We were on the Captain Cook Trail at Cape Perpetua Scenic Area south of Newport, Oregon in the Siuslaw National Forest. The contrast between the white foam and the jagged black volcanic rock was stunning.
The recipe for real sea foam is more complex. You needs waves and wind and water, of course, plus salts, proteins, fats, and decaying organic matter from algae die-off. This is not Johnson's baby bubble bath! For some people and animals it can cause respiratory problems.
We watched a sea lion surfing around these rocks, but I didn't get it in the zoom photo.
The Spouting Horn is pretty impressive, and more frequent than Old Faithful. Pooooooofffffff!
It was time for a sustaining lunch of crab burgers, steamed clams, and fish and chips at the South Beach Fish Market.
You can read about this character-loaded joint on Michael Stern's Roadfood. The crab burger did not knock my socks off, but the toddler gobbled the steamed clams and played open/shut with the shells.
Opposites. Om.
© 2013 Nancy L. Ruder
2 comments:
Great pictures. I actually had no idea that Captain Cook had made it to Oregon.
I brought home a book about Captain Cook from the library. It had exactly one paragraph about his time on the Oregon coast.
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