The Daily Courier

State looks to improve Oregon Coast Trail

- By KATIE FRANKOWICZ

ASTORIA, Ore. — Dissuaded by snow and dangerous river crossings, some backpacker­s ditched the popular Pacific Crest Trail in early 2017 and turned to the shorter, less wellknown Oregon Coast Trail.

But though the trail was declared "hikeable" in 1988, hikers looking to walk it from end to end struggled to navigate gaps between segments and faced unclear signs, few legal camping options and, in general, a trail that wasn’t quite ready for them.

Now the state is looking for solutions. This month, the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department held several open house presentati­ons to gather feedback about the trail.

The effort builds on previous connection strategies, like a 2011 plan that identified 31 gaps in the trail that ranged from natural hazards like creek and river crossings to stretches where hikers have to hop onto highway shoulders to reach the next section.

Though the state has worked over the years to address the gaps, Robin Wilcox, a senior state parks and trails planner, estimates over 20 remain today. Some of them are more recent obstacles, like a landslide in Ecola State Park that sent a portion of the trail into the ocean.

There are other issues, as well, tied to changes in property ownership and questions about how best to maintain the trail’s different sections.

These types of challenges are common with any long trail system, said Chris Havel, the associate director for Oregon State Parks.

“That’s always the case with long trails,”he said. “You get the first 70 per cent, 80 per cent figured out ... but even portions of the Pacific Crest Trail went unresolved for decades.”

The Oregon Coast Trail runs for more than 600 kilometres. The trail is not continuous, interrupte­d by highways, towns, property lines and the ocean. In some places, hikers must time their trek with the tides .

Most people experience the trail through day hikes at state parks, perhaps not even realizing they are walking a piece of a much larger system.

“You know, honestly, I think one of the main challenges still is that people don’t even know the Oregon Coast Trail is a thing, that it exists and why it could be important for them,” Wilcox said in a presentati­on to state House lawmakers in May.

On the North Coast, the Oregon Coast Trail winds through Fort Stevens, Ecola and Oswald West state parks.

The state has identified five trail gaps in Clatsop County — two in 2011 and three more recently. They include Hug Point, where a rocky outcroppin­g is impassable at high tide; Camp Rilea, where the trail, which runs along the beach, is closed periodical­ly due to artillery training; and areas where the trail turns onto local roads and U.S. Highway 101.

One of the newer gaps emerged in 2016 after a landslide snipped a portion of the trail that runs between Indian Beach and Ecola Point in half.

The state’s plans to address gaps in the Oregon Coast Trail will dovetail with work to reroute this section in Ecola State Park outside of the slide zone.

As Wilcox and her team continue to look at how to improve the trail system, Cox anticipate­s conversati­ons about where camping could be allowed might come up. For the section of the trail he oversees, he believes there could be an opportunit­y to work with cities and counties.

The state expects the work of identifyin­g gaps along the Oregon Coast Trail, improving safety and connectivi­ty, adding signs and looking at the trail as a whole will take several years.

A new website —oregoncoas­ttrailplan­ning.com — provides regular updates and also gives people several ways to submit feedback or informatio­n.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? The 10-kilometres Gwynn Creek Loop takes hikers through old-growth forest and along the Oregon Coast Trail.
The Associated Press The 10-kilometres Gwynn Creek Loop takes hikers through old-growth forest and along the Oregon Coast Trail.

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