautiful scenery! Experience the accomplishment and exhilaration that can only come from a day spent on a great trail. You'll learn tips and tricks for when and where to go, what to expect and how to make the most of your hiking adventure.  Be sure to wear hiking shoes, dress for the weather, and bring a water bottle, sunscreen, sunglasses, and any other necessary personal items.  Ages 8 years old and above welcome (children 8-14 must be accompanied by a parent/guardian).

Contact Name: 
Garrett Koepke
Contact Phone: 
1-855-953-7677
Contact Email: 
garrett.koepke@state.or.us
Venue: 
Willamette Mission State Park
Venue Details: 
From Salem, drive north on I-5. Take exit 263 towards Brooks. Turn left onto Brooklake Rd NE and continue for 2 miles. Turn right onto Wheatland Rd NE. Look for Willamette Mission State Park on the left after 2.4 miles. Group will meet at the first loop on the right as you enter the park, by the information kiosk.
Cost: 
Free

Metro's Family Nature Explorers at Oxbow Regional Park

Sunday, June 23, 2013 - 10:00am to 1:00pm
Metro
Address: 
3010 SE Oxbow Parkway
Gresham, OR
United States
Park/Trail: 

Family Nature Explorers - Oxbow Regional Park


10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday, June 23


Bring your family into the woods for nature games with Metro staff and volunteer naturalists. Kick off your shoes, run in the grass, use your "owl eyes," stalk like a fox and play "nutty squirrels." Suitable for ages 4 and older. $5 per vehicle ($7 per bus) fee. Registration and payment of $11 per family required in advance. Register and pay online by visiting www.oregonmetro.gov/calendar. Find your event by searching or browsing and then follow the instructions.

Contact Phone: 
503-663-4708
Contact Email: 
parks@oregonmetro.gov
Venue: 
Oxbow Regional Park
Venue Details: 
Discover Oxbow Regional Park, a 1,000-acre natural area park nestled in the wild and scenic Sandy River Gorge.
 
 Online camping reservations now available - Reservations can now be made online using a MasterCard or Visa. Pets and alcohol are not allowed in Metro parks or natural areas. Reserve your spot now, go to http://www.reserveamerica.com/camping/Oxbow_Regional_Park/r/campgroundDetails.do?contractCode=OR&parkId=402500&topTabIndex=CampingSpot.
 
 Located within the wild and scenic Sandy River Gorge, Metro's Oxbow Regional Park offers rare access to many of the region’s natural wonders while providing a variety of unique recreational opportunities. The river draws swimmers, rafters, kayakers and drift boats carrying anglers. Twelve miles of trails invite you to explore an ancient forest with centuries-old trees and ridges and ravines carved by volcanic and glacial flows.
 
 Oxbow is a great place to see wildlife and animal tracks. The area’s natural habitat makes an ideal home for wildlife such as mink, beaver, raccoon, fox, deer, osprey, songbirds, salmon, elk, black bear, cougar and many others.More about wildlife and tracking 
 The park also offers a wooded campground, reservable picnic shelters, playgrounds, equestrian trails, and a number of environmental education opportunities. 
 
 Nature activities and field trips
 Visit upcoming events at Oxbow below, including animal tracking, ancient forest walks, salmon viewing, wildflower and mushroom identification classes, and programs especially for kids and teens. You can also plan your own field trip with a Metro naturalist especially for your classroom, group or organization.
 
 Location; From I-84, take the Troutdale exit (17). Go past the truck stop to the light and turn right on 257th. Go 3 miles to Division Street and turn left. Continue east for 5 miles following the signs. Turn left on Oxbow Parkway and drive 1.6 miles to the park entrance.
Cost: 
Registration and payment of $11 per adult required in advance plus $5 per vehicle fee, $7 per bus

Metro's Animal tracking workshop

Saturday, May 25, 2013 - 10:00am to 1:30pm
Metro
Address: 
3010 SE Oxbow Parkway
Gresham, OR
United States
Park/Trail: 

Animal tracking workshop


10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Saturday, May 25


Oxbow Regional Park is a tracker's paradise in spring, when beavers, otters, fox, mink, mice and deer leave their stories in the sand. With practice, beginners can learn to read the ground like an open book. Seasoned tracker Terry Kem covers basics of track identification and awareness skills needed to watch wildlife at close range. Suitable for all ages. $5 per vehicle ($7 per bus) fee. Registration and payment of $11 per adult required in advance. Register and pay online by visiting www.oregonmetro.gov/calendar. Find your event by searching or browsing and then follow the instructions.

Contact Phone: 
503-663-4708
Contact Email: 
parks@oregonmetro.gov
Venue: 
Oxbow Regional Park
Venue Details: 
Discover Oxbow Regional Park, a 1,000-acre natural area park nestled in the wild and scenic Sandy River Gorge.
 
 Online camping reservations now available - Reservations can now be made online using a MasterCard or Visa. Pets and alcohol are not allowed in Metro parks or natural areas. Reserve your spot now, go to http://www.reserveamerica.com/camping/Oxbow_Regional_Park/r/campgroundDetails.do?contractCode=OR&parkId=402500&topTabIndex=CampingSpot.
 
 Located within the wild and scenic Sandy River Gorge, Metro's Oxbow Regional Park offers rare access to many of the region’s natural wonders while providing a variety of unique recreational opportunities. The river draws swimmers, rafters, kayakers and drift boats carrying anglers. Twelve miles of trails invite you to explore an ancient forest with centuries-old trees and ridges and ravines carved by volcanic and glacial flows.
 
 Oxbow is a great place to see wildlife and animal tracks. The area’s natural habitat makes an ideal home for wildlife such as mink, beaver, raccoon, fox, deer, osprey, songbirds, salmon, elk, black bear, cougar and many others.More about wildlife and tracking 
 The park also offers a wooded campground, reservable picnic shelters, playgrounds, equestrian trails, and a number of environmental education opportunities. 
 
 Nature activities and field trips
 Visit upcoming events at Oxbow below, including animal tracking, ancient forest walks, salmon viewing, wildflower and mushroom identification classes, and programs especially for kids and teens. You can also plan your own field trip with a Metro naturalist especially for your classroom, group or organization.
 
 Location; From I-84, take the Troutdale exit (17). Go past the truck stop to the light and turn right on 257th. Go 3 miles to Division Street and turn left. Continue east for 5 miles following the signs. Turn left on Oxbow Parkway and drive 1.6 miles to the park entrance.
Cost: 
Registration and payment of $11 per adult required in advance plus $5 per vehicle fee, $7 per bus

Metro's Sandy River Spey Clave

Friday, May 17, 2013 - 9:00am to Sunday, May 19, 2013 - 5:00pm
Metro
Address: 
3010 SE Oxbow Parkway
Gresham, OR
United States
Park/Trail: 

All day Friday to Sunday, May 17, 18 and 19


Come to Oxbow Regional Park for the largest gathering of anglers devoted to two-hand fly rod fishing in the western hemisphere. Enroll in the free Spey casting college. View on-the-water demonstrations. Meet Northwest fly fishing legends. Free with a $5 per vehicle ($7 per bus) fee. Want to camp at Oxbow? Visit www. oregonmetro.com/oxbow for details about online reservations. Pets and alcohol are not allowed in Metro parks or natural areas. For event information, visit www. flyfishusa.com/spey-clave.

Contact Phone: 
503-663-4708
Contact Email: 
parks@oregonmetro.gov
Venue: 
Oxbow Regional Park
Venue Details: 
Discover Oxbow Regional Park, a 1,000-acre natural area park nestled in the wild and scenic Sandy River Gorge.
 
 Online camping reservations now available - Reservations can now be made online using a MasterCard or Visa. Pets and alcohol are not allowed in Metro parks or natural areas. Reserve your spot now, go to http://www.reserveamerica.com/camping/Oxbow_Regional_Park/r/campgroundDetails.do?contractCode=OR&parkId=402500&topTabIndex=CampingSpot.
 
 Located within the wild and scenic Sandy River Gorge, Metro's Oxbow Regional Park offers rare access to many of the region’s natural wonders while providing a variety of unique recreational opportunities. The river draws swimmers, rafters, kayakers and drift boats carrying anglers. Twelve miles of trails invite you to explore an ancient forest with centuries-old trees and ridges and ravines carved by volcanic and glacial flows.
 
 Oxbow is a great place to see wildlife and animal tracks. The area’s natural habitat makes an ideal home for wildlife such as mink, beaver, raccoon, fox, deer, osprey, songbirds, salmon, elk, black bear, cougar and many others.More about wildlife and tracking 
 The park also offers a wooded campground, reservable picnic shelters, playgrounds, equestrian trails, and a number of environmental education opportunities. 
 
 Nature activities and field trips
 Visit upcoming events at Oxbow below, including animal tracking, ancient forest walks, salmon viewing, wildflower and mushroom identification classes, and programs especially for kids and teens. You can also plan your own field trip with a Metro naturalist especially for your classroom, group or organization.
 
 Location; From I-84, take the Troutdale exit (17). Go past the truck stop to the light and turn right on 257th. Go 3 miles to Division Street and turn left. Continue east for 5 miles following the signs. Turn left on Oxbow Parkway and drive 1.6 miles to the park entrance.
Cost: 
$5 per vehicle fee, $7 per bus

Tour de Clack Restoration Bike Ride

Sunday, June 30, 2013 - 9:00am to 4:00pm
Clackamas River Basin Council
Address: 
Milo McIver State Park
24101 S Entrance Road
Estacada, OR 97023
United States

Put your pedals to the pavement with the Clackamas River Basin Council!  

On June 30th at 9:00 a.m., we'll be hosting the second annual free Tour de Clack restoration-themed bicycle ride.  Riders will convene at the Riverside Day Use Area at Milo McIver Park in Estacada, and depart on either a 30- or 50-mile loop through the watershed.

30-mile loop 
2,100' of elevation gain/loss 
Route Map
This route leaves Milo McIver beside River Mill Reservoir along a gravel path and then crosses the river into Estacada for the first stop--an installed bioswale at the Estacada Library. You'll then continue on through bucolic countyside and to a site on Eagle Creek near Bonnie Lure Park planted with native trees and shrubs as part of CRBC's SHADE OUR STREAMS project. Leaving here, you encounter the first two climbs and then a fast, fun descent to Barton Park and back over the river. The ride meanders on quiet roads through more farm land with fantastic views of the Clackamas River and Mount Hood. After another climb and downhill you arrive at the final stop--a fish habitat restoration project on Mattoon Road that features large woody debris, tree planting, and fish passage barrier removal. Shortly after leaving that stop the ride heads up Stormer Road, the last and most difficult climb. Don't worry, it's steep but quite short, and then you're a quick downhill away from the end of the ride and a dip in the Clack!

50-mile loop 
4,300' of elevation gain/loss 
Route Map
This more challenging option leads you through some of the finest road riding around. It departs along the same route as the 30 mile route and then splits off after the Bonnie Lure rest stop. Soon you head up Wildcat Mountain Drive and loop around the Bear Creek valley, through lush forests and past Eagle Fern Park. From there the ride gradually gains elevation through rolling hills to a rest stop at an engineered riffle and bridge replacement at Porter Road. More rolling hills lead you back down to the Clackamas River where you'll connect to the PGE multi-use path along the North Fork Reservoir. This will bring you to the last stop of the ride at Faraday Lake before you re-enter Milo McIver.

 

Participants can expect to see beautiful views of the upper Clackamas watershed, learn about the projects of CRBC, and have a great time!

Attendees should wear a helmet and bring a water bottle for refilling along the route.  Water and snacks will be available at all stops, and the route also includes stores where items can be purchased.  Riders must be age 15 and up.  

Please note that though the ride is offered free of charge, we ask participants to support our hosts at Milo McIver State Park by paying the $5 entry fee.  Participants can also consider making it a weekend getaway and camping at Milo McIver.

The Tour de Clack is funded by a grant from the Oregon Watershed Enhancement Board.

Contact Name: 
Rebecca Walker
Contact Phone: 
503-303-4372 x101
Contact Email: 
rebecca@clackamasriver.org
Venue: 
Milo McIver State Park
Venue Details: 
We'll be in the Riverside Day Use area, near the fish hatchery. When you enter the park, continue straight at the stop sign and follow the paved park road until its conclusion at a parking lot.
Cost: 
FREE

National Get Outdoors Day at Fort Vancouver National Historic Site

Saturday, June 8, 2013 - 10:00am to 3:00pm
National Park Service
Address: 
Fort Vancouver National Historic Site
1501 Evergreen Blvd.
Vancouver, WA 98661
United States

On Saturday, June 8th, 2013, celebrate healthy, active, outdoor fun in your urban national park! Experience all kinds of outdoor activities at Fort Vancouver National Historic Site - your Gateway to the Great Outdoors. Partners from federal, state, and local agencies, nonprofit organizations and the recreation industry are again teaming up to host the fifth annual National Get Outdoors Day (GO Day) to encourage outdoor fun at sites across the nation.


GO Day at Fort Vancouver includes the annual free Brigade Encampment, where costumed interpreters re-enact the springtime return of Hudson's Bay Company fur brigades to Fort Vancouver.


Prime goals of GO Day are reaching currently underserved populations and first-time visitors to public lands, and reconnecting youth to the great outdoors.

Contact Name: 
Cassie Anderson
Contact Phone: 
(360) 816-6247
Contact Email: 
cassie_anderson@nps.gov
Venue: 
Fort Vancouver National Historic Site
Venue Details: 
Fort Vancouver National Historic Site, a unit of the National Park Service, is at the heart of the Vancouver National Historic Reserve. The Vancouver National Historic Reserve brings together a national park, a premier archaeological site, the region's first military post, an international fur trade emporium, one of the oldest operating airfields, the first national historic site west of the Mississippi River, and a waterfront trail and environmental center on the banks of the Columbia River. The partners of the Reserve teach visitors about the fur trade, early military life, natural history, and pioneers in aviation, all within the context of Vancouver's role in regional and national development. The Reserve's vast array of public programs -- including living history events, cultural demonstrations, exhibits, active archaeology, and other special events and activities -- create a dynamic, fun, and unique tourist destination for people of all ages.
Cost: 
Free

Cascadia Wild-OUTDOOR SURVIVAL SKILLS - Cordage basics

Sunday, July 21, 2013 - 1:00pm to 5:00pm
Cascadia Wild
Address: 
1912 NE Killingsworth St. 97211
Portland, OR 97211
United States

Sunday July 21st from 1 to 5pm
$25 / $5 for members of Cascadia wild.
Come learn the basics of making cordage from natural materials. Topics covered will include material selection, processing fibers and reverse wrap cordage. 
Location: Cascadia wild office 1912 NE Killingsworth St. Portland, OR  97211.
To register: Visit here http://cordage.eventbrite.com/ to register and pay online.  Or contact us at info@cascadiawild.org or 503-235-9533 to register and pay by check or cash. Include your name / contact information (email and phone), and the class(es) you are signing up for. 

Contact Name: 
Cascadia Wild
Contact Phone: 
503-235-9533
Contact Email: 
info@cascadiawild.org
Venue: 
Cascadia Wild
Cost: 
$25

Cascadia Wild-OUTDOOR SURVIVAL SKILLS - Shelter construction

Sunday, June 16, 2013 - 12:00pm to 4:00pm
Cascadia Wild
Address: 
7300 SE Harmony Road
Milwaukie, OR 97222
United States

Sunday, June 16th, Noon to 4
$25 / $5 for members of Cascadia wild.
Learn how to use the natural materials around you to build a shelter that will keep you warm and dry for the night. Class will cover building a debris hut, improving on natural shelters and choosing a good location for your campsite.
Location: 3-Creeks Natural Area (also called North Clackamas District Park or Harmony Road Neighborhood Park). We will meet at the adjacentNorth Clackamas Aquatic Park, located at 7300 SE Harmony Road.
To register: visit here http://shelterconstruction.eventbrite.com/ to register and pay online.  Or contact us at info@cascadiawild.org or 503-235-9533 to register and pay by check or cash. Include your name / contact information (email and phone), and the class(es) you are signing up for. Registration and payment required in advance.

Contact Name: 
Cascadia Wild
Contact Phone: 
503-235-9533
Contact Email: 
info@cascadiawild.org
Venue: 
3-Creeks Natural Area
Venue Details: 
3-Creeks Natural Area (also called North Clackamas District Park or Harmony Road Neighborhood Park). We will meet at the adjacentNorth Clackamas Aquatic Park, located at 7300 SE Harmony Road.
Cost: 
$25

Cascadia Wild - outdoor survival skills - Friction fire for beginners

Sunday, May 26, 2013 - 1:00pm to 5:00pm
Cascadia Wild
Address: 
1912 NE Killingsworth St. 97211
Portland, OR 97211
United States

Sunday May 26th, 1pm to 5pm
$25 / $5 for members of Cascadia wild.
Come join us to learn the basics of bow and drill fire making. Topics covered will include material selections, set construction and techniques to get you started on your way to making fire. 
Location: Cascadia wild office 1912 NE Killingsworth St. Portland, OR  97211.
To register: Visit here http://frictionfire.eventbrite.com/ to register and pay online.  Or contact us at info@cascadiawild.org or 503-235-9533 to register and pay by check or cash. Include your name / contact information (email and phone), and the class(es) you are signing up for. 

Contact Name: 
Cascadia Wild
Contact Phone: 
503-235-9533
Contact Email: 
info@cascadiawild.org
Venue: 
Cascadia Wild
Cost: 
$25

Make Fire With Sticks! Family Friendly

Saturday, September 29, 2012 - 1:00pm to 4:00pm
Rewild Portland
Address: 
Northeast 7th Avenue
Portland, OR 97212
United States
Park/Trail: 

We would love to invite you to this Saturday's Rewild Skill-Share, our afternoon rewilding social networking picnic.  Make new friends and hang out with old while sharing skills, ideas and strategies for creating new cultures based on humanities prehistoric past. We welcome all levels of experience.This month's theme is: Fire by Friction! We haven't had a fire-focused rewild skill-share in a while. We'll be playing with bow-drills, hand drills, maybe a fire plow and if anyone sh...

ows up with a bamboo fire saw, you'll get a dozen high-fives!Materials to bring:• Carving Knife• Nylon Cord• Natural Cord• Cedar, Cottonwood or other soft heart wood• Any other wood cutting and carving tools• Jute or other tinder materialOther stuff to bring is your family & friends, water, healthy paleo snacks to share, a carving knife, a blanket or chair to sit on, materials for your project, a musical instrument to play and a $5-10 suggested donation to support our efforts. Remember: “dress to impress”. This is a social event after all!See you there! http://www.rewildportland.com/educational-programs/rewildcamp/ https://www.facebook.com/#!/rewildportland   

 

Contact Name: 
Sarah Hill
Contact Phone: 
(360) 901 5255
Contact Email: 
sarah@rewildportland.com
Venue: 
Irving Park
Cost: 
Free! $5 suggested donation

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