We discovered Camp
Wilkerson, a Columbia County park less than 90 minutes from our home
here in Oregon, while we were out on a motorcycle ride, checking out
Apiary Road, which Stefan found on Google Maps and said, "Hey, let's ride
this road." A review online of Camp Wilkerson called it a great "secret",
and we see why: in our experience, county parks either have no camping, or
have camp sites packed together so tightly it's more of a parking lot (Big
Eddy). So most people who want to camp somewhere beautiful don't even
bother to check them out. But because of its remote location, we did check
out Camp Wilkerson, and it turned out to be even better than we ever
dreamed: 11 tent camping sites, three primitive cabins (with heat!), a
beautiful horse camp separate from the other campers and only three RV
sites - one of which can be rented only in conjunction with the rustic day
lodge that could accommodate at least 150 people (the web site says 250).
I am stunned that there is no RV pod at this campsite!
There are also five pods of 4-5 Adirondack shelters - shelters that have a
roof and walls on three sides and bare wooden bunks for sleeping. Each pod
of shelters is secluded by thick trees and brush from other sites. They
aren't the best designed Airondack shelters - their wide rather than
narrow wall openings mean they provide no protection from cold, and people
sleeping on the end will get wet if it rains. Each shelter has bunks that,
altogether, sleep eight adults, but some don't have ladders up to the
second tier. Also, the Adirondack pods are reserved for groups only - you
have to rent the entire pod of four or five shelters. If I'm reading the
online information correctly, that means each Adirondack is $25 a night,
but you have to rent all four or five, which means it's $100 - $125. The B
pod of Adirondack shelters is right across from the very new, beautiful
bathroom and shower facility that the horse campers use.
I think any one of pods C, D, E and F would be great for a motorcycle gathering of 40 riders or less (maybe have just four riders per shelter), provided the site would allow all the motorcyclists to park in the Adirondack pod where they were camping.
All camping sites include a picnic table and fire ring.
Upsides of Camp Wilkerson: it's 280 acres of remote wooded bliss, it's SO
green and shaded, it's always at least a little cooler than anything in
the valley, the tent camp sites are separate from all the other sites, the
hiking on the 3.6 or so mile Liahona Trail is lovely, there's free, clean
water near most of the tent sites, you don't have to pack out your trash
(but do take your bottles and cans out - come on...) and the bathrooms
have free showers. This is a beautiful camp ground, truly. And all
sites are reservable!
Downsides of Camp Wilkerson: the bathrooms are VERY far from the tent
sites (they really, really need a pit toilet down in the tent area),
Liahona Trail is quite overgrown and many signs are covered in weeds,
other trails are completely abandoned even though there are still signs
for such, there is no map of the trails available to carry with you in the
park (either print out this
one before you go or take a photo of the trail map at the lodge with
your smartphone for reference), you are likely to hear a lot of guns from
shooters who knows where, the camp host is too far away to enforce quiet
hours, there is no onsite bins for bottles and cans (you would think a
scout troop would do that) and there are no walk-in overflow tent camping
sites (the long abandoned amphitheater and horseshoe pits should be made
into this!).
If there was more cabins and RV sites, I would say this would be an
incredible wedding site - you could get married in the "school house" and
have your reception either in tents next door or in the rustic day-use
lodge (it has a kitchen). Otherwise, your guests have to camp in tents or
in the oh-so-primitive Adirondack shelters.
There's also day parking - day use fee is $5. Totally worth it to go here
and hike.
This would be a great place to base yourself if you wanted to ride your
motorcycle every day through beautiful winding paved and gravel roads to
and from the coast and through Tillamook and Clatsop forests. It's also
near enough to Vernonia for you to have lunch or dinner there, or pick up
groceries you forgot.
Hiking:
The Liahona Trail, named after an ancient compass mentioned in the Book of
Mormon, is supposedly 3.6 miles, but we think it's 4 if you include the
Lower Big Foot Road to and from the tent camping area. It's mostly
tree-covered - perfect for a hot day. It is shared by horse riders, and as
long as your dog is leashed and you give the horses plenty of space to
pass, it's all good. Liahona has a couple of very steep parts but is
otherwise relatively easy, if very overgrown in spots. In June 2017, there
were some long, deep muddy tracks and there is no bridge over Oak Ranch
Creek - you will either have to get your feet wet or do your best on
whatever rocks someone has put across the creek (if at all). There are a
few spots where you can make your hike shorter and cut back into the
campground, or skip sections altogether, however, as of June 2017, all
spurs, as well as Cedar Hill "road" and Upper Bigfoot "road" were no
longer visible at all - completely overgrown and impassable.
Little Foot trail is super easy and weaves in and out of the Adirondack
Shelter pods - if no one is staying in those, it's a great hike, but if
they are occupied, folks there might not appreciate your traipsing
through.
Lower Bigfoot Road is passable and a good way for tent campers to start
the Liahona Trail.
Supposedly, there are wider forest roads that allow for five, seven or
10-mile loops, but we have no idea which these are or where to find maps
of such.
So, our story:
About three weeks in advance, I started looking for a cabin or tent site
relatively near us we could book. Last year, we had had to turn back from
camping and go back home for the first time ever because we couldn't find
a camp site - every first-come-first-served camp ground in Tillamook
Forest was full by 3 p.m. on that weekend in July, AFTER July 4th, and we
didn't want to get turned away again on our first camping outing of 2018.
As I said, we had discovered Camp Wilkerson while out on a motorcycle
ride. The campground
uses Reserve America for booking, and I was having trouble booking a
place using the site - the search claimed there was nothing available the
weekend I wanted, but the availability map showed one tent spot still
available on both the Friday and Saturday I wanted. So I clicked on that
tent image of the available site and was able to book it both nights.
Later, I realized it was Father's Day weekend, and I was doubly glad we
were booking in advance - I assume that Father's Day weekend is a big
camping weekend in Oregon and that all first-come first-serve camp sites
would be full by 10 a.m. Friday, even if check in time was supposed to be
much later - and we can't get anywhere that early on a Friday.
We headed out at 1 p.m. from our home in Washington County. We made great
time - but were stopped for about 20 minutes on 47 because of a log truck
accident up ahead. No problem, except for the trucker behind us who walked
up while we stood outside the car and started talking to us - and then
started in on politics, entirely unprompted by me or anyone else (we were
just talking about our car - he said he really liked it). He just
suddenly, out of the blue, said the current President was "better than
that guy from Kenya." I just walked away. He laughed and went to the car
behind us to say, "Wow, I really made her mad!" Oh, Kentucky, you have no
monopoly on white trash assholes, you really don't.
We pulled into Camp Wilkerson by 3 p.m. and went down the long, long road
to the camp ground. The entirely empty campground. After some confusion,
we found the tent camping area and our tent spot right up front - my name
was on the camp site sign, with Friday and Saturday's dates marked. I
always need to see that for myself before I calm down and start enjoying
our trip. We got Lucy out and walked around the loop, noticing that every
tent site was booked for Saturday night, but not Friday night, by the same
name - let's call it Mastery Enlightenment, rather than their real
name. We set up our tent and then toured the entire camp ground, via the
Little Foot trail, including all of the Adirondack Shelter pods. And other
than some folks in the horse camp, we were entirely alone, because every
site - the lodge, the school house, and every Adirondack pod, was booked
by Mastery Enlightenment. That meant that it was very likely we were going
to be entirely alone in the park Friday night, except for the far-away
host and the horse campers, because people want to camp BOTH nights, not
just Friday night. Stefan also noted that our tent site, #11, isn't on the
printed map of the campground.
We also made endless jokes about Mastery Enlightenment. Was it a cult? A
Christian youth group? A multi-level marketing scheme? An S & M group?
Would there be a guru? A Mistress of Discipline? Would they wear outfits?
Just as we finished supper, an SUV came down followed by two motorcycle
riders. They were all going to try to cram into the tiny site they had
reserved online that day for the night, but we rushed over and told them
the whole place was empty Friday night and they could choose anywhere
else, so they did. We so rarely meet other motorcycle travelers in camp
sites when we travel by motorcycle - and here were were, sans bike,
finally meeting some. They have a sweet deal - the couple that ride on
their motorcycles (the guy is from Kentucky, believe it or not, the gal is
from Poland) are followed by their friends and their dog in an SUV. We
totally want that arrangement! They ride 250s, so can't take much on their
bikes, but they can do gravel roads much easier than me!
The camp host brought them firewood they'd asked for earlier and we talked
to him briefly. Other than the completely inappropriate and uncalled for
"Heil Hitler" salute when he was talking about his Medicare/Medicaid
benefits - once again, an entirely unsolicited topic of discussion by me -
he was a very nice man. He said that he thought the group was some kind of
teacher's group and that he'd only heard about them a few days before.
It was a good thing we brought our earplugs, because our fellow travelers
stayed up well past midnight talking. I appreciate that they were out to
socialize, but as I've said many times: a tent campground is one big
bedroom. No matter how quietly you talk, you are being heard by everyone
else sleeping in the bedroom. Please respect quiet hours, and if you
can't, go talk somewhere where you won't disturb folks - like the vast,
empty lodge?
Lucinda did well in the tent. We bring her bed and a little children's air mattress I bought for Wiley and Buster once upon a time, for when we tent camped... and I wrapped her in blankets so she would stay warm - it got quite chilly, though no where near freezing. She loves that we are all in one big bed together.
We got up for good the next morning around 8 a.m., made breakfast, and
went on our hike on the Liahona Trail. It is a terrific trail, but it
really, really needs a day of trail cleanup. A group of half a dozen folks
could do wonders in just one day with this trail: the wooden bridge on the
south loop needs all the moss and mud cleared off it or it will be rotten
by next year, all of the trail signs need to have the foliage cleaned out
around them, and there are some overgrown trees and bushes that could be
cut back with just some clippers - no need for saws or machetes. There is
a really, really steep part, and a few times, the mud was well past ankle
deep (and you have to go far into the weeds on the side to avoid it), but
otherwise, it's really nice. The trail is shared by horses and their
riders. Two came by when we were stopped, sitting on a log, having lunch -
Lucy sat quietly, from behind the log, perfectly still, watching, and she
spooked the horses, who didn't see her until they were passing by and when
they did, must have thought she was a predator. The riders were very nice
and encouraged me to keep cooing at the horses as they passed us, to calm
them down, which I was happy to do. Horses are so gorgeous... oh to be
rich and be able to afford one... or four.
We got back to our camp site at 2ish, after almost 3 hours of hiking, and
decided to take a nap. After all, 2 p.m. is check-in time at the camp
ground, and the cult / MLM scheme / Christian group would be arriving any
moment. They would have registration tables and schedules and table
decorations at the lodge and maybe even outfits, right? Perhaps we
wouldn't be getting much sleep that night, so now was our chance!
We woke after a glorious 90 minute nap and - nothing. Still no one. We
read, I wrote in my journal, and we continued to both enjoy the silence
and be bewildered by this group that had ruined Father's Day camping
dreams for dozens of people - but not us. And how in the world would they
assign camp sites? And did the people that would stay in the
Adirondack shelters know that they needed air mattresses and very warm
sleeping bags and climbing abilities? And why hadn't they started cooking
supper yet for this massive group that would arrive any minute?!?
As we were cleaning up after supper, two women started walking into the
tent camp loop with great determination. I said to Stefan, "They look like
home schoolers." Welp, I was close: Mastery Enlightenment is a charter
school. And these two were PISSED. They walked past us a bit, then came
back, and I could hear the anger in the voice as soon as I heard "Excuse
me..."
They wanted to know if we had booked our site online and when. I smiled,
said yes, and told them when. They said they were very confused by that
since they "had paid for the entire campground a year ago." I smiled,
shrugged and said there had been only one tent camp site available on the
booking site, that everything else was marked reserved, and so I booked
it. They said that their school had booked the entire site a year in
advance, and they weren't blaming me, oh no, and of course I had a right
to stay, but they had booked the entire campground "because of the
children" and they "didn't want any liability risk" by having any
non-school affiliated folks around. And that included the horse campers -
they believed that, when booking the entire site, it had included the
horse camp too. Which doesn't make sense if you've seen the campground -
the horse camp area is like an entirely separate campground. And when we
got home, I did some research and found that the Columbia County chapter
of Oregon Equestrian Trails paid
for and installed those horse camps in 2017. Any info about those
camps online or in print says you have to bring a horse in order to rent
any space within that area.
Then they told us we would probably be alone in the camp site that night,
and that's when we learned the REAL reason they were SO pissed off: they
started rattling on about how they hadn't known when they booked out the
entire campground that particular weekend that there was a festival in one
town nearby at the same time as well as a parade in another town nearby
and a bicycle race out on Apiary Road on Saturday and Father's Day on
Sunday (guess their school doesn't use calendars) and, with all those
conflicts which they had NO IDEA about not many people were going to be
coming despite all their hard work and all the money they shelled out for
the entire park. We listened and nodded and tried to look sympathetic. I
assured them we wouldn't bother their group and that we would be very
clean and that they wouldn't lose their cleaning deposit because of us,
they assured me they weren't worried about any of that (even though it
sure sounded like it), we all wished each other well, they walked away,
and I admit now that Stefan and I immediately started in on some of the
meanest jokes that have probably ever come out of my mouth, both because
of my hatred of charter schools and because of these women's piss poor
planning skills that were the REAL reason their night-of-camping was such
a disaster. Really, you didn't look online or at a calendar when you
planned this? You don't know Father's Day is always the third weekend in
June? And you think people will just come camping because you said they
should because of how much money you paid? Borrow some goddamn corn hole
boards, a bocci ball set and some badminton sets and offer some food
beyond a few burgers and hot dogs at the lodge at 7 at night, you idiots.
Otherwise, why in the world is it worth it to pack up all your crap and to
camp for just ONE night?
Then I tore into the whole "liability" argument: Excuse me, Charter School
guru, but unless you have done a criminal background check and
character-based interview with every parent of every child at your school,
plus any family members 14 or over that will be attending your camp out, I
am no greater liability risk to those kids than the parents and other
family members are. You think because you have met the parents, because
you see them around, because their kids go to your school, that they are
somehow magically safe for all kids to be around? Bite me.
Later, we took an evening walk up around the horse camp and back and saw
four trucks crowded around the lodge, one of them blaring music on the
radio, and parent sitting around in lawn chairs, one of them yelling, "My
kid is a BAD ASS is what he is! A bad ass!" And a pot-bellied guy we'd
seen earlier walking around with a can of Coors, saying to his two young
girls, "Okay, girls, let's go for a hike!" - he was there too, now sans
the can. Yeah, I'm definitely the one you should worry about around your
kids, lady. Hey, kid, hold my beer.
The reality is that they wanted to have a big screaming par-tay and not
have anyone complain about it and THAT'S why they rented all the camping
spots - and they were pissed that only a handful of folks had turned
out.
We got back to our site and thought, well, what a great way to spend our
last night, in peace and quiet. We cooked our supper - and an RV pulled
into the RV site at the top of the tent camp loop, and the inhabitants'
kids proceeded to yell for two SOLID hours. Not even kidding. It was
constant. And then one of the kids screamed, over and over again, for
30 minutes, "IT HIT ME LIKE A hurriCAAAAAANE", emphasis on the last
syllable. Screaming. Like it was a stuck record. Screaming. I know it was
30 minutes because I TIMED IT. Finally, at long last, an adult male voice
said, "Okay, Robbie, that's enough. No more." The group did all go quiet
by 11, and I was oh-so-grateful. So much for our empty, quiet camp site
that last night... but I was determined not to be upset because, honestly,
I thought we'd be surrounded by "Robbies" all weekend. And we were able to
sleep all night in silence.
Honestly, the beauty of the campground, the lovely hike, and all those hours we had the place to ourselves - totally worth it. A great weekend. And we most definitely will go again.
Next morning, we had planned on hiking the rest of the Liahona Trail, but
Stefan suddenly wasn't feeling well at all, so we walked Lucy a bit, I had
a very light breakfast, and then we packed up and headed home - and,
remarkably, made it back in exactly one hour. While Stefan napped, I
checked out the World Cup: Mexico beat Germany?!? And fans caused a mild
Earthquake in Mexico City at the moment of the goal? Hilarious. And then I
watched the last half of the Switzerland - Brazil game. And then I wrote
this travelogue.
One final note:
There is a montage of signs on the bathrooms at Camp Wilkerson that are
graphic representations of what is and isn't allowed in the park. And one
of the images is a wine glass with a red line through it. Apparently this
is a holdover from a 2016
policy that said alcohol was prohibited at Columbia County parks. As
of 2018, that
policy has changed.
My favorite North American Ghost towns / historic mining towns / pre-1900s towns
Advice for Traveling Around the USA Camping & Hiking
Women's Safety While Tent Camping
Forest Grove, Oregon area day
hikes Backpacking start
points near Portland, Oregon (PDX)
Forest Grove, Oregon area day
hikes (Washington County, Yamhill County, Tillamook County)
More Oregon and Washington
suggested short motorcycle routes
Tips for Women: Getting Started as a Motorcycle Rider (just to ride, not necessarily to travel as well)
For Women Who Travel By Motorcycle (or want to)
Advice for Women Motorcycle Travelers: Packing
advice for Women Motorcycle Travelers: footwear (shoes & socks).
Advice for Women Motorcycle Travelers: Transportation and Accommodations Choices
Suggested short motorcycle routes in Oregon and Washington state (from an hour to all-day; many can be linked together to create longer trips).
transire benefaciendo: "to travel along while doing good." Advice for those wanting to make their travel more than sight-seeing and shopping, whether in your own country or abroad.
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