It has been a couple of years since we kicked off a new year with a hike but January 1st, 2023 was forecast to be a lone dry day in the foreseeable future. Not only was the day supposed to be rain free, it was also going to be at least partly sunny. While Heather works back from her injury we are targeting shorter hikes that don’t involve too much elevation gain. Specifically looking for hikes that fit these criteria has led us to some hikes that we might have otherwise overlooked. We discovered several such trails in Lincoln City.
I put together a plan to visit five of the city’s open space areas over the course of four stops. The four stops would be just under six and a half miles with approximately 800′ of cumulative elevation gain. Following the hikes our plan was to have lunch at the newly opened Pelican Brewing Siletz Bay Brewpub.
Since the brewpub is located just south of Lincoln City we planned to start at the northern most trailhead and worked our way south. This meant that the Friends of Wildwoods Trailhead. The hike here was supposed to be a 1 mile out-and-back with a short side spur to a platform overlooking a swamp.


We somehow managed to turn it into a 1.5-mile hike including a loop that isn’t shown on any maps. It’s worth noting that in all of these open space areas we visited on this day there were multiple use trails leading off in different directions. We used our GPS a surprising number of times throughout the day. One nice feature was that there were QR codes available at the trailheads which accessed maps for our phones. Even so we somehow managed to not find the viewing platform but instead wound up overlooking the wetlands from a different spot.



Junction with the spur Wetlands Trail. The larger sign on the left is a Trail Challenge sign. We would see several more over the course of the day. The challenge, we learned later, is to visit all eight of the Open Spaces.
End of the trail at East Tide Ave.

The wetlands.
We may have overlooked the trail down to the platform due to debris left over from a big storm the week before which packed wind gusts over 70 mph. We had been prepared for the possibility that some of the trail might be inaccessible due to damage but overall they were in good shape.
After finishing our hike we hopped in the car and drove less than a mile south to our second stop at Regatta Park.
Devil’s Lake from Regatta Park.
From this trailhead we would visit two open spaces, Regatta and Spring Lake. Before hitting the trails though we walked down to the shore of Devil’s Lake to get a closer look.





From the lake we walked back uphill across the parking lot to a large Nature Trail sign.

Once again the plethora of trails got the best of us and our route through the Regatta Open Space was not how we’d meant to do it, but we managed to see what we had wanted to.
Pointer for a heritage tree.

Sitka Spruce. This approximately 400-year-old Oregon Heritage Tree is 212′ tall with a 32 1/2′ diameter.

Another Trail Challenge sign.
After looping through the Regatta Open Space we walked uphill out of the park to West Devil’s Lake Road where we turned left for 400′ to a trail on the far side of the road.
Heading out of Regatta Park
Neat dragon sculpture.
West Devil’s Lake Road. The trail is ahead on the right just beyond the driveway on that side.
There was no sign along the road but there was a trail marker just uphill.
This was the Spring Lake Trail which made a short steep climb to a ridge top.

The trail briefly leveled out atop the ridge before diving down the other side.
The area around Spring Lake was by far the most confusing of the day with numerous trails crisscrossing and intersecting seemingly every few feet. We used the GPS quite a bit here as we made our way counterclockwise around the lake.
This junction is where our loop began and ended.
Another fork just beyond the one in the previous photo.
Footbridge over the northern arm of the lake.
Spring Lake from the footbridge.
Found another one.

Small trailhead at 14th Street.
Spring Lake from the 14th Street Trailhead.
We had to walk a few feet along 14th Street to find the trail on the east side of the lake.

Approaching the junction at the end of our loop.
After completing the loop around the lake we returned to our car and drove another 2.7 miles south to the Agness Creek Open Space.
There are two trailheads here, a north and a south, separated by 200′. We parked at the South Agness Creek Trailhead and started with the 0.3-mile loop there.


This forested loop was full of bright green mossed covered ground.


After completing the loop we took a connector trail between the two trailheads to reach the North Agness Creek Trailhead.
The connector trail at the south trailhead.
Two short out-and-back trails begin at the north trailhead. We started with the left hand trail.


The left hand spur abruptly ends on a ridge above what we assume was Agness Creek although we couldn’t really make out an actual creek.
Agness Creek?
We returned to the trailhead and took the right hand fork which led a third of a mile to SW 19th Street.



Approaching SW 19th Street.

After reaching the neighborhood at the end of this trail we returned to the south trailhead and drove 1.8 miles to our final stop at the Spyglass Open Space.

Sticking with the theme for the day we got turned around a bit here as well and instead of doing a 1.4-mile loop around the perimeter we followed an old roadbed directly up the middle of the open space. We had planned on doing a counterclockwise loop but didn’t see the trail we actually wanted which was right next to a chain link fence.
This should have been the end of our loop, not the beginning. Had we realized we weren’t on the perimeter trail we would have taken the first left hand trail which would have allowed us to do our planned loop in reverse (clockwise). Instead we headed straight up the ridge.

The Trail Challenge sign here was located at a second junction, near the ridge top. A short distance beyond was another junction with an unsigned trail veering off to the right. We still hadn’t figured out our mistake and thought that the right hand trail was a spur trail shown on the map leading to a neighborhood so we went left.


The trail never quite reached the ridge top as it veered left in the forest below.

I scrambled up one of several use trails to see what kind of a view the ridge offered.
A lot of clearcuts is what I could see.
When the trail made a sharp turn left and suddenly headed downhill we began to realize that we hadn’t been where we thought we were. We pulled up the map and GPS track and began comparing and figured out what we’d done. We weren’t sure where we had missed the right turn at the beginning of the hike though. When we reached another split in the trail we went left, leaving the perimeter to cut back uphill to the junction at the Trail Challenge sign.



We turned left at the junction and then took the right hand spur that we’d mistook for the spur to the neighborhood. We followed this trail uphill, encountering our first and only downed tree for the day, to a junction with the actual spur. This section was fainter and a little harder to follow but we stayed left along the ridge as much as possible.

We were really surprised that this was the only real obstacle we encountered all day given the recent storm.
An example of the fainter tread along this section.
The spur to the left led to a neighborhood so we turned right.


The trail arriving at the trailhead entrance road. The chain link fence at Taft High is on the left.
Our hike here was just over 1.5-miles long with a little over 300′ of elevation gain which was the most of the fours stops. We changed at the car and drove on to the Pelican Brewery arriving just before they opened at Noon. We watched the birds in Siletz Bay while we waited for the restaurant to open then enjoyed a great lunch before heading home.
Siletz Bay from the brewpub.
A gull and an egret.
Once we were home we did a little research on the Trail Challenge which is when we learned that the challenge involves eight open spaces. The five we visited on this day plus The Knoll which we had visited back in 2020 (post), Cutler Wetlands, and Nesika Park. It looks like we have a couple of reasons to head back to Lincoln City (and the Pelican Brewpub) sometime soon. Happy Trails!
Flickr: Lincoln City Parks
It seems this time of year I (we) are always a little ahead of the sunlight which does nothing for photos.
Coming up on the road crossing.
Cascade Head from the trail with the elk at the end of the grass to the right.
Fuzzy (low light) photo of the elk.
Crossing Savage Road with the first view of the Pacific.


View from one of five metal footbridges along this section.
Signboard and donation box at the start of
First direct sunlight of the morning.
Out of the trees and into the meadows.
Looking uphill
Snacks
Salmon River Estuary
A snail and lupine leaves.
A small viewpoint just before the trail turns uphill.
Going up
The trail gains views as it gains elevation.
The trail through the meadow below.
This knoll looks like the high point as you climb, but it’s a trick.
The high point is actually marked by a post. (Near the right end of the photo).




Wooden arch over the old roadbed.
Nearing the upper trailhead.
When they do reopen the road there will be a few trees to deal with.




There were around 18 trees such as this one across the trail from the trailhead to Cliff Creek.
This large chunk of tree trunk has done some damage to the bridge, but it was still passable.
Cliff Creek




At the 1.6-mile mark I entered the 

Sign near the bench.
Big sitka spruce trunk.
Approaching the Chitwood Creek crossing.
Chitwood Creek
Heading back toward the ocean.
Someone stuck some feathers in this mushroom.



There was a large number of noisy sea lions on the shaded rocks below Cascade Head. Even though they were quite far away they were loud.
Seagull hanging out on a sea rock.
Sea lion heading for its buddies.
A combination of the position of the Sun and the presence of haze made it very difficult to make out the waterfall on Chitwood Creek. I don’t know if the haze was smoke or just the usual coastal haze. (There was a fairly good east wind blowing steadily all morning.)



Sparrow in the meadow at Hart’s Cove.
Pearly everlasting
Varied thrush
A reminder of Spring, a trillium that bloomed months ago.
A monkeyflower along FR 1861.
Back at the upper trailhead.
Candyflower
Mushrooms on a log.

The Thumb, aka God’s Thumb (
Heading for the high point.
Descending Cascade Head
There were quite a few of these (an aster?) blooming along the trail.
Not sure what type of bird this is.
Sulphur butterfly
Wooly bear caterpillar, there were many of these on the trail.

Looking back up at one of the first hikers I’d passed.
Pretty moth on a bush.
View to the east of the Coastal Range.
Heading for the tree line.
Back where I’d seen the bull elk in the morning.
Cars parked along Three Rocks Road, the parking area at Knights County Park was full when I got back to the car a little before 1pm.

Mallard pair
Canada geese
Goose and a mallard in the channels.




Several interpretive signs were placed along the loop.
A reminder that COVID-19 is still an issue.
The larger muddy area along the bank ahead on the right is where Heather spotted the otter.
Alder lined trail.
Blurry photo of a non-breeding male hooded merganser.
The blurry river otter.
Another mallard
Canada geese
Siletz River
Western grebe
Goose and a bufflehead (the duck not the post)
Bufflehead
Spring is coming!
Sentry at the Roads End entrance.




It’s hard to tell just how much uphill this is. Fortunately it wasn’t very muddy.
A little easier to see the uphill here, this was near the top.
The junction.

The Roads End parking area is the open green space in the center along the ocean.
The Pacific Ocean.
Roads End Point jutting out to the north.
The Knoll
Snow queen
More signs of Spring, salmonberry blossom and buds.
Sitka spruce and ferns along the ridge.
The downed trees ahead in the distance.
The last of the tree fall.
Mud had begun to be a bit of an annoyance at this point.

Busy woodpecker
The trail getting nearing the turn left.
Lone tree in the meadow.
Lone robin in the lone tree.


Heather crossing the saddle (left of the big bush)
Cascade Head from the saddle.
Final pitch up to the top.
Not quite to ourselves, we shared the space briefly with some chestnut backed chickadees.
Cascade Head and the mouth of the Salmon River.
Roads End Point and Lincoln City
Rocks below God’s Thumb

A reasonable representation of the wet/muddy conditions on this part of the hike.
Toothwort

The gate and Sal La Sea Drive in the distance.
It’s not a hike at the coast without some skunk cabbage.


Coltsfoot
An immature bald eagle flew overhead at one point.
Little waterfall along the beach.
Roads End Point
Not going around that today.
God’s Thumb on the right.
Hikers on The Knoll


Looking back south as the sunrise paints the clouds.
A house on the cliffs.

Seagulls outnumbered people in the early part of the day.



Vinge Creek, about a mile down the beach, was crossable on small rocks.
Geese flying overhead, we couldn’t make out what kind.
At first we thought there were two weather vanes on the houses, a whale on the right and a heron on the left.
It turned out to be a real great blue heron (but the whale was a vane).
Looking south toward Cape Perpetua (
View north.
Sunlight on the wave tops.
Sunlight bursting through the trees.

Wavy sand.


Cape Perpetua from the dunes.
Testing the 40 zoom feature on the Canon SX740HS.
Heading for the log.
View from the log.
More testing of the zoom function. Seagulls on the near sandbar and seals on the one on the other side of the bridge.
Looking at the dark cloud bank over the Pacific.
Seal
A little more cloud cover to the south over Cape Perpetua.
More cloud action.
Cormorant
Reynolds Creek after fording.
Finally starting to feel like it could start raining soon.
The advancing line of clouds.
Another look at the arch.
A kingfisher near the stairs up from the beach.
December blossoms on salal along the 804 Trail.











Ocean coming right up to the rocks.





Trail at lower right with a little standing water.



Three Arch Rocks – one of two wilderness areas in Oregon off limits to visitors.
















Looking back north from the dune crest.
Looking north at what was to come.
Thick forest between the bay and the dune.
One of several semi-circles created by grass going back and forth.



Cape Lookout from the trail to the picnic shelter.
Seagull atop the shelter.






Ferns on a tree trunk.
Lichen overhanging the trail.


The boardwalk
Nursery stump
Spider finishing its morning web.


There is a flag in there.



Flagging along the trail.
Elk had obviously been on the trail recently.
Fern covered hillside.












Salmon River at Knight County Park








One of the bridges.
Overgrown stream
White crowned sparrow
One of three hummingbirds
Another white crowned sparrow
Checkerbloom
Monkeyflower
Yarrow
Field chickweed
Lupine
Foxglove with a spider web
Clovers
Iris
Self-heal



Look for the head to the right of the tall foxglove stalk.















Lupine
White crowned sparrow
Cape Lookout (
Beach morning glory

Groundcone
Tiger lily

























Obstacle hanging over the trail.















































































View from the boardwalk













Part of the 








One of several benches along the trail.
















Whale Watching Center

















