COMMUNITY CENTER
An elementary school built in 1926 serves the area as a Community Center. Buildings include a swimming pool, gym, theater, fitness center, computer lab, service kitchen and rooms for meetings and classes
The Center is on Ninth Street in Nehalem, one block north of Highway 101. Call 368-7008 for general information.
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CRABBING
You can catch Dungeness crab in Nehalem Bay at almost any time of year, but fall and winter provide specimens with the firmest shells and flesh. Toss your rings off a dock at one of the marinas or use a boat to reach prime areas in the bay.
You don't need a license to catch crab, but you do need to obey strict regulations about size and gender. The typical day of crabbing includes a visit from an official to check your catch. Fines for undersize crabs can run up to $280 per crab. In addition, your boat should have a life jacket for each occupant and a motor of at least six horsepower to ensure that you can move against winds and tides.
Don't go crabbing for the first time without instructions. Get details about best times, techniques and safety from local marinas. Folks at the marinas rent boats and rings, sell bait and may even clean and cook your catch.
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DOGS
Bringing your dog to the beach can enhance or ruin your visit, depending on how you allow it to behave.
In town. Local governments strictly enforce leash laws. More important, towns have lots of visitors who bring dogs. Visitors who let their dogs use local streets, sidewalks and yards as toilets don't make their dogs or themselves welcome.
On the beach. Dogs love running in the sand, playing in the waves and rolling in dead sea gulls. But not everyone on the beach loves dogs. Many people find your pet too loud or too friendly. Please control your pet.
On trails. An obedient dog in a good physical condition can accompany you safely on any trail except the trail up the rocks at the top of Neahkahnie Mountain. Notice the word "obedient." If your dog won't come to you instantly at your command, keep it on a leash. Don't risk watching your pet disappear over a cliff.
If you take your dog hiking, carry water for your pet as well as for yourself. After mid-summer, Fido won't even find a friendly puddle along most trails.
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DUNES
Ocean and wind create sand dunes along the shore. Sand moves from south to north during the winter and in the opposite direction during the summer. Winter forces are the strongest.
Dunes consist of three distinct zones:
Foredunes lie parallel to the shoreline and are usually covered with grasses. Most of the grass is European beach grass, imported during the 1930s because it grows so well in sand.
The deflation plane behind the foredunes includes small marshes, lakes and trees. The trail from the south parking lot in Nehalem Bay State Park runs through the deflation plane.
Oblique dunes are large ridges of sand at slanted angles to the foredunes and ocean shoreline. Nehalem Bay State Park's access road runs among oblique dunes from Bayside Cemetery to the junction with Sitka Street.
In addition to these categories, dunes are described as active and stabilized. Active dunes have no vegetation and may travel along the ground just as a wave travels along water. When dunes support grasses and shrubs, the root systems prevent wave action by protecting the sand from the wind. All the dunes in the Nehalem Bay area are stabilized.
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EAGLES
On your luckiest day, you may see a bald eagle. Watch along the ends of promontories such as Neahkahnie Mountain, Nehalem Point and Fishery Point. Even if you can't see the bird's color, you recognize an eagle by how big it seems in comparison to a hawk. You also recognize an eagle because nearby gulls flutter around it, seeming to chase it.
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ELK
Watch for Roosevelt elk as you hike the forests or walk the beach. Elk like to keep a comfortable distance from you and aren't dangerous if you respect their wishes. Take care not to get close, especially during mating season in the fall.
If you see one elk cross a road, expect more. Elk travel in herds of 10 to 25 animals. One elk weighs 500-900 pounds - enough to damage both you and your car if hit. Watch especially carefully at dawn and dusk as animals cross the road en route to sources of water.
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FISHING
Anglers call the Nehalem Bay area a fishing utopia. Every month offers fish.