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An Afternoon in the Redwoods Above Brookings

Most people don’t realize that redwoods grow in Oregon. They do — and some of the most beautiful old-growth groves anywhere sit just up the Chetco River from Brookings. An afternoon in there feels nothing like the rest of the coast. It feels ancient. And that’s exactly the point.


Where the Redwoods Begin


The redwood range technically ends in Northern California, but the Chetco River corridor carries those giant trees a little further north than most maps suggest. The grove outside Brookings is one of the northernmost redwood stands in existence — and because it sits in a river canyon sheltered from ocean winds, the trees here grow tall and straight and old. Getting there doesn’t take long. A short drive from town puts you in a completely different world. The temperature drops. The light changes. The sound of the highway disappears and is replaced by the river and wind high up in the canopy — so far above you that you have to stop and actually tilt your head back to find it. What an Afternoon In There Actually Feels Like


Redwood forests have a particular quality that’s hard to put into words without sounding like you’re exaggerating. The scale is just wrong — in the best possible way. You’re used to trees being a certain size, and these trees break that reference entirely. The trunks are wider than some living rooms. The bark is thick and fibrous and warm to the touch in a way you don’t expect. The afternoon light filters down through the canopy in shafts, catching dust and pollen in the air, and everything at ground level is lit by what gets through — a soft diffused green that makes the whole forest feel like it’s glowing from the inside. It’s the kind of light that makes your phone camera useless and forces you to just stand there and look. The River Below, the Trees Above


From above, the Chetco looks like it’s threading a needle — a ribbon of clear water cutting through a dense carpet of green that stretches up the canyon walls on both sides. It’s one of those views that makes you understand why people fight to protect wild places. On the ground it’s different. The river is right there, moving fast and cold over smooth stones, and the redwoods crowd the banks so closely that in some places the roots reach into the water. If you’re quiet enough you’ll see things: a great blue heron standing still in the shallows, a kingfisher working the riffles, the river doing its slow patient work on the rock below. It’s the kind of afternoon that resets something in you. The coast is right there waiting when you come back out, and it looks different somehow — brighter, louder, more vivid — like your eyes adjusted to the forest and now everything is sharper. Getting There from Brookings

The redwood groves along the Chetco are accessible via North Bank Chetco River Road, which follows the river east from town. The drive itself is worth the trip — the road winds along the river through increasingly dense forest, and by the time you reach the grove you’re already deep in the canyon. Bring water, wear layers, and plan for at least two hours if you want to actually settle in rather than just pass through. Dogs are welcome on the trail. The ground is soft and the river has spots shallow enough to wade in summer. It’s one of those places that works in almost any season — quiet and misty in winter, cool and green in summer, absolutely golden in fall when the light slants low through the trees.




Brookings By The Sea celebrates everything that makes this corner of Oregon special. Browse our coastal lifestyle apparel in the shop and wear your love for the coast wherever life takes you.

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The First Signs of Spring on the Southern Oregon Coast

Spring arrives quietly on the Southern Oregon Coast — in the way the light lingers a little longer, in the soft green that creeps across the headlands, and in the way the ocean settles from its winter grey into something cleaner and brighter. If you pay attention, you’ll notice it. And once you do, you won’t want to be anywhere else.


The Coast in Its Quiet Season

There’s a reason locals love early spring more than almost any other time of year. The crowds that fill the campgrounds and trailheads in summer are still weeks away. The beaches are quiet. You can stand at the water’s edge with nothing but the sound of the surf, and it feels like the coast belongs entirely to you.

The light is different too. Spring light on the Southern Oregon Coast has a quality that’s hard to describe — softer than summer, cleaner than winter, with long golden mornings and evenings that stretch far longer than you expect. Photographers know it well. If you’re chasing the coast at its most photogenic, early spring is your answer.


When the Headlands Come Back to Life

The most dramatic transformation happens on the headlands. Through winter the exposed clifftops are battered and brown — wind-scoured grass, bare rock, the raw geology of the coast doing nothing to soften its edges. Then March arrives, and almost overnight those same cliffs begin to green.

By late March and into April the headlands are lush enough to look almost surreal — a vivid strip of green pressed right up against the deep blue-green of the Pacific. Wildflowers aren’t far behind. The lily fields that make Brookings famous start to stir. Wild strawberries appear in the grass. Red-flowering currant blooms along the trail edges.

It’s the kind of transformation that reminds you why people fall in love with this stretch of coast in the first place.


The Ocean Finds Its Color Again

Winter on the Pacific is dramatic — grey swells, dark water, spray on the windows. Beautiful in its own way, but unrelenting. Spring changes that. As the storms ease and the sun climbs higher, the ocean shifts. The grey gives way first to a deep slate blue, then to the blue-green the coast is known for, and on the clearest spring days the water off Harris Beach can take on a colour that looks almost Caribbean — a shock of turquoise you don’t expect this far north.

Whale watching peaks in spring as gray whales make their northward migration. On a clear day from the headlands you can spot spouts moving steadily up the coast — sometimes close enough to see the barnacled backs breaking the surface. It’s one of those experiences that catches first-timers completely off guard, and that locals never quite take for granted.


Why Spring Is the Best Time to Visit Brookings

Brookings sits in what locals call the “banana belt” — a stretch of the Southern Oregon Coast that catches more sun and stays warmer than almost anywhere else on the Oregon or Northern California coast. In February and March, when the rest of Oregon is buried under grey skies, Brookings regularly sees temperatures in the 60s and clear blue days that draw people down from Portland just to stand in the sunshine.

Spring amplifies all of that. The trails are dry enough to hike but not dusty. The beaches are uncrowded but warm enough to linger. The tide pools at Harris Beach reveal sea stars, anemones, and hermit crabs in the shallows. Everything feels alive and unhurried, and the coast has the rare quality of a place that’s fully itself without needing an audience.

If you’ve been thinking about making the drive down — or if you live nearby and have been putting it off — spring is your window. Come see it before the summer crowds arrive and discover what the locals already know.


Brookings By The Sea celebrates everything that makes this corner of Oregon special. Browse our coastal lifestyle apparel in the shop and wear your love for the coast wherever life takes you.

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Sun, Sand & the Secret No One Tells You About the Oregon Coast!

Travel Tips Oregon Coast Weather
While the rest of the coast is wrapped in fog, Brookings is soaking up the sun — and there’s a fascinating reason why.

Picture this: you’re scrolling through your phone, watching friends post grey, drizzly vacation photos from Lincoln City or Newport, and thinking maybe the Oregon Coast just isn’t worth the trip right now. But here’s the thing — there’s a small town tucked into Oregon’s southernmost corner that didn’t get the memo about bad weather. That town is Brookings, and if you haven’t heard of the Banana Belt, your next coast trip is about to get a whole lot sunnier.

Wait — Oregon’s Coast Has a Banana Belt?

It sure does, and Brookings is right at the heart of it. The term “banana belt” describes any area that enjoys noticeably warmer, milder weather than the surrounding region — and the stretch of Oregon’s south coast near Brookings-Harbor has earned that nickname fair and square.

The science behind it is actually pretty cool. Meteorologists call it the “Chetco Effect” (sometimes called the “Brookings Effect”), named for the Chetco River that runs right through town. When winds come in from the east or northeast, they rush down the western slopes of the Klamath and Siskiyou Mountains — mountains that rise dramatically close to the coast in this part of Oregon. As that air descends, it compresses and heats up, a process called adiabatic warming. The deep Chetco River gorge funnels those warm, dry winds right down to the shoreline, almost completely bypassing the cold marine air that blankets everywhere else on the coast.

The temperatures around Brookings are so significantly warmer than other towns nearby that meteorologists named the phenomenon the “Chetco Effect” — it can be 20°F warmer in Brookings-Harbor than nearby areas, and temperatures in the middle of winter can sit comfortably in the mid-60s.

The result? On a January day when the Willamette Valley is socked in at 45°F and Portland is under a grey ceiling, Brookings can be basking in comfortable 65°F sunshine. Since weather records began in 1913, Brookings holds Oregon’s all-time warmest temperatures for the months of November, December, January, February, and March. In summer, temperatures regularly settle into a perfect 70–75°F range — warm enough to enjoy, cool enough to stay comfortable all day.

What Does That Actually Mean for Your Visit?

It means you can plan a trip to Brookings with far more confidence than anywhere else on the Oregon Coast. While travelers further north gamble with overcast skies and chilly beach days, visitors to Brookings more often than not find themselves pulling off their jackets halfway through a beach walk.

Even the plant life tells the story. Because of this remarkably mild climate, Brookings is the Easter Lily capital of the world — about 90% of all Easter lilies grown commercially in the United States are cultivated right here. The city has been officially designated an Azalea City by the Azalea Society of America, one of only 16 cities in the country to hold that honor. Rhododendrons, camellias, daffodils, and magnolias bloom here in the dead of winter. You can even find the northernmost Redwood groves on Earth just minutes from downtown. None of that happens in a place with harsh, wet coastal winters.

So What’s There to Do When You Get Here?

  • Samuel H. Boardman State Scenic Corridor — A 27-mile stretch of coastline just north on Highway 101 that is widely considered one of the most spectacular drives in the Pacific Northwest. Natural Bridges, Arch Rock, Secret Beach, and Whaleshead Viewpoint are all within this corridor.
  • Harris Beach State Park — Sandy shores, dramatic sea stacks, tide pools, and prime Gray Whale watching from January through May. Camping is available right at the water’s edge.
  • Chetco Point Park — 360-degree coastal views, tide pools, and picnic areas. The kind of spot you sit for an hour longer than you planned.
  • Azalea Park — A gorgeous 33-acre park in the heart of town, spectacular in spring when its ancient azaleas burst into bloom. The annual Azalea Festival on Memorial Day Weekend is worth timing your trip around.
  • Chetco River & Loeb State Park — Hiking, kayaking, crystal-clear river swimming, and world-class salmon and steelhead fishing.
  • Salmon Run Golf Course — An 18-hole public course tucked into the coastal mountains, 3.5 miles from downtown. You might tee off with a black bear watching from the treeline.
  • The Redwoods — The Oregon Redwood Trail is minutes from town, and the legendary Jedediah Smith Redwoods just over the California border are less than 30 minutes away.
  • Deep-Sea Fishing & Whale Watching — Charter boats at the Port of Brookings Harbor will take you out for salmon, albacore tuna, and halibut, or to watch the gray whales on their annual migration.

A Town with History — and Character

Founded in 1908 as a lumber company town, Brookings-Harbor has grown into a vibrant community of around 16,000 with a genuine, unhurried Pacific Coast personality. And if you’re a history buff, ask a local about the Fujita Sword. During WWII, a Japanese pilot dropped incendiary bombs near Brookings — the only aerial bombing of the contiguous United States during the war. Decades later he returned, made peace with the community, and donated his family’s samurai sword as a gesture of goodwill. It’s on display in town and it’s a remarkable piece of American history.

The Bottom Line

The Oregon Coast is one of the most beautiful places on earth. But if you want the version that smiles back at you with warm sun and clear skies — Brookings is the answer. Whether the rest of the coast is wrapped in January fog or a summer marine layer, there’s a better-than-good chance that down here at the bottom of Oregon, the sky is blue and the temperature is perfect.

The Banana Belt is real, it’s wonderful, and it’s waiting for you.

🌊 Ready to Experience Brookings for Yourself?

Explore our guides to local beaches, lodging, dining, and events — and start planning your visit to Oregon’s sunniest corner of the coast.

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10 Things You Have to Do in Brookings, Oregon

Tucked into the southernmost corner of the Oregon coast, Brookings is the kind of place that gets under your skin. The weather is mild, the scenery is jaw-dropping, and the pace of life reminds you what actually matters. Whether you’re visiting for a weekend or lucky enough to call it home, here are ten things you absolutely have to do in Brookings, Oregon.


1. Watch the Sunset at Harris Beach State Park Harris Beach is one of those places that makes you stop mid-sentence. The sea stacks, the crashing waves, the light turning everything gold — it’s iconic Oregon coast at its finest. Show up about an hour before sunset and find your spot on the rocks.

2. Explore the Chetco River The Chetco River runs crystal clear and cold straight out of the Kalmiopsis Wilderness. Locals kayak it, fish it, and swim it in summer. Even a walk along the banks is worth your time.

3. Hit the Brookings Farmers Market Every Saturday morning from May through October, the Farmers Market fills up with local produce, fresh flowers, baked goods, and some of the friendliest people on the coast. Don’t skip the honey.

4. Drive the Samuel H. Boardman Scenic Corridor Just north of Brookings on Highway 101 sits one of the most dramatic stretches of coastline in the entire country. Pull over at every turnout. Every single one.

5. Fish for World-Class Salmon and Steelhead The Chetco River is legendary among serious anglers. Winter steelhead runs bring fishermen from all over the Pacific Northwest. Even if you’re a casual angler, a guided trip on the Chetco is an experience you won’t forget.

6. Walk the Brookings Harbor The harbor is the heart of the community. Watch the commercial fishing boats come in, grab fish and chips from one of the local spots, and soak up the salt air. Simple and perfect.

7. Hike to the Kalmiopsis Wilderness One of the most botanically unique wilderness areas in North America sits right in Brookings’ backyard. The Kalmiopsis leachiana plant found here exists almost nowhere else on earth. Bring good boots and plenty of water.

8. Visit Azalea Park in May Every Memorial Day weekend Brookings explodes in color when the native azaleas bloom in Azalea Park. The festival that surrounds it has been going on for decades and is a genuine slice of small-town Oregon life.

9. Grab a Bite at a Local Spot Brookings has a handful of restaurants that punch way above their weight. Skip the chains on 101 and ask a local where they actually eat. You won’t be disappointed.

10. Just Slow Down Brookings doesn’t ask much of you. No major attractions, no theme parks, no crowds fighting for the same Instagram shot. It asks you to slow down, breathe salt air, and pay attention. That might be the most valuable thing it has to offer.


Brookings By The Sea celebrates everything that makes this corner of Oregon special. Browse our coastal lifestyle apparel in the shop and wear your love for the coast wherever life takes you.