Continued from Page 6 Since 2001, one of those special places has been closed to human traf- fic. Dead Man’s Cove, sometimes called Dead Man’s Hollow, rests just a few hundred yards west of the U.S. Coast Guard station at Cape Disap- pointment. A natural cove, this small rocky opening delights in busting up the ocean combers that flood into the mouth of the Columbia River. Now, the cove is once again open. Leave it to a pair of insistent hik- ers to stumble upon this sheltered beach in a storm. The landscape is writhing. The flood tide thrusts 12 foot waves through a narrow, rocky opening and the physics of motion throw beachcombers into a frenzy. Driftwood, pushed by years of high tides unto this narrow windswept beach, lingers like graffiti. Few have the strength or gump- tion to cart the shapely driftwood from its resting place. Because of the narrow opening, the majority of driftwood remains tangled on the beach for all to enjoy. We do, though we find ourselves racing to higher ground as the surging tide gallops in rising layers up the soft sands. The trail into the hollow is diffi- cult, especially when the rain is thick and the ground soft and muddy. An older man now, I slip and slide a few times. Below, chunks of driftwood logs have been shaped into wooden sculptures, gnawed slowly by the force of water. Logs of cottonwood, fir and cedar are embedded into the dark sands of grain. The beauty of this hollow is a temporary haven, the sort of sheltered cove where one might come once or twice a year. On a winter morning when the rain descends sideways, it remains rea- sonable to huddle inside our warm homes and brew two pots of coffee or tea. But even on cold, rainy days, it’s nice to put on an extra layer of wool clothing and step outside, to feel the power of a storm, the tide, the galloping clouds. I find joy in the footprints left in the soft sands. Joy in their disap- pearance as the combers rush around our ankles. Joy in the movable feast that is ocean, its volatile winds and storms. Here, an eternal landscape. Waves crash by the cove. David Campiche THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 2022 // 7