Port Orford Heads State Park
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Port Orford Heads State Park is a coastal state park in northwest Curry County, Oregon, in the city of Port Orford. It was established in 1976, and is administered by the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department.
Located on a bluff above the city, the park has three main walking trails: the Cove, Tower and Headland trails. From each of these vantage points (at the right time of year) one can see commercial fishing boats, orcas, gray whales, California and Steller's sea lions, and various seabirds. The Headland Trail offers an unrestricted view of Cape Blanco to the north and is a popular whale watching spot during the fall. The park is open for day use only.
From 1934 to 1970, one of the earliest US Coast Guard lifeboat stations on the Oregon Coast operated at what later became the park. A museum and interpretive center in the Port Orford Lifeboat Station was opened in 2000 by the Point Orford Heritage Society. The building is on the National Register of Historic Places. The museum includes the station's refurbished, unsinkable 36-foot motor life boat, and information about the Japanese bombing of the south Oregon coast during World War II.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Official website at the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department
- Port Orford Lifeboat Station Museum and Point Orford Heritage Society
- US Coast Guard Historian's page on Station Port Orford
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