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An evening view over the slough Waterfowl at the reserve. South Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve (SSNERR) is a 4,770-acre (19 km 2) National Estuarine Research Reserve located on Coos Bay Estuary, in the U.S. state of Oregon. Its headquarters are in Charleston.
Slough Creek's second meadow is about a three-hour hike. Cutthroat trout in Slough offer good dry fly fishing with heavy hatches of caddis, pale morning duns, and large Green Drakes in July. Terrestrials are prominent in late summer. [6] [7] In the summer of 2007 an angler reported the first rainbow trout to be caught upstream of the Slough ...
Baskett Slough National Wildlife Refuge is in northwestern Oregon, 10 miles (16 km) west of Salem in Polk County. The Refuge consists of 1,173 acres (4.75 km 2 ) of cropland , which provide forage for wintering geese, 300 acres (1.2 km 2 ) of forests , 550 acres (2.2 km 2 ) of grasslands , and 500 acres (2.0 km 2 ) of shallow water seasonal ...
The Oregon Parks and Recreation Department is seeking approval to replace the current website, from ReserveAmerica.com, seen here, with a new one that would go live in late 2024 or early 2025.
an impoundment of Dry Creek Agency Lake: connected to Upper Klamath Lake: Lake Allison: former lake filling the Willamette Valley to a depth of 300 to 400 feet (91 to 122 m) Alvord Lake: a terminus for streams near the Alvord Desert: Aneroid Lake: in the Eagle Cap Wilderness: Antelope Flat Reservoir: in central Oregon, an impoundment of Bear Creek
Koberg Beach State Recreation Site is a state park in Hood River County, Oregon United States, administered by the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department.The park offers a wayside rest area for west bound traffic on Interstate 84.
The park was named after Oswald West, the 14th Governor of Oregon and the man who led preserving Oregon's beaches for public use. A memorial marker for Matt Kramer, a journalist whose articles helped shift public opinion to preserve the beaches, sits at the trail divide between Short Sands beach and Cape Falcon.
The river is named for Jedediah Smith, who in 1828 led a party of explorers from Utah overland to northern California and southern Oregon. From California, they traveled north to the Umpqua River, camping along its banks near the mouth of the Smith River on July 13. An attack by Native Americans on July 14 killed 15 of Smith's party.