Nehalem Bay State Park is officially one of my new favorites! And I've got to say, thank you Oregon State Parks for having Yurts and Cabins so we can get a little camping in during the winter.
I do not reccomend going out on a Friday night after work in the winter if you can avoid it or leave early so you get to camp before complete darkness sets in. Hwy 101 in January after the sun has set with thick layers of fog around every corner was one of the most intense 17 miles of my life! On the way home seeing the cliff edges I was driving on the night before in day light made me squeemish. It was worth it though. The yurts are perfect little reteats.
For check in during the winter evenings you have to knock on the camp host door and they check you in. It took a while for us to figure that out because there weren't very clear directions. We had to drive through a flooded road in the campground to get to our cozy little yurt, the people in front of us chose to back up and not drive through, it wasn't as bad as they thought.
There was a heater, and plenty of room to get cozy. There was also a nice sized deck cover so if it rained we had room to cook and sit underneath. But it did't rain while we were there is was acutally pretty warm in the evening, warm enough to walk to the beach and make an attempt at clamning. It was pitch black and Brandon thought a sneaker wave was going to get us during the low tide at 9 o'clock at night, so we headed back to camp for a fire and some food.
The yurts have a fire pit and some space for chairs to sit around the campfire, it's not as much as a typical campground. There were some yurts that had huge decks and some that had very small decks, we marked them on the campground map.
One thing I really liked about this campground is that you are esentially right on the beach with a sand dune between you and the beach protecting you from the ocean winds. Cape Lookout has many sites that do not have this luxury. There are also a ton of sites, which is nice for busy summer weekends, and it's also right on the bay which has crabbing and claming. We saw raccoons when we arrived and again later at night by the campfire, we saw a lot of elk poop in the campsites and deer prints at the bay, so there is plenty of wild life.
Hi Stephanie, great review of NBSP! We were just there for the first time this weekend and loved it. Would you mind sharing which of those yurts had the huge covered decks? We might try some winter yurting there ourselves. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteHi Tom - The yurt we stayed in was YURA38 and it had a large deck. There were more and I've made note of them, but I'll need to find my notes and get back to you with more.
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