10/16/2022

October 12, 2022 Part 3 of 3 Seals and Lighthouses - Oh My

After leaving the Seal Lion Caves, we wanted to go to the Heceta Lighthouse Museum.  Well..after a few wrong turns, we realized that it was a .5 mile walk from the beach..

Here is the beach – Lovely!

2022-10-12 Seal Cave and Heceta Head Lighthouse OR (174)

Some information:

“While the lighthouse is 56 feet tall, it stands 205 feet above sea level thanks to the bluff it is placed on. It’s a bluff you have to climb if you want to see the lighthouse up close and personal.

The masonry tower stands fifty-six feet tall and has a focal plane of 205 feet above sea level. The light is the most powerful on the Oregon coast and can be seen up to twenty-one miles out to sea.

The tower’s first-order Fresnel lens was manufactured in Birmingham, England by Chance Brothers. Most Fresnel lenses installed in U.S. lighthouses were produced in France, but besides Heceta Head, Chance Brothers lenses were also used at Point Cabrillo and Anacapa Island in California, and in Staten Island Lighthouse in New York. The Heceta Head lens has 640, two-inch-thick prisms, arranged in eight bull’s-eye panels, and revolves to produce brilliant white flashes.

There are few more dramatic vistas along the Oregon Coast than Heceta Head, a 200-foot bluff that juts out into the sea and is crowned with a 56-foot-tall lighthouse that has steered ships from danger since 1894.

The view is especially eye-popping from the pullout along U.S. 101, just past the Sea Lion Caves, about 10 miles north of Florence. From here, high above the surf, you can take in the scene, which includes the sights and sounds of frolicking sea lions on the rocks below, and a bird’s-eye view of Cape Cove and Devils Elbow, with Heceta Head framed perfectly beyond.

For an up-close encounter with this striking landmark, continue along U.S. 101 another half-mile or so and turn right onto Cape Creek Road, which winds down beneath the soaring, aqueduct-like 1932 highway bridge to a large parking lot beside a windswept beach (day parking is $5), popular for tide pooling and offering sheltered picnic tables. Here a well-maintained gravel path leads a mile slightly uphill, past a few outbuildings and out to the lighthouse itself; it’s part of a 7-mile trail network through Heceta Head Lighthouse State Scenic Viewpoint that affords abundant opportunities to view sea lions and migrating gray whales (which come especially close to shore in May), as well as such local birdlife as cormorants, eagles and common murres.

The lighthouse was staffed until 1963, when an automated beacon was installed — it’s visible some 20 miles offshore. Today, although you can’t ascend the stairs to the lens, you can explore the base of the lighthouse as well as its ground floor when rangers are on hand (staffing and weather permitting). For the ultimate Heceta Head adventure, book an overnight stay in the red-roofed former assistant lighthouse keeper’s residence, which dates to 1893 and is now operated as Heceta Lighthouse B&B. It contains six antiques-filled rooms, some with ocean views, and rates include breakfast and an afternoon wine social. Whether on clear nights beneath a canopy of twinkling stars or stormy winter evenings when you can hear the waves crash against the rocks below, staying here is a magical experience.”

More information can be found here:

https://traveloregon.com/things-to-do/culture-history/lighthouses/heceta-head-lighthouse/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heceta_Head_Light

https://www.lighthousefriends.com/light.asp?ID=131

https://www.lighthousefriends.com/light.asp?ID=131

https://www.oregon.com/attractions/heceta-head-lighthouse

The lighthouse keeper’s house from the beach:

2022-10-12 Seal Cave and Heceta Head Lighthouse OR (178)

We decided to take the trail to the lighthouse so up we went.  Pictures from the trail:

2022-10-12 Seal Cave and Heceta Head Lighthouse OR (187)

 

2022-10-12 Seal Cave and Heceta Head Lighthouse OR (194)

Here is the house – now a Bed and Breakfast.  We could not go in because there were a few guests.

2022-10-12 Seal Cave and Heceta Head Lighthouse OR (199)

From there we continued up the trail to the lighthouse:

2022-10-12 Seal Cave and Heceta Head Lighthouse OR (210)

The life of the Lighthouse keeper and his family:

2022-10-12 Seal Cave and Heceta Head Lighthouse OR (211a)

The road/trail from the house to the lighthouse:

2022-10-12 Seal Cave and Heceta Head Lighthouse OR (217)

  Impressive!:

2022-10-12 Seal Cave and Heceta Head Lighthouse OR (220)

 

2022-10-12 Seal Cave and Heceta Head Lighthouse OR (233)

 

2022-10-12 Seal Cave and Heceta Head Lighthouse OR (239)

There was a volunteer available who gave us a tour of the lower floor and gave us a history of the improvements of the lighthouse.  Plus the little shed next door was a mini museum of artifacts from the lighthouse and the keepers.

 

Views from the lighthouse grounds:

2022-10-12 Seal Cave and Heceta Head Lighthouse OR (242)

2022-10-12 Seal Cave and Heceta Head Lighthouse OR (231)

What a wonderful day!

Tomorrow we are doing a short move so stay tuned and enjoy today.

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