Southern Oregon Summer Recreation Guide 2021

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May 21, 2021

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FRY FAMILY FARM CONCERTS By Allayana Darrow Ashland Tidings

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Fry Family Farm, a certified organic, family-owned farm, is slated to host a packed concert series from June through October in partnership with the Ashland Folk Collective. John Craigie takes the stage June 19 and 20 with a set composed of “smoked-out soul, tender folk and American songbook eloquence.”

Children 12 and younger are welcome to enjoy the show at no charge. Capacity is limited, masks are required to enter, and all state safety guidelines will be followed. Fry Family Farm, 2184 Ross Lane, Medford, will serve beer, wine, salad and pizza at the show. Bring your own blanket for the front, seats and chairs for the back. For tickets and details about upcomJohn Cra ing shows, see ashlandfolkcollective. igie will ta ke the sta Family Fa com/shows.html. ge Jun rm in Medfo

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ROGUE RIVER ROOSTER CROW By Ryan Pfeil Mail Tribune

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The famed annual Rogue River Rooster Crow, which features both humans and roosters competing to see who can belt out the best cock-a-doodle-do, won’t be happening this year due to the pandemic, but an alternative offering is being planned. A car show will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, June 26, at the intersection of East Main and Pine streets in Rogue River, according to City Recorder Carol Weir, who also serves on the Rooster Crow event board. Participants wanting to show off their ride need to preregister. Either email Weir at MAIL TRIBUNE/FILE PHOTO cweir@cityofrogueriver. org or call 541-582-4401 The annual Rogue River Rooster Crow fell victim to for more information and the pandemic this year, but a car show will be held to receive a registration for residents and visitors. form. The application deadline is June 21. Registrants will check in between 7 and 9 a.m. the day of the event. The event is free and open to everyone. Organizers were still working out details on potential vendors, but entertainment, including music, and a raffle will be offered. “The cars are going to be spaced out a lot more than they normally would in a car show,” Weir said. “Where we would normally have the vendors, we’re actually going to use that area for cars. Plus, on the street.” Even if the Rooster Crow’s typical offerings had gone off without a hitch, the car show would still have been part of the festivities. But this year, it’s the main event.

55 THINGS TO DO

PUBLISHER STEVEN SASLOW

MAIL TRIBUNE/FILE PHOTO

Ashland’s North Mountain Park will be one of three sites — along with downtown and the Railroad District — to feature soundwalks during the Ashland World Music Festival.

ASHLAND WORLD MUSIC FESTIVAL By Allayana Darrow Ashland Tidings

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The Ashland World Music Festival will dazzle this Memorial Day weekend with curated sound walks and virtual mainstage performances. Each musician in the festival brings to the stage specific cultural awareness and understanding tied to their performance style. This year’s lineup takes the audience across continents through

SECTION EDITOR DAVID SMIGELSKI

PAGE LAYOUT ROBERT GALVIN

music, from Spanish flamenco to Indigenous Andean music; from tones of the Irish diaspora to Appalachian folk. Sound walks route listeners downtown along the Calle Guanajuato, Lithia Park, the Railroad District and North Mountain Park, passing art installations along the way. A virtual storytelling event May 31 centers on stories of home. Soundwalk maps are available to download, print and use at your leisure. For the complete schedule and other details, see rogueworldmusic. org/awmf/.

SOUTHERN OREGON RECREATION GUIDE


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Friday, May 21, 2021 |

Train Your Landscape to Be Did you know w that in the Rogue Valley, V lley Va ey, ey y, about 50 percent of our total water usage is used on our lawns and gardens? Fortunately, there are ways you can improve the efficiency of your landscape watering by completing a few simple tasks. Medford Water Commission believes that conservation plays an important role in water resource management and offers a variety of resources to help you meet your water conservation goals and save money as well. To promote a water-wise landscape with a healthy root system, consider the following practices: It is best to water deeply, but less often. For instance, it is not usually necessary to water every day; overwatering results in shallow roots that are more easily stressed by hot temperatures. Call our prerecorded Infoline (541-774-2460) during the watering season for controller scheduling information based on current weather trends. Test your irrigation system to help assess if you need to replace or repair any parts. Find tips at left.

(541) 774-2435 | medfordwater.org MF-00138588

Prune plants and clear dead debris away to encourage new growth to flourish and allow water to reach the roots effectively. Completing tasks such as aerating, amending soil, and adding mulch will sustain healthy soils that cycle nutrients, minimize runoff, and retain water. Reduce nitrogen fertilizer, which can cause shallow rooting, and increase potassium fertilizer to enhance drought tolerance. Replace water-hungry lawn areas with native or water-wise plants. Check out the Commission’s WaterWise Landscaping website, medford.watersmartgardening.com, for more ideas on how to create a landscape that is healthy, attractive and uses less water. For more information on water conservation programs, such as rebates and sprinkler checkups, visit medfordwater.org or call us at 541-774-2435.

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INDEPENDENCE DAY ACTIVITIES

OREGON WINE EXPERIENCE By Nick Morgan Mail Tribune

By Nick Morgan Mail Tribune

This won’t be the summer when traditional Fourth of July festivities return to Ashland and Central Point, but that’s no reason to sing the red, white and blues. Instead of a parade in downtown Central Point — and the crowds it normally draws to Pine Street — this year’s Freedom Festival is bringing the parade to neighborhoods across the city, according to the Central Point Chamber of Commerce website. Details about the parade route, and how to participate, were still under wraps at press time, but details on how to sign up for the parade and Freedom Festival will be available at centralpointchamber.org/freedom-festival. The city of Central Point called off its fireworks show last year, and there’s no sign it’ll return for 2021. Ashland’s 4th of July parade and patriotic activities at Lithia

Park are also another year away, according to the Ashland Chamber of Commerce, but organizers are considering a possible public fireworks display depending on state guidelines. Updates about festivities will be posted on ashlandchamber.com. For those who like to celebrate America’s birthday with a good run, Ashland’s 4th of July Run virtual events will return this year with a one-mile fun run, 5K and 10K events. Participants will have between June 26 and July 4 to run in their neighborhood and email their results to Ashland4thofJulyRun@ gmail.com. The running event is free, and $25 commemorative T-shirts will be available until June 10, with proceeds benefiting the Phoenix High cross-country team and the Ashland Parks and Recreation Commission. See facebook.com/groups/ AshlandJuly4thRun.

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The Rogue Valley food and wine extravaganza went virtual in 2020, but the Asante Foundation’s biggest fundraiser of the year will return this August with a ANDY ATKINSON / MAIL TRIBUNE limited number of Wine glasses ready to be filled in Jacksonville oenophile events at the 2019 Oregon Wine Experience. largely geared toward top donors. The event kicks off Aug. 25 with the Founders’ Barrel Auction and tastings at the Bigham Knoll Campus, 525 Bigham Knoll Drive in Jacksonville. Seven Feathers Casino Resort chefs will treat tasters to “innovative culinary pairings.” A Grand Tasting will hold multiple tasting-event windows Aug. 27. The Miracle Auction and Salmon Bake is planned for Aug. 28, featuring wooden plank-roasted salmon from the Coquille tribe, tastings of this year’s Oregon Wine Competition winners, along with a raffle and cork pull. Events are subject to change depending on state and local COVID-19 guidelines and regulations, but the event will feature plenty of ways for wine aficionados to participate online. Virtual events kick off Aug. 26 with the Virtual Medal Celebration. For $75, online participants will get a “Medal Celebration in a Box” that includes the winners of the Oregon Wine Competition and a selection of pairings meant to be enjoyed at home. A livestream will be offered for the Miracle Auction & Salmon Bake, with an accompanying wine package available for $100. Last year’s event drew more than 3,400 virtual participants and raised more then $1.1 million for children’s health care programs with the nonprofit Asante Foundation. For information about this year’s event, see oregonwineexperience.com.

MEDFORD CRUISE By Nick Morgan Mail Tribune

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After sitting idle in 2020, Medford’s motoring extravaganza is slated to make a triumphant return this August. The Medford Cruise has a new date and a simplified roster, but what won’t change are the candy colors and chrome that will enchant gearheads of every age and every stripe. The event kicks off with a Poker Chip Fun Run open to all kinds of cars and motorcycles at 1 p.m. Friday, Aug. 27, at Fichtner-Mainwaring Park, followed

MAIL TRIBUNE FILE PHOTO

Londyn Lennert of Medford sits in her father’s 1932 Chevy at a Medford Cruise Show ’n Shine.

by an after-dusk (about 9:30 p.m.) drive-in movie featuring the 2006

Pixar film “Cars,” rated G. The Show ’n Shine runs from

10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, with prize categories for street rods, sports cars, hot rods and each of the Detroit Three automakers. The main event is the downtown cruise from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. Saturday. This year’s cruise breaks from tradition by opening the event to all cars in the show — not just classic cars. The four-wheeled fun continues with the Familia Unida Multicultural Car Show, featuring live music and low riders from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday. All events are free to attend. For costs to participate, and for the latest updates and changes, see medfordcruise.org.


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MOUNT SCOTT

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WHITEWATER RAFTING

ASHLAND • PHOENIX • MEDFORD • GRANTS PASS

MAIL TRIBUNE / DAVID SMIGELSKI

Crater Lake as seen from the summit of Mount Scott.

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Crater Lake is one of the most beautiful sights in Southern Oregon, but the view from the top of the park’s Mount Scott is incomparable. The hike to reach the 8,929-foot peak — the highest point in Crater Lake National Park — sounds daunting, but it’s quite doable for people who are at least moderately fit. You will be rewarded with endless views of mountains in the Cascade range, including Mount Thielsen, Mount Shasta and Mount McLoughlin. The trailhead is about 14 miles east of the park entrance on Rim Drive, and the hike covers 5 miles roundtrip. The trail starts along an alpine meadow, which early in the summer is filled with flowers watered by snow melt. After about a quarter mile, the trail

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CENTER

for the Mail Tribune

becomes steeper, snaking its way through clumps of trees. The path is rocky and the crumbly volcanic soil requires decent shoes. Overall, you’ll be climbing just over 1,300 feet. Along the way, you can stop and take in the views to the east, where endless forests flow down into Klamath County, with farmland off in the distance. The higher you get, the more Crater Lake sparkles into view. Don’t expect solitude on the climb. At the summit, it can be a little crowded sometimes. On the east side of the fire lookout, some seek shade from the afternoon sun. On the west side, hikers perch themselves on rocks to look over the lake. In the middle of summer, light clothing and plenty of water are all that’s necessary for the hike. However, in early and late summer, when weather conditions can change dramatically, hikers should be prepared with a jacket because it can get nippy on top.

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THUNDERING WATERS By David Smigelski Mail Tribune

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A cool way to spend a hot summer day is basking in the mist of a plummeting waterfall, and Southern Oregon is home to a gem called the Thundering Waters tour that will let you soak in the mist of many falls. Most of the route follows the North Umpqua River along Highway 138, aka “waterfall highway.” Perhaps the area’s most celebrated falls is Toketee Falls, which features a two-tiered drop of 40 and 80 feet. It is one of Oregon’s most-photographed cascades, adorning countless calendars and postcards. The .4-mile trail to Toketee, consisting of catwalks and bridges in a narrow chasm, is an attraction unto itself. Fall Creek Falls is off a one-mile trail that passes through a narrow bedrock crevice and lush vegetation to a double falls with tiers of 35 and 50 feet. Watson Falls PHOTO BY NANCY MCCLAIN — the highest Toketee Falls is one of the most phowaterfall in tographed waterfalls in Oregon. southwestern Oregon at 272 feet, plunges over the edge of a basalt lava flow. A wooden bridge crosses Watson Creek 0.3 mile from the trailhead, and offers an excellent view of the falls, which are also visible from the parking area. Clearwater Falls, which drops 30 feet over moss-covered rocks and logs, is just a short walk up the Clearwater River. Lemolo Falls drops 102 feet into a deep pool of the North Umpqua River at the end of a 1.7mile hike. Other falls include Susan Creek Falls, Steamboat Falls, Little Falls, Deadline Falls, Whitehorse Falls and Warm Springs Falls. Touring all of these sights in one day makes for a long day trip from the Rogue Valley, because the minimum driving time is five to seven hours. Some of the falls are within sight (or sound) of parking areas, while others can require a hike of 1 to 2 miles. To download a brochure of the waterfall tour, see www.fs.usda.gov/Internet/ FSE_DOCUMENTS/fsbdev3_056140.pdf

JAMIE LUSCH / MAIL TRIBUNE

The Takelma George is a highlight on the Upper Rogue River Trail.

UPPER ROGUE RIVER TRAIL By David Smigelski Mail Tribune

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The Upper Rogue River Trail between Prospect and Union Creek is a great place to escape the heat of the valley and get an authentic Oregon experience. The trail, officially known as Forest Service Trail No. 1034, follows the river through miles of basically flat terrain where huge trees stand beside the water. Forest roads cross the trail at several points along the way, so you can organize a shuttle if your party is traveling in more than one car. To get there, take Highway 62 toward Prospect and Union Creek, where there are several places to access the trail.

Forest Road 6210 (about three miles north of Prospect) crosses the river at a campground called River Bridge. Three miles upstream, the trail enters Takelma Gorge, a narrow chasm the river has cut through the lava rock. If you walk another 1.5 miles, you’ll reach Woodruff Bridge, where Forest Road 68 crosses the Rogue. The trail continues upstream from Woodruff to Natural Bridge, where the river disappears into subterranean lava tubes. Even if you aren’t into hiking, the drive through the old-growth trees that line Highway 62 from Prospect to Union Creek is refreshing. At Union Creek, you can check out the Rogue Gorge right from the car, where the river plunges through a constricted pass, and there’s an asphalt path at the gorge for anyone who wants a closer look.

LOWER ROGUE CANYON which passes through Mule Creek Canyon and offers stunning views of iconic sights such as Coffeepot Rapid, Blossom The 40-mile Bar and Inspiration Point, trail through which looks across the river at the lower Rogue Stair Creek Falls. River canyon To reach Marial from MedMAIL TRIBUNE/FILE PHOTO ford, a roughly three-hour, from Grave Creek to Foster Bar is a bucket-list item that draws A backpacker walks the lower Rogue 98-mile drive, take Interstate 5 River Trail near Grave Creek. people from all over the globe. north to Glendale exit 80. Head The trail hugs the river, which west 2.4 miles into Glendale on in summer resembles a watery highway as hun- Glendale Valley Road, then go right on Azadreds of rafters and kayakers ride the currents. lea-Glen Road for .2 miles, then left on Reuben Some people camp out on gravel bars as they Road. After 12 miles, take a slight left toward hike, while others book accommodations at Dutch Henry Road and go 13 miles to Mule Creekprivate lodges that dot the canyon. Marial Road. Go left for 12 miles, then keep left to A 40-mile, multiday backpacking trip takes continue on Mule Creek-Marial Road for 3.2 more plenty of planning and logistical expertise — miles. When you see the Rogue River Ranch, more than many people want to bite off. But you you’re getting close. Pass the ranch and continue don’t have to hike the whole canyon to experito Marial if you can. If the bridge near Tucker ence its splendor. Flat campground is out, park there and start your hike. If the road is open, continue past Marial to a The best day hike in the lower canyon in a 3.3-mile stretch from Marial to Paradise Lodge, small gravel parking area at the end of the road.

By David Smigelski Mail Tribune

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Friday, May 21, 2021 |

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COLLABORATIVE THEATRE PROJECT By Jim Flint for the Mail Tribune

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The Collaborative Theatre Project in Medford is back onstage, with three summer performances planned at its venue at the Medford

Center. “Into the Breeches,” written By George Brant and directed by Todd Nielsen, runs through June 6. The play starts in 1942, and all the men have shipped out, leaving the Oberon Playhouse struggling for survival. Maggie, the director’s wife, decides to produce Shakespeare’s “Henriad” with women instead, assembling a team united in desire, if not theater experience. The result is a hilarious, touching and inspiring story of community, the power of theater and friendships. “Radiance, the Passion of Marie Curie,”

PHOTO BY MIKE KUNKEL

Collaborative Theatre Project’s production of “Into the Breeches” opened May 13 for a run through June 6. In the cast, from left, are Carolyn Scott, Mariah Wise and Renee Hewitt.

written By Alan Alda and directed by Susan Aversa, is scheduled June 24-July 18. The play follows Marie Curie and her husband, Pierre, who share a Nobel Prize. When

RANDALL THEATRE COMPANY

Rogue Theater Company will offer performances, script readings and chats with actors and directors at Grizzly Peak Winery this summer.

By Jim Flint for the Mail Tribune

COURTESY PHOTO

ROGUE THEATER COMPANY @ GRIZZLY PEAK WINERY By Allayana Darrow Ashland Tidings

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Take a trip to the theater and breathe in fresh air outside, physically distanced, with a glass of wine in hand. Rogue Theater Company, founded in 2019 by artistic director Jessica Sage, offers performances, script readings and chats with actors and directors at Grizzly Peak Winery, keeping the live performing arts alive in the Rogue Valley throughout the summer. “A Doll’s House, Part 2” kicked off the season May 6-16, and it will be followed by “Tiny Beautiful Things” July 15-25. All performances begin at 2 p.m. Bring your curiosities about

Pierre dies in an accident, Marie is plunged into depression. Paul Langevin, fleeing an unhappy marriage, gives her the strength to return to her work. But the scandal over their affair threatens to end her career, just when she might become the first person ever to receive a second Nobel Prize. “The Book of Will,” written By Lauren Gunderson and directed by Rick Robinson, is scheduled Aug. 12-Sept. 5. In this play, it has been three years since Shakespeare’s death, and his closest friends miss him dearly. After hearing a badly botched version of “Hamlet” at a nearby theater, they realize Shakespeare’s words are starting to fade into obscurity. So, they set out to compile as many of his manuscripts as possible, going head-to-head against a shady publisher, a drunken poet, shrinking resources and their own mortality. For more information and to purchase tickets, see https://ctpmedford.org/.

Shakespeare to a six-session series with actor and lecturer Barry Kraft, who will walk you through “Romeo and Juliet,” “Julius Caesar” and “Hamlet” in September, in person or from the comfort of home via livestream. In the beginning, RTC’s plays were performed in OSF’s Black Swan Theatre and the Bellview Grange. Six months into the pandemic, sensing people were craving theater and wanting it to be safe, RTC performed two sold-out play readings outdoors at the winery. For details, see roguetheatercompany.com/home-1/. Set on 40 beautiful acres, with views of nearby Grizzly Peak and Mount Ashland, Grizzly Peak Winery is located at 1600 E. Nevada St., Ashland. Call 541-482-5700 or see grizzlypeakwinery.com/.

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Randall Theatre Company is promoting a new season and a new home. In 2020, the Randall took over the former Howiee’s location at 115 E. Main St. in Medford, creating ANDY ATKINSON / MAIL TRIBUNE the Ghostlight PlayKathy Wing and John Wing inside Randall Theatre’s new Ghostlight house, now the home Playhouse, formerly known as Howiee’s, in downtown Medford. of the Randall Theatre Company. It also had its eyes on the empty Howiee’s space on the Front Street side, and now that section has been incorporated into the Randall’s new venue. The restaurant side will open in phases. When the kitchen is ready, plans are to offer to-go orders and serve Playhouse guests on the patio. When the restaurant interior is finished, inside service will be offered as COVID guidelines permit. The Randall has expanded its focus as well. The new venue will feature live bands, comedy acts, karaoke nights, movie nights, live podcasts, and more — in addition to Randall Theatre Company productions. Randall launched its 2021 season in March with “Traveling Through Broadway,” performed live with limited seating and livestreamed for in-home viewing. With dates subject to change, the lineup for the rest of the year includes three concert-style revues: “Back to Broadway – the 1970s,” June 11-27; “Grand Dames and Divas,” July 30-Aug. 8; and “Broadway’s Best Bad Girls,” Sept. 3-19. COVID guidelines permitting, the Randall will present “Waiting Star” in November. The romcom musical, in the style of Broadway’s Golden Age, is inspired by characters in Shakespeare’s three plays about Prince Hal, with the rascally Falstaff in a featured role. For updates and tickets, go to randalltheatre.com.


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CRATERIAN THEATER

OREGON CABARET THEATRE

By Jim Flint for the Mail Tribune

By Jim Flint for the Mail Tribune

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Friday, May 21, 2021 |

PHOTO BY JUSTIN WAGGLE

Oregon Cabaret Theatre’s second full-scale production of the year, “The Great American Trailer Park Musical,” runs through June 20.

Oregon Cabaret Theatre in Ashland opened its second full-scale production of the year April 29, “The Great American Trailer Park Musical,” an irreverent comedy with some show-stopping musical numbers, which will play through June 20. After a tough year in 2020 because of the pandemic, which darkened stages across the country, OCT began rehiring in anticipation of the Feb. 26 launch of the hit musical, “The Spitfire Grill.” With cabaret-style tables and chairs, the theater is able to maximize safety with its seating scheme. Every table is at least six feet from

another, and patrons are 13 or more feet from the stage. Other productions scheduled for this year are “Buddy, The Buddy Holly Story,” July 1-Sept. 5; “Poirot, Murder on the Links,” Sept. 30-Nov. 7; and “Christmas, Contigo,” Nov. 18-Dec. 31. The Cabaret will fill in with twonights-only shows throughout the year, with music and comedy performed by Cabaret favorites. The venue also offers dinner and/or intermission desserts. Go to oregoncabaret.com for showtimes, updates and to purchase tickets.

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The Craterian Theater in Medford will open its season with a three-week run of a Teen Musical Theater of Oregon production of “Into the Woods,” scheduled June 4-20. Expect the unexpected in this Grimm fairy tale mashup musical crafted by Stephen Sondheim and James Lapine. In the woods we find the Baker and his wife trying to reverse a witch’s curse so they can have what they wish for most in life, a child. But they’re not alone in the woods and soon cross paths with Cinderella, Little Red Ridinghood, Rapunzel, Jack (of beanstalk fame), and two starcrossed princes, all searching for their own “happily ever after.” TMTO will mount a second summer production in August, and Craterian Performances plans to begin its presentation of regional, national and international tours beginning this fall. “Of course, as we’ve all learned, today’s plans could go out the window tomorrow,” said Stephen

MF-00138098

PHOTO BY JIM CRAVEN

Craterian Theater of Medford kicks off the summer season with a Teen Musical Theater of Oregon production of “Into the Woods” June 4-20. Above are Grayson Weaver and Jeb Goldman in TMTO’s 2019 “Freaky Friday.”

McCandless, executive director. “Giving to the arts is down and we have no operating income,” McCandless said. “How long it takes for both to reach a critical mass again is the biggest challenge we face. I believe that humanity will always find its way to both sides of the footlights.” Go to craterian.org for updates.


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OREGON SHAKESPEARE FESTIVAL world premiere of Dominique Morisseau’s “Confederates,” and OSF’s first winter special, “It’s Christmas, Carol!” by Mark Bedard, Brent The Oregon ShakeHinkley and John Tufts, who also speare Festival hopes to will appear in the play they wrote return to the stage later collaboratively. this year with four plays The plays are not yet in the proin the fall and winter, and efforts duction process. Digital content, are under way to livestreaming, develop some proand archived gramming on the plays are availAllen Elizabethan able on O!, Theatre stage this accessible summer. through the festiAll is dependent val’s website. on the state of Due to the the pandemic and ongoing panPHOTO BY T. CHARLES ERICKSON state guidelines demic and If all goes well with the pandemic, the Oregon for occupancy uncertainties Shakespeare Festival will be live again this fall. limits and physiassociated with cal distancing. it, OSF will delay announcing speIf permitted to proceed, OSF cific dates and ticket sales for onstage will present four onstage plays productions until there is more clarity this fall: August Wilson’s “How I regarding reopening. All onstage Learned What I Learned,” the West events are subject to change. Coast premiere of Mona Mansour’s For tickets, information and “Unseen,” the American Revolutions updates, go to osfashland.org.

Ashland’s mural, titled “Streets of Guanajuato,” painted by Laura “Loreta” Rangel Villaseno, brightens the entrance to the Calle Guanajuato from the Lithia Park side.

By Jim Flint

for the Mail Tribune

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PHOTO BY DENISE BARATTA

CALLE GUANAJUATO By Allayana Darrow Ashland Tidings

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In 2019, Ashland recognized the 50th year of an official Sister City relationship with Guanajuato, Mexico. The two cities share student, business and cultural exchanges and murals in each city depicting the other. Ashland’s mural, titled “Streets of Guanajuato,” painted by Laura “Loreta” Rangel Villaseno, brightens the entrance to the Calle Guanajuato from the Lithia Park side.

Stroll along the Calle and meet jewelers, photographers, metal workers, glass blowers, wood carvers, spinsters and more from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays through October during the Lithia Artisans Market. In March, a group of artisans volunteered to beautify Ashland Creek below the Calle, now free of trash and blackberry brambles. Take a seat at an outdoor restaurant table and feast your eyes on Ashland’s largest mural, have a ring hand braided at just the right size, or simply take in the colors and festive atmosphere.

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LITHIA PARK By Vickie Aldous

SCIENCEWORKS HANDS-ON MUSEUM By Ryan Pfeil Mail Tribune

Mail Tribune

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Friday, May 21, 2021 |

Lithia Park is considered the crown jewel of Ashland, and it’s easy to see why. Ashland Creek flows through the 100-acre park, which includes lawns, pickleball and tennis courts, a sand volleyball court, picnic spots, a playground, a Japanese garden, two duck ponds, a formal rose garden and a stately grove of sycamore trees. One of the most popular features is the trail network that takes walkers and joggers through a tranquil woodland. The park is a hotspot for birders, and it’s not uncommon to see some of Ashland’s resident deer. Dogs are not allowed in the park except for Americans with Disabilities Act service animals. Lithia Park parallels Winburn Way and Granite Street. Visitors can take a self-guided tour with MAIL TRIBUNE / FILE PHOTO the help of the Lithia Murray and Faby Campbell, visitors from Texas, walk Park Trail Guide, over a footbridge in Lithia Park. available for download at www.ashland.or.us/Page.asp?NavID=16354 or for $5 at the Ashland Parks and Recreation Office at 1195 E. Main St., the Ashland Chamber of Commerce information kiosk on the downtown Plaza, or the Ashland Chamber of Commerce office at 110 E. Main St.

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Depending on Jackson County’s COVID-19 risk level at any given time, Ashland’s ScienceWorks Hands-On Museum may be hindered because of state guidelines. But science marches on. If the museum can’t have its usual educational offerings MAIL TRIBUNE / FILE PHOTO inside, organizers Sawyer Harris, 10, of Ashland, tests out a Van De Graph generator plan to take it out- at ScienceWorks Hands-on Museum in Ashland. doors, said interim Director Erin Endress. “We’re really going to focus on being outside,” Endress said. “So even if we can’t have people in the museum due to risk levels and gathering restrictions, we can still hopefully have some people outside. We have ample space on our plaza and in the fields.” “A lot of our activities can just be done on a table top,” she added. “So we’ll move some of our museum out to the front. Whether indoors or outdoors, the museum will be open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekends. Offerings will include multiple science demonstrations, many of them involving the sweeter things in life. “We’re going to be doing lots of candy exploration and investigating sugar,” Endress said. “That’ll be some of our demos and investigations.” Sundays this summer will include morning interactive storytimes for children. Sessions focusing on scientific observation — microscopes are involved — will follow in the afternoon. Youth camps are also offered. See scienceworksmuseum.org or call 541-482-6767 for details.

GROWERS MARKETS By Vickie Aldous Mail Tribune

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The Rogue Valley Growers markets in Medford and Ashland offer a bounty of fresh produce, plants, prepared food, unique handmade items and more. The market in Medford runs from 8:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Thursdays in Hawthorne Park near the corner of Hawthorne and East Jackson streets. Pets are not allowed at the market, and depending on the COVID-19 situation, visitors may be asked to wear masks. The Ashland market is from 8:30 a.m. to

1:30 p.m. Tuesdays at the National Guard Armory site, 1420 E. Main St. Ashland’s Saturday market runs from from 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. downtown on Oak Street between East Main Street and Lithia Avenue. Talent Artisans & Growers are holding their 2021 Fourth Friday Talent Evening Market from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. May 28, June 25, July 23 and Aug. 27. The market is located across from Talent City Hall at the corner of Main and John streets in Old Town Park. The Sunday JVille Market plans to start July 4 in downtown Jacksonville, with more details to be announced as the date nears. Visit jville.market for updates.

DARIA LAND PHOTO

Bunches of kale and chard await shoppers at the booth of Barking Moon Farm, at the Ashland market.

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Exhibit Organized by Anchorage Museum Get tickets today at Aquarium.org MF-00138650

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Friday, May 28: Concert Livestream & Heartbeat Stories World Music Festival lineup weaves cultural music & story-telling, featuring:

Halau Hula, Kevin Carr Trio, Raye Zaragoza, Son Huitzilín, Nell & Jim Band, Las Horas May 29-31: Self-Directed SoundWalks & Visual Art Festival lineup on three different SoundWalks leading you through Ashland’s park & city-scapes to visual art installations by local artists. Music Schedule, SoundWalk Maps & More @ rogueworldmusic.org/awmf


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MEDFORD RAILROAD PARK

WILDLIFE SAFARI By Ryan Pfeil Mail Tribune

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At Wildlife Safari in Winston, visitors can check out exotic animals from inside their

By Vickie Aldous Mail Tribune

vehicles. It has capacity restrictions for the gift shop and restaurant, but other than that, it’s business as usual at the drive-thru animal park. The 600-acre open-concept zoo boasts a variety of animals, including ostrich, Watusi cattle, lions, giraffes, hippos, bears and zebras, according to the park website. There are also new features and fauna to take in, including the new Lion Pride Rock feature in the center of the Lion Loop. “They have a lot more area to go and hang out in,” said Wildlife Safari marketing assistant Michael Burns. Newborn residents of the emu and cheetah variety will also be present to check out from afar, along with a new giraffe. The park also offers youth summer camps, though there is limited room for attendees. More information is available on the Wildlife Safari website, https://wildlifesafari.net.

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Azalea Lusch has an encounter with an ostrich at Wildlife Safari.

“It’s a fun, educational thing, and it’s also just a nice way to get out of the house and learn about the world and the animals,” Burns said. To get to Wildlife Safari, drive north on Interstate 5 to exit 119, then continue

onto Highway 42 until you reach NW Lookingglass Road, where you will turn right. After that, turn right onto Wildlife Safari Road and follow it to the main parking lot. The attraction is open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. seven days a week.

WILDLIFE IMAGES By Ryan Pfeil Mail Tribune

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MAIL TRIBUNE FILE PHOTO

A brown bear checks out visitors at Wildlife Images near Merlin.

Friday, May 21, 2021 |

Wildlife Images likely won’t be looking at too many big changes because of COVID-19

this summer. It helps when your facility is on a 24-acre site and outdoors. Even under “extreme” COVID-19 guidelines, up to 100 people are allowed in, said communications director Erin Maxson. “We are 100% open,” she said, but masks are required for the indoor exhibits and gift shop. Summer hours for the park, located at 11845 Lower River Road, northwest of Grants Pass, are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. seven days a week, Maxson said. Founded in 1981 to provided treatment and care for sick, injured and orphaned wildlife, Wildlife Images has since expanded to provide education on wildlife and conservation to the public.

The facility offers keeper talks, where attendees can learn about the facility and its denizens from staff every half hour, but there’s more to check out this year. For an additional fee, attendees can get a more experiential look at the day-to-day operations. “You go behind the scenes,” Maxson said. “You go to a training session with an animal. Sometimes it’s a walk with the wolves or a playdate with a badger or something like that. There’s a bunch of those. That’s what we’re really excited about.” Special events are offered monthly, along with self-guided tours and camps. More information is available at https://wildlifeimages.org. To get to Wildlife Images, take Interstate 5 north from Medford to exit 61, and drive on Merlin Road toward Merlin. Continue onto Galice Road, then turn left onto Robertson Bridge Road. Turn left onto Artlin Road, followed by a slight left onto Oregon Highway 260, or Lower River Road. Wildlife Images is will be on the right.

Plans for a possible reopening of the Medford Railroad Park were still up in the air at press time, but those who run the park said they plan to look at the COVID-19 situation in July and consider a possible short season. When open, the park is popular with kids and adult railroad buffs. Reduced-scale train rides pull people along more than a mile of track, traversing tunnels, bridges, hills and other features. The park, at 799 Berrydale Ave. in Medford, is home to elaborate handmade model train layouts, plus full-size locomotives, cabooses and train cars. In regular years, the park season runs from April through October. The 49-acre park is run by five groups: Southern Oregon Chapter of the National Railway Historical Society, Southern Oregon Live Steamers, Morse Telegraph Club, Rogue Valley Model Railroad Club, and Medford Garden Railroaders. For updates, visit facebook. com/Medfordrailroadpark/.

At press time, summer plans were still up in the air for organizers of Railroad Park, at Table Rock Road and Berrydale Avenue in Medford.

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HISTORIC

JACKSONVILLE MAIL TRIBUNE/FILE PHOTO

By Nick Morgan

The covered bridge across Little Butte Creek in Eagle Point is on the National Register of Historic Places.

Mail Tribune

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With attractions for history buffs, hikers, shoppers and diners, Southern Oregon’s first city has plenty of pioneer spirit to explore. Jacksonville is one of only eight cities in the country listed as a National Historic Landmark, based on the downtown district’s intact historical buildings, which make the town Oregon’s “most extensive and complete example” of a late 19th-century mining community during the Gold Rush. There are dozens of historic properties and landmarks to scout out, such as the Beekman House Museum, Beekman Bank Museum and the historic Jacksonville cemetery. Miles of hiking trails in the nearby Jacksonville Woodlands and the city’s Forest Park are perfect for novice to experienced hikers. Forest Park, one mile west of downtown, boasts grand vistas, the town’s old reservoir and remnants of old gold mines. In addition to its hiking trails, the town offers numerous eclectic shops, many fine restaurants, a Sunday market, and one of the region’s most-loved entertainment venues, the Britt Music and Arts Festival. Jacksonville is also the gateway to the Applegate Valley Wine Trail, one of Oregon’s newest wine appellations with 18 wineries. For more information about things to see and do, visit https://jacksonvilleoregon.org/.

MAIL TRIBUNE/FILE PHOTO

Historic downtown Jacksonville

COVERED BRIDGES By David Smigelski Mail Tribune

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If you’re looking for a lowkey summer excursion, pack a picnic and take a drive to one of the covered bridges that dot the Southern Oregon

landscape. The historic Wimer Covered Bridge, about seven miles north of the city of Rogue River, spans Evans Creek. The bridge was built in 1892 and was rebuilt for the third time in 2008. To get there, take East Evans Creek Road to Covered Bridge Road. McKee Bridge, built in 1917, is 122 feet long and stands 45 feet above the Applegate River. Just eight miles from the California border, it is Oregon’s southernmost covered

bridge. Take Highway 238 out of Jacksonville to Ruch. Turn left on Applegate Road and follow the Applegate Lake signs to the wayside of McKee Bridge. Antelope Creek Bridge was built around 1922 on Antelope Creek, about 10 miles outside Eagle Point. Now a pedestrian bridge, it was moved in 1987 to its location over Little Butte Creek in downtown Eagle Point. Lost Creek Bridge, built in 1919, is just 39 feet long, making it the shortest covered bridge in Oregon. To get there, take Highway 62 to Highway 140 and go to the Lake Creek exit. From the town of Lake Creek, go about 3 miles on South Fork Little Butte Road, then turn right on Lost Creek Road at the concrete bridge across Lake Creek. The covered bridge is about a half mile down this dirt road. It is open to foot traffic only.

ROGUE RIVER RAFTING By Vickie Aldous Mail Tribune

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Whether you’re searching for whitewater adventure or lacy riffles, the Rogue River’s variety makes it a rafting and kayaking destination. Rafting season runs through October, and with navigable stretches that vary from flat and fairly slow to frothy and wild, there are itineraries available for every skill level. A great gentle float for beginners is the 12-mile stretch from Casey State Recreation Area to Upper Rogue Regional Park in Shady Cove. Advanced paddlers will want to check out the Nugget run from just below the former Gold Ray Dam site to Gold Hill Sports Park.

MAIL TRIBUNE / FILE PHOTO

A group of rafters blast through Nugget Falls on the Rogue River.

Rafting companies abound along the length of the Rogue, offering rental rafts and gear for do-it-yourselfers. Depending on COVID19 cases, vaccination rates and regulations,

rafting companies may have modified operations and enhanced safety measures. For example, expect extra cleaning and sanitation, and you may be required to wear a face mask if you ride in a company’s shuttle van.


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ASHLAND WATERSHED TRAILS By Damian Mann for the Mail Tribune

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If you’re looking for someplace relatively cool to explore this summer, head up to the Ashland Watershed trails. The massive trail system cuts through forests to the south of Ashland, offering shade on the hottest summer days. Best of all, you can use the trails throughout the day and into the evening. There are trails for novice hikers, and seasoned trekkers can

Rabbit Trail. Be forewarned, there hike from Lithia Park to the top of Mount Ashland — which covers 13 is a relatively steep stretch along uphill miles White Rabbit that will get you Because of COVID-19, the huffing and puffing. Ashland Woodlands and Trails The ever-popular Toothpick Association recommends you Trail takes about 20 minutes to get maintain six feet of distance from to from downtown Ashland. Head other hikers and bikers. A number south on Tolman Creek Road until of Forest Service roads crisscross it turns into a paved forest road the network of trails, which allows and keep winding your way up into for easier social distancing. the mountains until you come to Several trailheads provide the trailhead on your right. There access to the trail system. are usually several vehicles parked If you head up from Lithia Park, you’ll see Witzend Trail, near Ash- alongside the road. For more information about land Loop Road. t r ailheads and routes, go Drive up to the top of Park to www.ashlandtrails.org/ MAIL TRIBUNE / FILE PHOTO Avenue, and you’ll be at the Anwen Jones hikes on the Toothpick Trail. entrance to the magical White route-search-formatted/.

GRIZZLY PEAK

SCENIC DRIVES By Nick Morgan Mail Tribune

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By Damian Mann for the Mail Tribune

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Grizzly Peak is one of the best local hikes to satisfy both novice and active hikers. At 4.7 miles, the hike is long enough to get a decent workout, and because much of the hike is a loop, it offers varied terrain and views. It’s also a popular hike for locals because of the vistas at the top. To the south, you can see Mount Shasta. To the north, you can see Roxy Ann Peak and Medford. At your feet, the town of Ashland is nestled between the Cascade and Siskiyou mountain ranges. If you head up the trail in late spring and early summer, wildflowers are abundant, particularly in the meadows and near a forested area that was burned more than a decade ago. To access the trail, turn off Highway 66 in Ashland onto Dead Indian Memorial Road. Go about five miles and turn left on Shale City Road. When you’ve gone several miles on Shale City Road, keep an eye out for a sign to Grizzly Peak, which will require a left turn. You will eventually arrive at a parking lot, and the trailhead will be just above it. A restroom is available. For about the first mile of the hike, you’ll be going steadily upward through dense forests on the north side of the mountain. Since you’re almost at 6,000-feet elevation, it might make you a bit winded on the first part of the journey.

MAIL TRIBUNE / FILE PHOTO

A hiker heads through a meadow of wildflowers on Grizzly Peak.

Eventually you will see a sign that leads you to the top of Grizzly Peak. While the peak is interesting, it’s not as exciting as the overlook that is still over a mile away. Just keep following the trail as it leads you through meadows and various promontories that offer views of the valley below. Eventually you will arrive at an overlook where many people stop for a picnic lunch and to catch the views. Continue on the trail that leads you through a rocky area, then back through meadows and finally into the forest. For most hikers, you should be able to make the journey in about two to three hours depending on how long you care to linger on the views.

It’s another great summer to hit the open road and take in Southern Oregon’s sights. Among the shortest and sweetest of scenic drives recommended by Travel Southern Oregon is a drive starting from the Voorhies Mansion in Medford — site of the Rogue Valley’s first pear orchard and Edenvale Winery at 2310 Voorhies Road — to downtown Jacksonville and all of its Gold Rush charm. Other scenic drives recommended online via Yelp include the drive to DAVID SMIGELSKI/MAIL TRIBUNE Crater Lake The Rogue River below Hellgate Canyon on its way to National Galice and the entrance to the lower Rogue River canyon. Park, or drives in Josephine County to Oregon Caves National Monument outside Cave Junction, or to the riverside town of Galice, a rafting mecca on the middle Rogue River. The drive to Galice will take you past Hellgate Canyon, a narrow chasm filled with churning whitewater where you can pull over and gaze down from an overlook at rafters as they careen between sheer cliffs. If you continue beyond Galice, you’ll pass one riverside park after another, like pearls on a necklace, until you reach the boat ramps at Grave Creek, the launching point for rafters and kayakers heading into the Wild and Scenic section of the lower Rogue River canyon, and the start of the Rogue River National Recreation Trail No. 1160, a 40-mile trail through some of the most beautiful scenery in the United States. For maps and travel guides, see traveloregon.com.


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MOBILE DINING SCENE The local food truck scene offers an amazing variety of fare, from gourmet hotdogs, tacos and Asian fusion to barbecue, toasted cheese The COVID-19 and fish and chips. pandemic created Food trucks can be found on havoc for many street corners and parking lots throughout the small businesses, Rogue Valley, at but one silver local festivals and lining appears street fairs, growto have been an ers markets, and explosion of tasty, at gathering spots mobile food trucks such as the Medin the Rogue ford post office. Valley. Other than “We’re opening driving around and new mobile units looking, probably every week,” said the best way for Chad Petersen, visitors to find environmental mobile fare is to public health manwhip out your cellager for Jackson phone and google County Health & Medford food PHOTO BY SARAH LEMON Human Services. trucks, search sites The meatball cone at She’s Got Balls As of March, such as Yelp or ask food truck can be ordered with or Jackson County your friends. without spaghetti. had 145 licensed Most local mobile food carts, and 20 of them food trucks have Facebook pages had opened in 2020, a roughly 14% that keep fans up to date on their increase, said Petersen. locations.

By David Smigelski Mail Tribune

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APPLEGATE L AKE By David Smigelski Mail Tribune

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This 988-acre reservoir sits nearly on the California border, and it offers FILE PHOTO a wide range of recreational Applegate Lake is plentifully stocked with rainbow trout, activities, including camping, and bass anglers often work the rocky points for both road biking, mountain biking, smallmouth and largemouth. fishing, wildlife viewing, trail the water. There is a trail that travels running, hiking and boating. around the entirety of the 17.5-mile long The lake is plentifully stocked shoreline, as well as several offshoots for with rainbow trout, and bass anglers hikers, bicyclists and equestrians. often work the rocky points for both The Payette Trail offers a 9.2-mile ride smallmouth and largemouth. A 10-milethat will keep you lakeside throughout, an-hour speed limit on the lake helps with several good places to stop for a dip. keep the lake quiet and wake-free for all For a longer ride, take the Da-Ku-Beusers, from floaters to kayakers. Te-De Trail, which links to others for Boats can be launched at the Copper miles of exploration. ramp, French Gulch and Hart Tish Park, The Collings Mountain Trail will which has a general store, a day-use take you to the famous Bigfoot trap — a area and a beach, as well as kayak and local attraction that you’ll be able to tell stand-up paddleboard rentals. friends and family about for years. To The lake has numerous fingers and reach the lake, take Highway 238 from coves you can explore in your waterJacksonville to Ruch and turn left on craft, and numerous hiking and biking Upper Applegate Road for 16.6 miles. trails snake through the forest around

DIAMOND L AKE By Mark Freeman Mail Tribune

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Boat ramps at the south and north ends of the lake provide easy access. Diamond Lake Resort, which is the hub of activity here, also has a fleet of rentals as well as guided fishing trips with all rods and gear provided.

Southern Oregon’s “gem of the Cascades” will shine even brighter this year for outdoor enthusiasts looking to beat the heat of the Rogue Valley and still find excellent water conditions amid this year’s gripping drought. Diamond Lake is virtually a drought-free lake beneath the shadows of Mount Bailey and Mount Thielsen about 90 minutes from Medford, offering summer fishing, hiking, camping and mountain-biking options JAMIE LUSCH / MAIL TRIBUNE throughout the summer. John Linson lands rainbow trout at Diamond Lake. Diamond Lake is a top-drawer trout fishery, with stocked rainbow A 13-mile trail around the lake is a trout, as well as predatory tiger trout and favorite for summer hikers and mountain brown trout. Fish eclipsing 20 inches are bikers. It’s best to start and end at the not uncommon, but anglers can keep just resort’s pizza parlor to complete the trek one of those behemoths as part of their with lunch and a cold beer. five-trout daily limit. The bike path is a good one for beginBank fishing is not a strong option, but ners because it’s quite flat. there are many ways to get yourselves To get there, take Highway 62 past Union onto the water and avoiding the lakeside Creek to Highway 230, then turn off at the mosquitoes big enough to fillet. well-signed Diamond Lake Resort signs.

NOT-SO-SECRET FISHING SPOTS By Mark Freeman Mail Tribune

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Southern Oregon draws anglers from near and far, with options ranging from spring chinook salmon and summer steelhead to rainbow trout. For salmon and steelhead, the best options are to seek out one of the region’s top fishing guides. Google Rogue River fishing guides for ample options. But for those looking to take their own shot, there are plenty of bank-fishing opportunities upstream of Shady Cove along Highway 62. McGregor Park along the upper Rogue River is one of the easiest spots for bank fishing for summer steelhead. Along Takelma Drive off Highway 62 near Trail, this U.S. Army Corps of Engineers park is so under the radar that even vandals haven’t discovered it. It has several places to cast for steelhead, and its proximity to Cole Rivers Hatchery improves the odds of the steelhead you catch sporting a clipped adipose fin, which allows you to keep it. Anglers can side-drift roe or worms with small corkies. Spinning-rod casters can use small Panther Martin lures (everything works, as long as it’s black with yellow dots) or mid-sized Vibrax or other silver- or brass-bladed spinners.

MAIL TRIBUNE / JAMIE LUSCH

Tim Lagendresse holds a rainbow trout he caught at Union Creek.

Those looking to catch rainbow trout can venture about 25 minutes farther to the Union Creek area, where 3,500 rainbow trout are stocked each Thursday from Memorial Day to Labor Day. Much of the fishing is Huck Finn style — short casts of a worm with a small lead weight 18 inches up from the hook. Focus on choppy water, along woody debris and under the Union Creek Campground bridge, because it’s a stocking spot. The creek is small and shallow and easily wadeable in tennis shoes — but the creek is always cold. Expect a steady diet of 8- to 9-inch rainbows. Fish your way down the creek from the highway, and even cast into the deep, slow Rogue waters near its mouth. To get there, take Highway 62 north to the Union Creek Campground parking area near milepost 57.


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PILOT ROCK By Joe Zavala Mail Tribune

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It’s not easy — especially the last half-mile — but those who brave Pilot Rock’s 2.8-mile trail will likely enjoy the 360-degree view and the sense of accomplishment that comes with pushing through the final scramble to reach the 5,910-foot peak. The summer’s a great time to try it because the footing is much improved after the snow and ice have disappeared, but it’s still a challenge, especially for those who have a fear of heights. Good hiking shoes are recommended, and you should also pack plenty of water, sunblock, a flashlight (just in case your trip is unexpectedly extended by injury) and food.

The top of Pilot Rock offers majestic views of the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument and Soda Mountain Wilderness. MAIL TRIBUNE FILE PHOTO

First-timers may want to rope in a friend who has hiked it before, too. To get to the trail from Interstate 5 southbound, take the Mount Ashland exit (Exit 6) and follow Highway 99 for 2 miles before taking a left onto Pilot Rock Road. If you stay left, you’ll see an old quarry to the right about 2 miles in. The trail, which intersects with the Pacific Crest Trail about a mile in, begins on an old road located behind a boulder barrier. Most of the trail is fine for beginners and includes plenty of shady spots, but the final climb will require a certain amount of dexterity. Smokey air would make the final ascent — it’s an 810-foot elevation gain — even more difficult than it already is, so check for local wildfires and air quality before heading out. Dogs are allowed to tag along on the trail but must be leashed.

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MOUNT ASHLAND but come prepared with plenty of water (and sun block) because the elevaThere’s tion change over that plenty short distance is a to do whopping 1,000 feet. on There’s a nice spot Mount Ashland after off the road just past the snow melts if you the lodge where you know where to look can camp for free and and what to pack. have access to pit Hikers, both expetoilets. The dirt road rienced and novice, past that is drivable, can venture out to but pretty bumpy. Grouse Gap to take in Mountain bikers the scenery and check can also take advanout the shelter, or for VICKIE ALDOUS / MAIL TRIBUNE tage of mountain a good workout and Cyrus Moore, 9, and Sydney Moore, trails. If you’re in it one of the best views 7, pedal on an uphill stretch of Forest for the ride more than in the Rogue Valley, Road 20 between the Grouse Gap head all the way up Shelter and the Mt. Ashland Ski Area. the exercise, take a shuttle from Ashland the summit trail. Grouse Gap is an area on the moun- and burn rubber all the way more than 13 miles down from the mountain to tain accessible by a 5-mile trail loop. Lithia Park. To get there, head up past the ski Geocachers who aren’t afraid of lodge to the junction with Forest Road heights will find something that’s 40S30. From there, the Grouse Gap worth their while on Mount Ashland, shelter is about a quarter-mile away. but watch your step — the prize is The summit trail, which takes you hidden in the rock outcropping that all the way to — you guessed it … the you can’t miss en route to the summit. summit — is only about a mile long,

By Joe Zavala Mail Tribune

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CRATER L AKE NATIONAL PARK By Kris Henry Mail Tribune

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A group of hikers reach the junction of the Mount Thielsen Trail and the Pacific Crest Trail, 1.2 miles below the summit of the mountain.

MOUNT THIELSEN TRAIL By Ryan Pfeil Mail Tribune

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Mount Thielsen, called the “lightning rod of the Cascades,” is the highest point in the Umpqua National Forest, rising 9,182 feet above the forest near Diamond Lake. The Pacific Crest Trail crosses the shoulder of the mountain, and a trail that starts on Highway 138 leads 3.8 miles to the PCT. From the PCT junction, a climbers’ trail heads another 1.2 miles up a ridge to the spire at the top, but it’s not for the faint of heart. From the trailhead to the summit it’s 10 miles

roundtrip, with more than 3,700 feet in elevation gain. The last 200 feet or so of ascent requires extreme caution, the Forest Service website says. “Climbing ropes are advised if you wish to go to the summit,” it says. “The view of the east and west sides of the Cascades, from the Sisters to Mount Shasta, is incredible,” the site says, adding that August is generally the best month to view alpine wildflowers. To get there from Medford, take Highway 62 about 50 miles just past Union Creek. Turn left onto Highway 230 and drive for about 24 miles, then turn left onto Highway 138 at Diamond Lake for 1-½ miles. The trailhead will be on your right.

Few places carry the majestic beauty and charm of Crater Lake National Park, a must-see for visitors and residents alike. With the bluest water you’ve ever seen, the lake in the caldera of an ancient volcano provides one of the most photographed sights in Oregon. The country’s deepest lake (1,943 feet) is fed by rain and snow but no rivers or streams, creating what’s considered to be the cleanest large body of water in the world. The 33-mile Rim Drive around Crater Lake is one of America’s most scenic byways, 123RF.COM with the full The night sky is full of stars over Wizard loop typically open from early Island at Crater Lake National Park. July to late October. The narrow road can be driven, without stopping, in about an hour, but plan on at least 2-3 hours to enjoy the varied sights available at more than 30 scenic pullouts along the way. At 6,000 feet above sea level, Crater Lake access can be restricted by snow into June. Webcams to check conditions and views are available at nps.gov/ crla/index.htm. There’s lodging at the Crater Lake Lodge and The Cabins at Mazama Village, and 214 sites at Mazama Campground. All sites may be reserved in advance by calling 866-292-6720 or visiting travelcraterlake.com. Wizard Island, the Watchman, the Old Man of the Lake, Phantom Ship, the Pinnacles, Plaikni Falls and Vidae Falls are among the highlights at the park. Boat tours and other ranger-led activities are not being offered due to COVID-19, but hiking (90 miles of trails), sky gazing and wildlife viewing remain.

BEAR CREEK GREENWAY By Joe Zavala Mail Tribune

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Stretching from the Ashland Dog Park to the Dean Creek Frontage Road near Seven Oaks Interchange on Interstate 5, north of Central Point, the fully paved Bear Creek Greenway is a good option for bikers, skaters, walkers and runners looking for a nearby outdoor excursion on a smooth, flat surface while avoiding the hassle

and dangers of Nature Center traffic. and Bear Creek Beginning as Park, and also a paved trail includes an in Medford in arty pedestrian the 1970s, the bridge over 18-mile GreBarnett Road. Those who use enway takes the Greenway travelers along Bear Creek JAMIE LUSCH / MAIL TRIBUNE should adhere past tempting A jogger runs along a fire-damaged area of the to the rules to help make sure jumping off Bear Creek Greenway in Phoenix. everyone has a points like Lynn Newbry Park, Blue Heron Park, U.S. safe experience — keep right and pass Cellular Community Park, Jefferson left, use a bell or yell when passing,

keep dogs on a short leash and clean up after them — and absolutely no fireworks, firearms, camping or alcohol. Also, motorized vehicles, with the exception of mobility devices and electric-assist bikes, are not allowed on the Greenway. Horses are allowed only on designated sections and not on pavement except where signed. The creek is home to a variety of wildlife, including beaver, otter, raccoons and turtles, and in the fall chinook salmon can be seen spawning in the creek.


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SOUTHERN OREGON SPEEDWAY By Tim Trower Mail Tribune

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Car racing fans are in for a treat this year as dirt-track action returns to Southern Oregon Speedway under new management and with major improvements throughout the facility. The grand opening is scheduled for May 29, and racing will continue through September. The track is part of the Jackson County Sports Park, 6900 Kershaw Road, White City. It opened in 1995 as a banked, three-tenths-of-a-mile oval and ran continuously until last year, when COVID-19 shut it down. Previous promoter Mike McCann pulled up stakes this year, prompting the racing community — concerned another year of inaction could be a

MAIL TRIBUNE / FILE PHOTO

Sprint cars race in the dirt at the Southern Oregon Speedway in 2004.

death knell in Southern Oregon — to set about saving the track. A group of longtime racers and supporters was formed, headed by Travis Hoppes and Dane Smith, who won a bid over three other groups to resurrect the speedway.

Mount McLoughlin rises in the background as bicyclists ride along the Cascade Siskiyou Scenic Bikeway near Howard Prairie. MAIL TRIBUNE / JAMIE LUSCH

CASCADE SISKIYOU SCENIC BIKEWAY

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The Cascade Siskiyou Scenic Bikeway is a challenging bike route that incorporates 5,000 feet of climbing through oak savannah, fir forests and past mountain lakes. The 55-mile ride starts and ends in Ashland and passes through a region so ecologically significant that 62,000 acres of it is designated as the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument. The route climbs from the valley floor out past Emigrant Lake and into oak-dotted mountainsides that deliver spectacular views of the Bear Creek Valley and Pilot Rock. The bikeway rises to the 4,551-foot Green Springs summit. Near Hyatt Reservoir you’ll see views of 9,000foot Mount McLoughlin, with glimpses of osprey and bald eagles nesting. Just when you think the climbing is over, you’ll tackle one final 3-mile climb through the wildflower-covered alpine meadows of Lily Glen and Buck Prairie before a thrilling, winding 13-mile descent down Dead Indian Memorial Highway back to Ashland. For more information about the route, see Travel Oregon’s description of Oregon’s scenic bikeways at https:// traveloregon.com/places-to-go

The speedway board of directors has overseen major improvements. In particular, the track, which had shrunk to less than a quarter of a mile over the years, is being lengthened to the original three-tenths. Other upgrades in the works are improved

banks in the turns, retaining walls, signage around the track, sound and lighting systems, configuration of the pit area, concession offerings, new electronic scoring that will allow fans to follow, and live pay-per-service through IMCA.TV. Tickets this year will be sold only on the track’s new website, southernoregonspeedway.com. The opening night of racing will feature IMCA modifieds, IMCA northern sport mods, late models and hornets. Key dates are the Roger Haudenshild Tribute, June 12; Battle at the Border, July 2-3; Lon Skinner Memorial, July 23-24; R Charles Snyder Salute, Sept. 3-4; championship nights, Sept. 11 and 18; and wingless sprint thrill cars, Sept. 25. Gates open at 5 p.m. and racing is at 7. Tickets cost $10 for general admission and $5 for seniors and veterans. Admission is free for children 6 and younger.

FROM TEE TO GREEN By Tim Trower Mail Tribune

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There are a number of appealing public golf courses in the Rogue Valley that cater to all levels of ability. Here’s a rundown (other rates available for juniors, seniors, twilight):

18 Holes Centennial, Medford: High-end course with an open landscape, virtually no trees and several water hazards. Greens are true, fairways well maintained. Longest course in the area. Weekend rates (without cart): 18 / 9 holes, $61/$35. 541-773-4653; centennialgolfclub.com Eagle Point, Eagle Point: Top-notch layout with a variety of hole designs and in optimum condition. Front nine more open and flat, back nine heads into the woods a bit. Plenty of test. Weekend rates (without cart): 18 / 9 holes, $60/$28. 541-826-8225; resortateaglepoint.com Stone Ridge, Eagle Point: Lots of upgrades under new management. Diverse track with plenty of elevation change and several elevated tees, which is always fun. Away from the bustle. Weekend rates (without cart): 18 / 9 holes, $44/$25. 541-830-4653; stoneridgegolfcourse.com

Nine holes Oak Knoll, Ashland: Municipal course. Mostly straightforward holes to start, then finishes with a tough uphill approach on No. 8 and a tee shot over a ravine on No. 9. Weekend rates (without cart): 18 / 9 holes, $25/$17. 541-482-4311; oakknollgolf.org

MAIL TRIBUNE / FILE PHOTO

The Rogue Valley has eight golf courses of varying lengths and types to test your skills. Quail Point, Medford: A shorter course that is long on character. Greens are quick with subtle breaks, and holes that wrap around a hill allow for a variety of shots. Weekend rates (without cart): 18 / 9 holes, $32/$20. 541-857-7000; quailpointgolf.com Stewart Meadows, Medford: Gem of a layout, suitable for all levels. Easy to walk but provides challenges with creeks and/or ponds on six holes and plenty of bunkers. Weekend rates (without cart): 18 / 9 holes, $30/$20. 541-7706554; stewartmeadowsgolf.com

Par 3 Bear Creek, Medford: Par 29, with two par 4s of about 300 yards. Great for juniors, beginners, walkers and for short-game work. Now has a disc course. Weekend rates (without cart): 18 / 9 holes, $18/$15. 541-773-1822; golfbearcreek.com Laurel Hill, Central Point: Par 31, with four par 4s ranging from 265 to 310 yards. Lots of trees and doglegs prevent them from being drivable. Weekend rates (without cart): 18 / 9 holes, $23/$17. 541-855-7965; laurelhillgolf.com

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PRESCOTT PARK

Hikers explore the Pacific Crest Trail on Mount Ashland.

By Kris Henry Mail Tribune

MAIL TRIBUNE FILE PHOTO

PACIFIC CREST TRAIL By Joe Zavala Mail Tribune

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Southern Oregon is the approximate halfway point on the 2,650-mile Pacific Crest Trail, which travels from the Mexican border to the Canadian border. Unless you’re one of those brave souls who attempt to hike the entire trail, a day hike is a fantastic way to experience the PCT. Don’t go without telling somebody, though, and pack a map and plenty of water. There are trailheads in Southern Oregon. PCT guidebooks can usually be found at local bookstores, and an interactive map can be found on

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the Pacific Crest Trail website (pcta. org). The trail runs along the south side of Mount Ashland on its path through the Klamath National Forest — an elevated section that tops out at about 6,300 feet above sea level. The best time to check out the PCT’s Southern Oregon sections, according to the Pacific Crest Trail Association, may be in August and September, because by then the mosquitoes thin out. But there’s also a risk in waiting, because wildfire season can mean unhealthy smoke levels and trail closures. In the early summer, hikers stand the best chance of finding snow-free PCT trail sections between Siskiyou Summit and Lake of the Woods.

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Located in east Medford off Hillcrest Road and Roxy Ann Drive, Prescott Park offers miles of trails for hikers and bikers. The primary geographical feature is Roxy Ann Peak, a landmark protruding 3,571 feet above sea level and about 2,000 feet above the valley floor. Mount Shasta can be seen looking south from the top of Roxy Ann Peak, with Mount Ashland, Table Rocks and Mount McLoughlin visible as one rotates clockwise. The well-marked trails cater to all fitness levels. Novice mountain bikers will like the Greenhorn Trail, which is just shy of a mile long. Advanced riders MAIL TRIBUNE/FILE PHOTO seeking more thrills will like the rockier Austin, 14, left, and his father, Russell Black Diamond trail. Lancaster, of Central Point, descend a mounTrail-marker posts provide informa- tain-biking trail in Medford’s Prescott Park. tion on what activities are permitted on each trail, the skill level recommended and trail distance. The parking gate is open from 8 a.m.-8 p.m. during the spring and summer. The city allows hikers to enter past the locked gate without a vehicle outside of those times. From the first gate to the Roxy Ann Picnic Area, the road consists of packed and loose gravel. Using a scale of 1-5, with 5 being very steep, it is a consistent 3. For information, contact the Medford Parks Department at 541-774-2400 or see medfordoregon.gov.

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Friday, May 21, 2021 |

SAMUEL BOARDMAN’S OCEAN TRAIL views of the rugged coastline and photo-worthy Oregon sunsets. The cape is also an excellent spot for whale watching in fall and spring.

By David Smigelski Mail Tribune

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The Samuel Boardman State Scenic Corridor is a jewel of a park that runs 12 miles along the Southern Oregon Coast between Brookings and Gold Beach, boasting attractions that range from wildflowers and ancient trees to tidepools and a “secret” beach. Named after Samuel Boardman, Oregon’s first parks superintendent, the park is a culmination of years of negotiations with private landowners. Many of the park’s features can be seen by pulling over and parking, while others require a hike. The corridor uses parts of the Oregon Coast Trail, with multiple detours and side trails to waterfalls, sea stacks and other attractions.

House Rock Viewpoint: A memorial commemorates Samuel H. Boardman. The 4-mile trail between Cape Ferrelo and House Rock offers many side trails to secluded beaches. Whaleshead Beach: This oceanfront picnic area has gorgeous views and an easy, flat path to the beach.

MAIL TRIBUNE / DAVID SMIGELSKI

Secret Beach really does feel like a secret beach, because you can reach it only by hiking along the Oregon Coast Trail in the Samuel H. Boardman State Scenic Corridor halfway between Brookings and Gold Beach.

One way to experience the corridor is to visit some of the trailheads and piece together short hikes to

JEDEDIAH SMITH REDWOODS STATE PARK By Mark Freeman Mail Tribune

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Rogue Valley visitors and residents often love to satisfy their redwoods fix on a summer day trip, and there’s no closer, better place than a protected corner of Jedediah Smith Redwoods State Park along the Oregon-California border. The park’s Stout Grove is an exceptional 44-acre preserve for dozens of 300-foot redwood specimens that reach for the heavens just south of California’s Smith River off Highway 199. It’s a half-mile trail hike into the guts of the grove, where massive ferns rise from the duff beneath trees dating back 1,000 years. The tract is dedicated to lumberman Frank D. Stout. In 1929 his widow, Clara W. Stout, donated the tract of old-growth redwoods to the Save the Redwoods League. Stout Grove then became the first dedicated grove in Jedediah Smith Redwoods State Park. To drive in, take Highway 199 from Grants Pass to the Myrtle Creek bridge west of Houchi (there’s a sign) and turn left. Then take an

JAMIE LUSCH/MAIL TRIBUNE

Workers construct a walkway to the Grove of Titans at Jedediah Smith Redwoods State Park.

immediate right for about two miles before reaching the parking area. Just southwest of the grove is an even more impressive colossus of majestic redwoods that make up the Grove of Titans. The grove is home to four of the 10 largest coastal redwoods by volume ever discovered. The Save the Redwoods League has joined forces with the state, federal park managers and others to help preserve that grove by building a series of elevated paths to them to protect both the ecosystem and its visitors. That grove could open to visitors as early as this fall. The easiest way to get there is a foot bridge over Smith River from the Jedediah Smith Campground.

beautiful spots, such as: Cape Ferrelo Viewpoint: A milelong hike leads to breathtaking

Natural Bridge: Follow a short trail to one of the best viewpoints in the park — the seven iconic arch rocks and blowholes known as Natural Bridges. Arch Rock: From a paved parking lot, a short path leads to an overlook featuring a series of offshore sea stacks and islands.

BAY TO CAPE By David Smigelski Mail Tribune

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One of the best getaways on the Southern Oregon coast is the area in and around Charleston, a JAMIE LUSCH / MAIL TRIBUNE locale that packs Asher Strong, 4, and Benson Strong 4, of North Bend, dozens of attraccheck out crabs caught by Rob Gensorek off a public tions into a small dock in Charleston. area. From crabbing off the docks in the Charleston boat basin, to buying fresh tuna off the fishing boats, stocking up on oysters from nearby farms and digging clams in the mudflats, the area provides a seafood bonanza. If you want a scenic drive, the bay-to-cape road from Charleston to Cape Arago is a jewel, passing by Sunset Bay State Park and the botanical gardens at Shore Acres State Park on the way to Cape Arago State Park. At Cape Arago, beachcombers will love the south cove trail, which drops down to a sandy beach loaded with tidepools where they can visit intertidal plants and animals. The park also features an overlook where visitors can take in views of Shell Island and Simpson Reef, part of Oregon Islands National Wildlife Refuge, where you can see thousands of marine mammals. If science is your thing, a visit to the Charleston Marine Life Science Center is in order, where you can see exhibit galleries that focus on coastal ecosystems, deep-water habitats, fisheries, marine mammals and ongoing marine research. To check hours, see www.charlestonmarinelife-center.com.

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CASCADE-SISKIYOU NATIONAL MONUMENT By Joe Zavala Mail Tribune

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Established in 2000, the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument has a little bit of everything for nature lovers, including spectacular scenic views, a diverse animal population and, for novice and expert hikers alike, a challenging range of elevation from 2,100 to 6,100 feet. Camping is a good way to partake in some of what CSNM has to offer, and the Hyatt Lake Recreation Area campground is open from Memorial Day through Labor Day. To get there from Ashland’s south freeway exit, take Highway 66 toward Klamath Falls for 17 miles until you reach the Green Springs Inn. From there, turn north onto East Hyatt Lake Road and follow for 3 miles. Hyatt Lake Campground has 44 campsites across three loops, and while the boat ramps were closed as of early May due to low water levels, the

BLM PHOTO

Pilot Rock stands tall in the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument.

campground is equipped with showers, flush toilets, a playground and an RV dump station (campgrounds must be reserved in advance at recreation.gov). Hyatt Lake is known for trout and bass fishing, but with the lake suffering low water levels due to ongoing drought, there’s plenty of other things to keep you busy, including hiking, swimming, horseshoes and a sand volleyball court. Visitors can check out birds of prey at the nearby Hyatt Lake Watchable Wildlife Site on the lake’s west shore, where a short, paved trail leads to a wildlife interpretive site.

DENMAN WILDLIFE AREA and other so-called “non-consumptive” users. The two main tracts Smackof the wildlife area — dab one at TouVelle Road in the and Agate Road and the middle other across from the of the White City Upper Table Rock trailIndustrial Area is an head — are accessed oasis for fish, wildlife via locked gates whose and those who stalk keys are available for them with anything free to the public. from a rod to a gun Key-holders must to a camera — the register their identity Oregon Department and vehicle inforMAIL TRIBUNE/FILE PHOTO mation with ODFW of Fish and Wildlife’s Denman Wildlife Area. John Cosentino, of Central Point, as a way of curbing fishes at the Denman Wildlife Area. The 1,900-acre illegal dumping there. area is a favorite for dog trainers, bird During the COVID-19 pandemic, hunters, anglers, hikers and even would-be key holders must send their rock-hounders sifting through the information to the ODFW office at the bed of Little Butte Creek that snakes wildlife area, then wait for their key to through the lands off Agate Road west be mailed to them. of Highway 62. Visitors must also have a wildlife The area is divided into four units area parking pass. They cost $10 a day that are home to 175 species of birds, or $30 a year. However, those with 41 different mammals and 21 kinds of ODFW pioneer licenses, Sports PAC reptiles and amphibians. license, an Oregon hunting license, The heaviest use comes from the an Oregon combined hunting/angling estimated 36,000 bird watchers, dog license or a youth combo license get a trainers, horseback riders, hikers free parking pass. By Mark Freeman Mail Tribune

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Friday, May 21, 2021 |

TOUR OF JEFFERSON By David Smigelski Mail Tribune

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Summer is the perfect time for this 420-mile driving loop through the State of Jefferson. The route follows the Redwood Highway and the so-called Bigfoot Highway, aka the Klamath River Highway. You’ll see lots of redwoods, no doubt, but the Bigfoot sightings might be a little tougher to notch. Then again, who knows? Traveling in a counterclockwise direction, the loop includes five highways: Interstate 5 to Grants Pass, 83 miles west on Highway 199 to Crescent City, California, 78 miles south along the ocean on U.S. 101 to Arcata, 40 miles along the Trinity River on State Route 299 to Willow Creek, 146 miles east along the Klamath River on Highway 96, then about 40 miles up and over the Siskiyou summit on I-5 to home. You’ll pass about DAVID SMIGELSKI / MAIL TRIBUNE 100 too-good-pass A Bigfoot statue looms large in Happy Camp, stops that will have California. you wishing for more time, including the Smith River National Recreation Area, Jedediah Smith Redwoods State Park, Humboldt Bay, the Trees of Mystery, and Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park, site of Fern Canyon. You’ll see herds of elk around Orick, the lagoons of Humboldt Lagoons State Park, and a string of beaches like pearls on a string — Trinidad State Beach, Moonstone Beach, Little River State Beach, Clam Beach. At Arcata, you’ll turn away from Humboldt Bay and aim your grill at the mountains of Six Rivers National Forest until you reach Willow Creek and make your turn onto Highway 96, aka The Bigfoot Highway, for 147 miles. In Happy Camp, you’ll chuckle at the Bigfoot statue, then it’s 64 miles to Interstate 5, and a hop over the Siskiyou Pass for a relaxing glide down the asphalt to the Rogue Valley.

COURTESY PHOTO

Lee Juillerat dives into Crater Lake from Jumping Rock, reached via the Cleetwood Cove Trail.

SWIMMIN’ HOLES By David Smigelski Mail Tribune

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Summer isn’t summer without dipping into a swimming hole on a hot, sunny day, and Southern Oregon offers lots of options. We don’t have room to list every swimming hole we know about, but here’s a starter list to get you going: Hyatt Lake offers a sandy beach, with plenty of picnic tables and parking. The lake is about 25 miles east of Ashland off Hyatt-Prairie Road. Lithia Park’s swimming reservoir is in the southern tip of Lithia Park, near the intersection of Granite Street and Glenview Drive. Call the city at 541-488-5340. Lost Creek Lake has a large swim area at Joseph H. Stewart State Recreation Area. The lake is about 35 miles northeast of Medford on Highway 62. Call 541-560-3334.

Applegate Lake offers many miles of secluded or bustling shoreline. The lake has a large designated swimming area, but several coves around the lake, such as where Manzanita Creek enters the reservoir, are popular for swimming. Applegate Lake is about 30 miles southwest of Medford. Big Squaw Lake, at 50 acres, and Little Squaw Lake, at 12 acres, both offer a calm, quaint setting. The hike-in reservoirs are located off Forest Service Road 1075 about nine miles east of Applegate Lake. To get there, cross Applegate Dam on French Gulch Road and take a right about 1.5 miles from the dam. Parking costs $5. Call 541-899-9220 or see applegatelake. com/campgrounds_squaw_lakes.html The one and only trail leading down to the deep, blue waters of Crater Lake is the Cleetwood Cove Trail, which is just over one mile long each way and fairly steep, dropping nearly 700 feet to water. It’s an experience to remember.

SKY L AKES WILDERNESS AREA By Kris Henry Mail Tribune

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The Sky Lakes Wilderness Area includes three major lake basins: Seven Lakes, Sky Lakes and Blue Canyon. Use of the 113,849-acre wilderness is heavy in the three main lake basins, which are popular fishing, hiking and camping. Bring mosquito repellent, because the bloodsuckers are think during the summer. All of Southern Oregon seems on display when

viewed from the 9,495-foot trout, are set against a backdrop summit of Mount McLoughlin. of tall trees that reach to the Sky Lakes Wilderness contains edge of the lakeshores. more than 200 bodies of water, The Pacific Crest National from creeks to ice-cold springs Scenic Trail passes the entire and scores of clear lakes. length of Sky Lakes Wilderness Several of the lakes, such as for about 35 miles. Alta and Natasha, were found The 1888-inscribed “Waldo PHOTO BY LARRY TURNER Tree,” at the southeast shore of through an EPA baseline study Hikers cool off in Blue Lake in the nearly 40 years ago to have Island Lake, is a draw for histoSky Lakes Wilderness Area. among the most chemically pure ry-minded visitors each year, as water known of all lakes on the is the opportunity to hike along globe. the route of an 1860s-1890s military wagon Most of the lakes, some stocked yearly with road, on the present Twin Ponds Trail.

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Friday, May 21, 2021 |

JACKSON COUNTY FAIR By Damian Mann for the Mail Tribune

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A pig takes a break at the Jackson County Fair in 2016.

The Jackson County Fair will hold a livestock show and livestock auction this year, but with concerns about COVID-19, other events were still up in the air in early May. A carnival is still a possibility, but no date had been set as of press time. The fair dates are July 14-18. The

swine auction will be held either live or virtually Wednesday, July 14, and the beef auction is set for Saturday, July 18. Sherm’s, which buys meat from the auction, is the major sponsor of the fair. Kids can still go to the fair for free thanks to a sponsorship by Lithia Motors. Butler Ford sponsorship means that parking is free. Helen Funk, Jackson County Expo director, said she made preparations to have a full fair this year, but she said the fair board would be meeting to figure out the details in light of COVID.

RAINBOW $5,000 TROUT DERBY By Mark Freeman

COURTESY PHOTO

Mail Tribune

“Spies in Disguise” will be shown Friday, July 9, in Bear Creek Park in Medford.

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Southern Oregon’s most popular trout-fishing derby is back at Diamond Lake this year after a one-year COVID-19 hiatus. The 23rd Rainbow $5,000 trout derby, run by The Black Bird Shopping Center of Medford, will be held June 26, giving trout-lovers a chance to win up to $1,000. The entry fee is $20. Anglers can sign up at Black Bird, Waldron’s store in Roseburg, Diamond Lake Resort, or online at www.theblackbird.com. More than 1,000 anglers are expected, all trying to be that skillful person who pulls in the fattest trout of the day. The largest fish by weight will win its angler $1,000, with second place netting $750 and third place fetching $500. Prizes descend in value until

MOVIES IN THE PARK By Damian Mann for the Mail Tribune

JAMIE LUSCH / MAIL TRIBUNE

A rainbow trout leaps after falling for a worm at Diamond Lake, home of the Rainbow $5,000 trout derby.

$100 for 10th place. The 11th- to 20th-place finishers each win $75, while the 21st- to 30th-place finishers each earn $50. Black Bird offers merchandise

giveaways throughout the day. The weigh-in at the resort will end at 3 p.m. As with past derbies, each registered contestant can weigh in only one fish.

ART BEYOND By Allayana Darrow Ashland Tidings

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The Schneider Museum of Art presents “Art Beyond” through July 18, an outdoor art exhibition encompassing single-artist projects and curated group sculptures and installations at Mount Ashland, ScienceWorks Hands-On Museum, Willow-Witt Ranch, Vesper Meadow and Lithia Park. Described as an outdoor art adventure, Art Beyond is an outdoor art

COURTESY PHOTO

Willow-Witt Ranch is a 445-acre gem in Southern Oregon’s Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument.

exhibition focusing on sculptural and installation-based artworks in and around Ashland. It is a

first-of-its-kind event for our region. Visitors can gaze upon Avantika Bawa’s bright pink scaffold sculpture at Willow-Witt Ranch, or take a session of plein air painting on Mount Ashland and ask questions of professional artists, join a free drawing event on Saturdays, or try a hand at augmented reality artistry. At the Vesper Meadow Restoration Preserve near Howard Prairie Lake, visitors will be able to engage with the concept art of Gabriel Barrera. For details on all the possibilities available, see the Schneider Museum’s website at sma.sou.edu/ exhibitions/artbeyond2021/.

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Medford’s ever popular Movies in the Park will offer free entertainment for the whole family again this summer. Organized by Medford Parks and Recreation, and sponsored by Rogue Credit Union, the movies begin Fridays at dusk in Bear Creek Park on Siskiyou Boulevard. The schedule includes:  July 9 - “Spies in Disguise”  July 16 - “Trolls World Tour”  July 23 - “The Croods, A New Age”  July 30 - “Elf”  Aug. 6 - “Rava, the Last Dragon”  Aug. 13 - “Alladin”  Aug. 20 - “The Princess Bride” “Cars” will be shown at Fichter-Mainwaring Park Aug. 27 as part of the Medford Cruise festivities Aug. 27 and 28.

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