Travelers Find Solace in Sights, Scenery
Herald and News
Klamath Falls, Oregon
July 29, 2007
By STOVER E. HARGER III
From Crater Lake to the Lava Beds, visitors from all
walks of life come to the Klamath Basin to enjoy the sights and
scenery.
Who are these visitors and what are their stories?
The Herald and News traveled to a few popular tourist spots to find
out.
Crater Lake National Park
Forty years ago, Denmark resident Lise Schack lived
in Eugene for two years. Her son Christian Schack was born in
Oregon, and the family visited Crater Lake together.
 |
H&N photos by Stover E. Harger
III
Christian Schack, left, and his mother Lise Schack, right, of
Denmark take in the scenery of Crater Lake. |
Lise was back this year, this time with her extended
family: Daughters, children and grandchildren.
“It’s very impressive, I think. It’s wonderful,” Lise
said. “We have pictures of it at home, but when you see the pictures
you don’t believe it will be that pretty, but it is. It’s even more
impressive.”
The family is taking a summer vacation, traveling
through Oregon and California with Lise visiting spots she saw when
she lived here.
Christian, now 40, traveled to Oregon from Denmark on
his own after graduating high school. He flew in, visited his
birthplace of Eugene and borrowed an old Volkswagen bus to drive to
Crater Lake.
This time around, Christian said his children and
wife were awed by the lake’s size and beauty. The family sat
together on the sunny day they visited and ate a picnic overlooking
the lake.
Crater Lake and the surrounding area are so
extraordinary that most everyone they talk to in Oregon tells them
to visit, Lise said.
“If you are coming from the outside and you ask,
‘What do you have to see in Oregon?’ they always say, ‘the coast and
then Crater Lake,’ ” she said. “It’s nice to be back.”
Collier Memorial State Park: Off of Highway 97, 30
miles north of Klamath Falls.
There are many things Ellen Jones and Tom Jones love
about Southern Oregon.
They love the trees, the meadows and the rivers. What
they don’t love are the mosquitoes.
Ellen and Tom of Willits, Calif., were staying at
Collier Memorial State Park on their way to Sisters for the annual
Outdoor Quilt Show. The couple wanted to stop at Collier Park
because Tom had camped there 40 years ago with his children.
“It was beautiful and pristine,” Tom said. “Then as
it is now.”
Their first night they were bombarded by mosquitoes,
but they said they still love the area.
The couple is semi-retired and hopes to do more
traveling in the future. They bought a camper two years ago and
recently put their home on the market.
Fifty years ago, Ellen and Tom attended St. Helena
High School in the Napa Valley.
They knew each other but never dated. Forty-five
years later they found each other again, reconnected and married.
Travel is a bond for them, Ellen said.
“That was one of the reasons we connected,” Ellen
said. “Our interest in travel and meeting people from all over.
Really nice, friendly people.”
Camping in Oregon is a much better experience camping
in California, Tom said. Oregon campgrounds are generally well
manicured and maintained, he said. At Collier Park, Tom likes the
detail put into the campgrounds look — each campsite is raked and
cleaned after each camping group.
They don’t travel alone. With them is their dog
Charlie, who lies on his side between their camping chairs. When a
chipmunk ventures too close, Charlie leaps into action and scares it
away.
They bring Charlie because he gets separation anxiety
if left alone.
The threesome travel for the adventure and the
beautiful scenery. On their trip from California to Oregon they
passed some areas that were so beautiful to them that Tom said it
looked like utopia.
Lake of the Woods
– Sunset Campground: Off Highway 140 about 35 miles
from Klamath Falls
Cheryl Cameron and Nancy Alston-Linne were childhood
friends who grew up in Klamath Falls. They met in second grade and
graduated from Mazama High School 24 years ago.
They spent much of their childhood camping and
fishing at the Lake of the Woods, but time eventually separated
them. Cameron moved to Los Angeles and Alston-Linne to Camas, Wash.
The friends try and get together every few years.
This year, when Cameron and her family were planning their summer
vacation, so was Alston-Linne. They decided to meet halfway at the
Sunset Campground at Lake of the Woods to relive fond memories.
“It’s always nice to come and visit,” Cameron said.
“It’s also nice to show your kids what you did as a
kid,” Alston-Linne added.
Both Cameron and Alston-Linne said they left Klamath
Falls after graduating because there weren‘t jobs for them in
Klamath Falls.
Cameron and Alston-Linne joke about a lack of things
to do in Klamath, but admit it is a good place grow up, and moving
to larger cities was a large and often difficult change.
“You kind of feel stuck,” Cameron said about living
in a big city. “I think you don’t quite feel 100 percent at home in
either place (California and Washington). At least I know I don’t.”
To combat this feeling and get back to nature,
Cameron and Alston-Linne decided to camp and show their young
children what it’s like to get out of the city and relax.
Their kids, many of whom have never been camping
before are enjoying the experience, Alston-Linne said.
Coming back to the Lake of the Woods has let them
relive many pleasant memories of camping, fishing and sitting around
the campfire.
Rocky Point Resort: 28121 Rocky Point Road
Jim and Amanda Tanner take a trip about once a month.
Jim, a fisherman, is part of the E.C. Powell Fly
Fishers club from Yuba City, Calif., and the group meets several
times a year to fly fish and socialize.
This summer is the third year in a row they’ve stayed
at the Rocky Point Resort on Upper Klamath Lake.
Jim and Amanda married about a year and a half ago
after meeting 23 years earlier when he was a Sutter County data
processor and she worked for the Sutter County school district.
“Twenty-three years later he married me and made my
life miserable,” Amanda said, joking.
“I’m still trying. I’m not there yet, but I’m working
on it,” Jim countered.
They both enjoy camping in the area because of the
natural beauty. Amanda said she loves the pine trees, and Jim likes
the peace and quiet.
“The fishing’s good, and the company is primo. It
doesn’t get any better,” he said looking at his wife.
Jim and his fly fishing group have been fishing
together for a little under 20 years. In two days at the Rocky Point
Resort, the group of 16 caught about 35 rainbow trout in the 5- to
15-pound class.
While the men in the group are out fishing during the
day, the women socialize. When the fishermen come back, the group
takes turns entertaining the others with meals. When it’s Jim and
Amanda’s turn, they said they cook everyone spaghetti, prepared in
their RV.
Jim and Amanda split their time living in Yuba City,
where she owns a house, and Klamath Falls, where he does. When they
camp, they stay anywhere that has a stream and a lake so the
self-described “fisherman that won’t quit” can fish.
When Jim comes back from the lake after a day of
fishing, he and Amanda often sit down to play card games. She said
she likes to beat him and send him back out fishing.
When she says this he lets out an affable grunt.
“I take out my frustrations on the fish,” he joked.
Lava Beds National Monument
Nancy Barbic and Duncan Campbell from San Francisco
have traveled to numerous national monuments and parks, but had
never visited the Lava Beds National Monument near Tulelake — until
now.
The couple, married since 2002, have been together
for 15 years. They are both outdoor enthusiasts and stayed at the
Lava Beds campgrounds.
Both Nancy and Duncan could spout off names of
different caves, and they laugh when discussing one called the
Mushpot Cave, which Nancy calls the “Disneyland of caves.” The
Mushpot is heavily roped off, lit and safe for all ages.
The Mushpot is not for them.
Their first full day at the monument, the couple
undertook one of the most difficult caves, the “Hercules Leg and
Juniper Caves.”
In it they had to travel almost a mile underground,
crawling on their hands and knees at times. The cave kept getting
smaller and smaller, but they decided to venture on, eventually
finding light again.
“We were pretty proud of ourselves after that,” Nancy
said.
Besides conquering Lava Beds caves, the couple
relaxed at night and stargazed with binoculars. The sky was so clear
they could see the four largest moons of Jupiter, the Galilean
satellites.
Nancy has been sick for the last few years, and they
said this would be there last vacation for a while.
They said they would recommend that Duncan’s sister,
who lives in Eureka, Calif., visit the area, because they think she
would like it.
Love of outdoor recreation is something both Nancy
and Duncan share.
“I can’t imagine doing this with too many other
people,” Duncan said as the couple sat next to each other, reading
books.
“It’s important that you aren’t dragging someone
through something,” Nancy added.
- BY Stover E. Harger III