Skip to product information
1 of 1

NOOK Press

16-Hour Road Trip: Oregon Coast

16-Hour Road Trip: Oregon Coast

Regular price $13.98 USD
Regular price Sale price $13.98 USD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Quantity
Author and photographer Marques Vickers escorts you on a scenic whirlwind adventure along the picturesque Oregon coastline. With his edition "16-Hour Road Trip: Oregon Coast", Vickers begins his pictorial journey from the Art Deco styled Isaac Lee Patterson Bridge to the stunning sunset descent below Neskowin cove.

His over 125 images capture the natural splendor of the Oregon Sand Dunes National Park, Humbug Mountain's base creeks and fauna, Battle Rock, Bullards Beach, Spinreel Campground, Tahkenitch, Beaver and Lagoon Creeks, Haceta Head, Devil's Churn, Seat Rock Wayside, Yaquina Head and the Devil's Punchbowl. At each site, Vickers provides detailed historical background and insight into each destination's significance and topography.

En route, Vickers' camera feasts on the design imagery of the notable Haceta Head and Yaquina Head Lighthouses and the Patterson, Bullards and Yaquina Bay Bridges. The Oregon Sand Dunes National Park, which stretches forty miles from the Coos River in North Bend to the Siuslaw River in Florence, is prolifically immortalized from numerous photographic perspectives. The unspoiled Dunes comprise the largest expanse of sand dunes in North America.

Two significant coastal rock formations, the Devil's Churn and Punchbowl are intimately photographed detailing the swirling turbulence, sprays and force generated by the relentlessly pounding surf within.

The photographic visit is encapsulated within a sixteen-hour visit and locations chosen based on their beauty and accessibility. Vickers freely admits that equally worthy sites were bypassed due to time and daylight constraints. The author concludes that any excursion along the Oregon coastline mandates an extended time commitment and closer scrutiny.

For the road trip warrior, this abbreviated jaunts skims a most desirable surface of a 250-mile highway stretch. Lesser traveled and renowned than its California counterpart, the scenery compares equally in aesthetics without the crowds.

View full details