September 2019 – Nehalem Oregon
Dogs joy! |
I know I’ve said it before, but returning to Nehalem Bay State Park
is sort of like coming home. This is our fifth stint in six years, so the
places and the people are pretty familiar.
This is the first time that we have hosted in September. In years past we just worked in October. It turned out to be both pretty familiar and quite different at the same time.
This is the first time that we have hosted in September. In years past we just worked in October. It turned out to be both pretty familiar and quite different at the same time.
The main difference is that the park operates with the full
ranger staff in September, so the park office is open until 9 PM every night.
That means that the rangers meet and process all of the incoming campers,
eliminating most of the camper contact that we like so much. We were also
assigned to a different section of the park, site D17, which is far removed
from the action at the A2 site.
D17 is a tight fit for Ripley |
Another significant difference was the work assignment. Since
the host roles vary by the site they are given, our September duties were much
different than we had in past years. The D17 hosts clean yurts and sections of
the campground, period. Once that was done, the rest of the day was wide open.
This is a much more traditional host assignment than we had been used to. It
took us awhile to realize that campers wouldn’t be coming to our door all day,
and that we weren’t expected to hang around after we finished the daily work
assignment. That gave us lots of free time, something we aren’t used to.
We don’t host just to clean yurts and camp sites in exchange for a free site.
We don’t host just to clean yurts and camp sites in exchange for a free site.
The neighbors are still around |
One nice surprise was that we got to see Milton and Lynnette
Hansen before they pulled out at the end of the month. We missed them last
year; we arrived the day they left. They were hosting at one of the day-use parks in Manhattan Beach , not in
the campground itself, so we got together for dinner in Garibaldi one evening to catch
up before they headed home. Unfortunately, Milton didn’t get to do much fishing this
year, so we’ll have to make do with store-bought salmon this Fall.
Squirrel! |
Books I enjoyed recently include Kindest Regards by Ted Kooser, and Canadian Living by Peter Gzowski.
Wines that we discovered this month include Eliseo Silva NV
Syrah and Ryan Patrick Redhead Red, both from Washington .
More soon,
Bob
No comments:
Post a Comment