Get Into Portland’s Best Park!

“Best” may be debatable, but biggest is not. At 5,200 acres, Forest Park is one of the largest urban parks in the country, and the largest in Portland.  The park has over 80 miles of trails, easily accessible and maintained by Forest Park Conservancy, Portland Parks and Recreation, and Volunteers.   (Now’s your chance!)

If you find the size intimidating, an easy place to begin exploring is the Lower Macleay Trail, a well traveled path with a parking area which runs along Balch Creek. Portlanders are familiar with the Witch’s Castle, an abandoned stone structure about .8 miles into the trail, and the path leads up to the Bird Alliance of Oregon (formerly Audubon Society). This is a separate natural area with a visitor center and 4 miles of trails on 172 acres. (I saw an elk there on a rainy day, and there is a bird rescue facility, too)

Drive, or take public transit a bit further up the hill and you may bike, walk or run along Leif Erikson trail, from the trailhead on Thurman Ave. Leif Erikson was the access road for the area when residential housing was planned (and fizzled out in the first half of the 20th century since building was too difficult).  From this wider, partly paved path, there are access points to wooded trails like the Wild Cherry and Dogwood trails. It’s easy to walk in-and-out, or to plan a 3-4 mile loop.

The park helps filter air and water, and is home to over 50 types of mammals, 100 species of birds and over 400 invertebrates. You may see owls, snakes, shrews, deer, woodpeckers, and many large slugs.

Enjoy Portland’s green spaces and parks! Beautiful at any time of year, and a reminder of the natural spaces we built on to create our neighborhoods.

 

Portland: These Are A Few of My Favorite Things

My top 5 list for Portland & environs – for me, for visitors, for everyone — with a little visual eye candy to illustrate and inspire.

Photo credit: K. Gilpatrick

1. McMenamin’s Edgefield – indescribably unique lodging, restaurants, live music concerts, gardens, golf, a spa and decadent soaking pools just outside of town in a lovely place called Troutdale. There’s something happening around every corner, and great acts headlining for outdoor shows in the summer. If you’re looking for an alternative to Portland’s incredible list of parks and outdoor spaces, from Laurelhurst to Sellwood, check out Edgefield.


2. Sauvie Island – with it’s farms and winding roads, it’s sweet beaches for family fun or casting a line into Sturgeon Lake, or just a good old-fashioned drive out for seasonal fun, it’s the perfect place to go for pumpkins, for produce, for the most gorgeous u-pick bouquets. Maybe just sit and enjoy a really stellar gyros — or take a minute to slow down and get a breath of fresh air and enjoy a simpler pace for an afternoon. Sauvie Island is the ultimate weekend activity for families every season of the year.

 

 

3. East Bank Esplanade – A perfect place to walk with friends and relax along the shores of the gorgeous Willamette, with it’s incredible views of all the bridges — even cross a pedestrian bridge if you’d like, breathing the fresh lovely air on foot, bicycle, scooter, unicycle, hoverboard — really anything goes.
From here you can ponder which neighborhoods you like the best, what feels like home to you, watch the boats on the water, see as far as you can see. OMSI is here, and you can stop in and explore, or just keep walking and enjoying the trails, and urban hiking goodness that we have all around us.