Peaceful Places Portland: 103 Tranquil Sites in the Rose City and Beyond

Peaceful Places Portland: 103 Tranquil Sites in the Rose City and Beyond

by Paul Gerald
Peaceful Places Portland: 103 Tranquil Sites in the Rose City and Beyond

Peaceful Places Portland: 103 Tranquil Sites in the Rose City and Beyond

by Paul Gerald

eBook

$10.99  $13.95 Save 21% Current price is $10.99, Original price is $13.95. You Save 21%.

Available on Compatible NOOK Devices and the free NOOK Apps.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

Everybody knows about Portland's food scene, its outdoor recreation, its bike lanes, beer pubs, and coffee shops. Whether you call it Stumptown or Bridgetown--or even PDX--Portland has been mocked as the city "where young people go to retire." But seemingly every weekend there's a festival, organized bike ride, political march, or something else clamoring for participation. In short, Portland is a happening town.

But sometimes folks just want to chill out, to go where there isn't much happening. They might want to enjoy a quiet meal, take a walk in a park, curl up with a good book, or get out of town to some soul-soothing destination. With books covering all the other activities in town, where's the one that tells people where they can do --. well, not much?

As of Fall 2012, the answer is Peaceful Places: Portland, written by Paul Gerald, the man who gave this town 60 Hikes Within 60 Miles of Portland and Breakfast in Bridgetown. This time, Gerald is off in search of peace and quiet, and he invites the reader along to quiet tables, parks and gardens, enchanting walks, outdoor habitats, and other retreats.

Seeking out the places or times when the crowds will be elsewhere, Gerald will give you the essence of what each place is about--what makes it peaceful or inviting. But he does not stint on also giving you all the detailed info you need to find the place and get there at the crowd-free time.

Sometimes, this will be a matter of discovery, as in "Do I really stand a chance of seeing a heron in the Pearl District?" Other times it may feel like being let in on a secret, like a meadow full of camas blooming within earshot of Interstate 205. Or maybe it's just the right time to hit just the right table for a romantic meal or some quality reading time.

But the theme that carries throughout the book is a simple one: Portland is a great city, but it's still a city, and sometimes folks just need a break.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780897329392
Publisher: Menasha Ridge Press
Publication date: 11/21/2012
Series: Peaceful Places
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 240
File size: 151 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Paul Gerald started on the sports desk of daily newspapers because he wanted to get into the press box at football games. That led to various writing gigs at daily and weekly newspapers in Tennessee, California, and Texas.

Eventually he branched out as a freelancer into the fields of travel, food, and the outdoors. He moved to Oregon in 1996 to pursue his writing habit and also enjoy the ocean, mountains, rivers, and big trees. He can’t seem to get enough hiking or camping, nor can he seem to stay in town when he has money and no deadlines.

Speaking of deadlines, he has mastered that art well enough to author four books, with more on the way:
60 Hikes Within 60 Miles of Portland
Day and Overnight Hikes on the Oregon Pacific Crest Trail
Best Tent Camping in Oregon
Breakfast in Bridgetown

Read an Excerpt

Oak Island

Sauvie Island, Outer Northwest Portland (Map 7)

Category: urban surprises

Maybe you have fond memories of visiting Grandma in the country. Maybe you really like birds. Maybe you’re looking for a safe, open place where the kids and dogs can romp. And maybe, while you’re out there, picking some berries might be fun.

If this sounds like you, check out Oak Island, which is actually a peninsula in a lake on an island in a river. The latter island would be Sauvie Island, an oasis of country living and wildlife in the Columbia River west of Portland. And Oak Island is at the intersection of those two missions: a place where crops are grown to feed wildlife.

At the peak of the fall migration, some 150,000 ducks and geese lay over at Sauvie Island, as do several thousand sandhill cranes. Some 250 species of birds come here at some point, including many bald eagles in the winter.

The trail is closed during peak migration, but no matter when you come, you’ll encounter songbirds, ducks, geese, and even some resident eagles. It’s a flat 2.5-mile loop through the countryside, winding amid grassy meadows and patches of forest. You’ll get a view of Sturgeon Lake and another of The Narrows, a strip of water that connects Sturgeon and Steelan Lakes.

You’ll even see fields planted with alfalfa, corn, millet, and other foods for cows in the summer and migratory birds in winter. The state has a map with interpretive information (see second website in “essentials”). And Sauvie Island is dotted with pick-your-own-berries places for before or after your walk.

See what I mean? Crops, lakes, meadows, trees, berries, and birds. Just a nice little stroll in the country.

Essentials

  • End of NW Oak Island Road, off NW Reeder Road, Sauvie Island, Portland, OR 97231
  • GPS coordinates: N45° 42.876' W122° 49.234'
  • (503) 621-3488
  • sauvieisland.org/visitor-information/natural-attractions/oak-island or tinyurl.com/oakislandtrailmap
  • Parking, $7/day or $22/year. Passes available at cracker Barrel Grocery, 15005 NW sauvie Island Road, Portland, OR 97231; Reeder Beach RV country store, 26048 NW Reeder Road, Portland, OR 97231; and Oregon Department of fish and Wildlife, 18330 NW Sauvie Island Road, Portland, OR 97231.
  • April 15–September 30: Daily, sunrise–sunset
  • Transit: n/a

Table of Contents

Three Paths to 110 Peaceful Places

Peaceful Places by Category

Peaceful Places by Area

Maps

Dedication

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Peaceful Places Alphanumerically (page numbers listed below)

About the Author

What People are Saying About This

"Portland author Paul Gerald has compiled a book on 103 tranquil sites across Portland to help you refocus in the new year." — KGW News Channel 8, Cathy Marshall, January 2013

"The best guide to the Zen of Portland." —Mark Zusman, editor, Wilamette Week

"Peaceful Places: Portland is an artistically attractive book with a peaceful ambiance for easy strolling." —The Portland Book Review, November 2012

"It will change your life from the outside in." - KBOO Radio, November 2012

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews