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clikrf8's avatar
clikrf8
Explorer
Feb 14, 2014

best way to cross Oregon' Cascades

I should be doing income taxes but this is more fun. Frustrating at times but anticipation is high. We will be driving from our home crossing from Whidbey Island to the Olympic Peninsula then down inland Highway 101 then coastal 101 to the Oregon Coast. It is preferable to running the I-5 gauntlet through the meglopolis of Marysville-Olympia. We will depart after March 19 or 30 and return in 3 weeks more or less.

My question to you Oregon experts is which highway to take from the coast to cross the Cascades. We may go as far south as Bandon or begin eastward at Newport. Last September we crossed from Newport to Corvallis on 20 then 34 to 20 turning south on 126 then took the Aufderheiden Scenic Byway to Oakridge then meandered our way via Waldo Lake, Diamond Lake, Crater Lake and highway 62 to 97. Highway 20 several miles past Cascadia State Park was fairly curvy so I am thinking that if it is icy and shady, it won't be fun. We returned in mid-October via 140 from Klamath Falls to Eagle Point then 62/227 to I5 then 42 to Bandon. We like backroads. 140 wasn't curvy but 227 was but had little traffic except for log trucks. These are the only 2 routes we have driven across Oregon's Cascades/

What about the other passes? I know that pass conditions will change according to whatever the weather does. Washington state highway 20 is closed form November to May every year but the other 3 are usually open except at times closed for avalanche control and severe weather. I do know we want to avoid logging trucks, lots of curves and lots of snow/ice. We don't plan to carry chains. Should we?

Our destination in eastern Oregon is highway 31 to revisit Summer Lake area to rockhound. Then south to Death Valley and other POIs.

The following are our choices:
Highway 20 from Newport to I5 then 34/20 to Bend
Highway 126 from Florence to Eugene then 126 to Bend or 58 to 97
Highway 38 from Reedsport or 42 from Bandon to I5/Roseburg then 138 to 97.

Any suggestions? Once this is figured out then I will ask for some help further south. Last April we spent 2 weeks in eastern Oregon going as far south as Frenchglen and although it was cold, the only time we encountered a few flakes was on 395 between Burns and John Day.
  • BruceMc: I guess we will have to stop by the Summer Lake hot springs. Thanks for sharing the photos. I am thinking we just choose according to the weather. Who knows what the conditions will be like. Currently, people are stuck on our passes in Washington or were earlier this morning.
  • Check the various passes on Oregon's ODOT road cameras at tripcheck.com before you go. The more commonly traveled passes will be better maintained in the winter months.

    Enjoy!
  • I have the ODOT app on my iphone so I will use that, also. Thanks for the tip. A lot can happen in the next 1.5 months weather-wise.
  • As an alternate route, you can head east over the Cascades in WA over HWY2 and wind your way south through Tri-Cities to make it into the eastern side of OR.
  • Bedlam: we wanted to drive south along the Olympic coast. We may return home that way.
  • I don't blame you for wanting to do the coast. We did a clockwise loop in November and veered east through Tri-Cities so we could follow the Columbia to Astoria before going north to Neah Bay, east to Port Towsend and north through Whidbey.

    We have done the OR coast down to Coos Bay on other trips but most of time we go through The Dalles or central WA to get to the eastern side of OR.
  • Yes, whichever way you go, the scenery is spectacular: Oregon/Washington coasts and the Columbia Gorge. A loop like you did is the best of both. We like to head south down the coasts as most parks and waysides (beach access) are on the west side. Notables are Beverly Beach and Fogerty Creek. Sounds like we live in the same neighborhood. Grandparents lived on Whidbey for 25 years.
  • Five years ago I did a big loop around Oregon in late May.

    We drove to the SE corner of Washington (I90, US26, US12). Then to Joseph OR (some nice twisty roads in this area). Poked around the west side of Hells Canyon to Halfway, then south along the river to Ontario. Then through Succor Ck and Leslie Gulch (gravel) to Jordan Valley in the SE corner of OR.

    Then west past Steens Mtn (around actually), Harts Mtn, Plush, Paisley, Summer Lake to LaPine. Then SE past Diamond Lake to Medford, and to the coast (with backroads travel around Applegate Res. and Bear Camp Rd).

    The trip back north was via Cape Blanco, Bandon, Roseburg, back across the Cascades to Oak Ridge, Camp Sherman and eventually Hood River. North through Washington on the east side of St Helens.

    Toward the end it was warm enough that I intentionally chose camping spots either on the coast or in the mountains.
  • paulj:
    That does sound like a great trip. I think ours more or less duplicated many of your destinations. When we travel south or southwest, we usually spend at least a week on the coast and in eastern Oregon. Last Fall we drove down the coast to Newport, over to 20, down through the Cascades, east to Lakeview (via Crater Lake, Diamond Lake, Lake Waldo) up to Hart Mountain (Plush, Adel), then Succor Creek. On the return from California, it was Goose lake, Lakeview, Hart Mt again, Abert Rim, a rough 4x4 road over to Paisley, Summer Lake the over to 97 down to Klamath Lake, over to the coast via 140 and whatever road gets you to Bandon then back up the coast. Sometimes I think I should wave to us passing by ourselves.