Moving to corvallis
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Hi, |
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For a short stint, Corvallis is not a bad place - I did my undergrad there BITD. While one does have to drive there is good stuff around besides Smith like Trout Creek or to the north places like Ozone. As for mtneering there is lots in the Cascades all within couple hours of driving. We did a bunch of trips to WA as well. |
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I've never lived in Corvallis, but I live in the Portland area. Corvallis is nice, small town feel so if that appeals to you it could be nice. On the other hand there is nothing in the area that is even close to competing with any of the venues familiar to you, except perhaps Smith Rock. There is some good summer hiking in the central cascades, the best of which may be similar to the High Sierra?. For skiing you'll be looking at Bachelor or the Mt Hood resorts. All 3 hours away. Alpine climbing (summer) in the central cascades is pretty much limited to scrambles and 5.low choss. If you get into mountaineering it could expand your options in the late spring and early summer months. |
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Hi Thanks for the feedback! |
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I lived in corvallis for grad school. There is a lot of adventure climbing on that side of the cascades. A few spots that I really enjoyed: Menagerie, Wolf rock, and Moolack. The kayaking around corvallis is really good..I remember butte creek and thomas creek being very fun. |
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There is a newer cliff (the Garden Cliff) that has recently been developed about 30-40 min from Corvallis, in Sweet Home, and features pretty good climbing, albeit mostly exclusively consisting of shorter powerful climbing (40'-60', 5.10-5.12). The Garden Boulders are right next to it as well, and are fun and powerful Boulders. That spot will probably be the best climbing within 2 hours, as anything else less than 2 hrs drive is mostly easy or not great quality. (Both of those areas, as well as anything else close by is on MP in the OR section - mountainproject.com/v/the-g…). |
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Oregon in the summer is pretty nice, especially if you enjoy hanging out on rivers and reservoirs. You'll want to drive a couple hours from Corvallis to find a nice river to hang out on. There's also fun things to do right in your own backyard, like plant a garden and grill food and drink local microbrewed beer, which Oregonians are very proud of. If you like to camp, there's lots of state park campgrounds around the state that take reservations 12 months in advance. If you get lucky you'll reserve a site sometime next fall! |
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@mtc Wow, someone is bitter! No good places to climb within a few hours of Corvallis? LOL |
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Tell her to go to UO instead ;) Mostly joking, since I just finished my PhD here in Eugene. Corvallis is a bit closer to Hood, Adams, and St. Helens for mountaineering/skiing destinations, but IMO Hood is way too crowded, as are all the small crags near Portland. Corvallis should still give you similar access to the places that Eugene climbers go to. I've spent plenty of weekends at Smith or in the Three Sisters area hiking, climbing, and skiing. |
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Thanks so much guys, this helps a lot. I have been very close minded about the move because climbing in California just sounds so much better. But this opens my mind a lot, and I hope I will quickly adapt to new things if we do decide to move. |
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I guess I'll chime in too... |
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But if you like people, LOTS of people at a crag, Smith Rocks State Park is your place. Besides being the only decent place to climb within three hours of Corvallis, it's a very festive atmosphere during the three months of not-freezing and not-sweltering temps each year.
I feel the need to defend Smith a little. Sure, there are always crowds at morning glory / the dihedrals, but there are plenty of more secluded options if you don't mind walking a little further. Out of more than a dozen trips to Smith over the last year I think there have only been a few days where it was busy enough that it wasn't easy to find routes - and that was in the dihedrals. If you can go on weekdays you shouldn't have much trouble finding great routes. The bivy is another story - during peak season it is hard to get a spot on weekends unless you get there mid-day Friday (apparently there is an overflow area behind Skull Hollow campground, but I haven't had to use this yet). As for weather, I think I've climbed at Smith just about every month of the year. In the summer, climb early, and find the shade. I'll second Moolack for great crack climbing - which would be a great option when Smith is too hot and crowded. And Willamette Pass has great skiing at a pretty good price, as long as it isn't raining. |
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haha! Thanks again!! |