MAY 25, 2017 // 9
MAIN PHOTO
Ecola State Park features several trails
that require routine maintenance in or-
der to be ready for summer tourist traffic.
‘TREAD LIGHTLY’
With the right to enjoy state lands and public
beaches comes a responsibility to care for them.
“The entire park is sensitive, culturally signifi-
cant,” he said.
Not only is habitat fragile, but a history of
earlier people dwells in the park. Captain William
Clark, in 1806, noted a small village at today’s
Indian Beach.
“People recognized, ‘This is a great place to get
to the water, so our village will go here,’ or, ‘Be-
cause of this view, this will be ceremonial ground,
sacred ground to us,’” Cox said. “They found it
awe-inspiring long ago, just like we do today.”
Fencing off sensitive area isn’t a happy
solution. “So tread lightly on the land,” Cox
said.
Significant sliding inside the park poses a
chronic, expensive maintenance problem. Internal
conversation about how and whether to provide a
better road to the park has resumed.
The Ecola State Park Master Plan, written in
1975, recognized the same need. A landslide that
year closed the park for four months. Another in
1961 closed the park for 10 months.
“The present park entrance road,” the plan
reads, “… suffers major slide damage on nearly an
annual basis. To avoid endless maintenance, repair
costs and danger to vehicular traffic, future re-rout-
ing or closure of this road appears imminent.”
Forty-two years later, it may be imminent again.
PHOTO BY JON BRODERICK
COLIN MURPHEY/THE DAILY ASTORIAN
Above: Visitors at Ecola State Park take in just one of the many sce-
nic views the park has to offer.
Right: Park Manager Ben Cox
HELP FROM HIKERS
Little can be done to avoid damage from
coastal winds and rain, but damage (most of
which is unintentional) from human activity can
be reduced.
“It’s trails, mostly,” Cox said. For example,
from Ecola Point the park maintains only one trail
to access the beach below, the mile-and-a-quarter-
long Crescent Beach trail.
Slides destroyed a more direct trail to the beach
below some years ago. There are no other trails,
but people slide down the muddy cliffs anyway,
creating ad hoc trails that damage the park.
Park rangers haven’t time to walk the trails
frequently, so Cox invites hikers to participate in
maintaining the park.
“The biggest thing people can do for us is walk
the trails. Tell us where a spruce is down across
the trail or where a water bar is compromised and
there’s a big wash-out,” he said. “Tell us the GPS
location. Take a photo if you can.”
With that information rangers can more effi-
ciently organize a work party, and the park can
breathe easier.
Hikers can send trail information to park.
info@state.or.us or, for Ecola State Park, can
leave a message at 503-436-2844.
COLIN MURPHEY/THE DAILY ASTORIAN
Roads often need repair after harsh winter conditions in Ecola State Park before tourists arrive.