Where to Tide Pool | University of Portland Magazine

Summer 2022

Where to Tide Pool

The Oregon coast offers an of embarrassment of marine-life riches. 

  • Story by Tara Prestholdt
Tai White-Toney, Katie Bates, Matt Ortman, and Tim Luethke (all UP graduates and co-authors with Tara Prestholdt)

Tai White-Toney, Katie Bates, Matt Ortman, and Tim Luethke (all UP graduates and co-authors with Tara Prestholdt)

THE NORTH COAST has a few gems like Ecola State Park, Hug Point, and Haystack Rock at Cannon Beach, but for more biodiversity start with Tillamook County, specifically Three Grace Rocks near Garibaldi and Oceanside State Recreation Area. In the Newport area, try Otter Rock Oregon Marine Reserve, Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area, and protected Marine Garden, or Seal Rock State Recreation Site. Quarry Cove at Yaquina Head has a tide pool observation platform that is ADA wheelchair accessible, the only one of its kind in Oregon. If home base is closer to Yachats, two places I will never tire of are Strawberry Hill (mile marker 169 on Highway 101) and Bob Creek (mile marker 170) in Cape Perpetua Marine Reserve. The best central-southern spots are the protected areas of Cape Arago, Cape Blanco, and Coquille Point. To reach the pools in Cape Arago State Park (middle or south cove) and Cape Blanco State Park, visitors will have to endure a steep and narrow hike, but Coquille Point has a wooden staircase for easier access and great views of the puffins that live in the Oregon Islands Wildlife Refuge. And for the truly venturesome, mile marker 344 intersects with a portion of the Pacific Crest Trail; follow it down to the beach and head a mile north on a barely-there trail to Whiskey Creek, the best place to see the shaggy, fuchsia Hopkin’s rose. Wherever you choose, I hope you discover a new appreciation for the vibrant flora and fauna of Oregon’s rocky intertidal zone.

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Illustration by Marisol Ortega


TARA PRESTHOLDT is a professor of Biology and Environmental Studies. She teaches classes on marine biology and our oceans at UP, and her research focuses on the ecology, evolution, and the future of marine organisms.

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