Tillamook State Forest needs a nonprofit
traveler's hostel, one that is a part of the Hosteling
International Network and that is within easy hiking or bicycling
distance from the Salmonberry
Trail, an 86-mile mixed-use, non-motorized path being built from
the Banks-Vernonia trail to outside of Tillamook. The Tillamook State
Forest hostel could be a full service hostel or a wilderness hostel.
The successful launch and maintenance of a
nonprofit hostel in association with the Salmonberry Trail in Tillamook
State Forest could lead to creation of another hostel - or more - in the
area, or in other places in Oregon. Wouldn't it be wonderful if Oregon
had as many HI hostels as British Columbia, and people could easily
hike, bicycle or otherwise travel between them?
A Tillamook Forest hostel, ideally, would
have:
- at least one bunk room for women only
- at least one bunk room for men only
- at least one co-ed bunk room
- a small, private studio apartment for the on-call volunteer host
- bedding for rent
- a kitchen with an abundance of cookware and utensils, two
refrigerators, a large sink (two would be better) and at least one
stove with four burners
- space for a large communal table, or two communal tables, where at
least half of guests could eat at once
- lockers
- a lockable room for staff only, with a safe
- a panic button that immediate calls 911 for an emergency at the
hostel
- a bicycle repair station
- covered bicycle parking in the backyard with a permanent rack
allowing bikes to be securely locked
- a fenced backyard with a lockable gate
- a grill
- a communal space outdoors for a bonfire
Depending on whether or not it is a wilderness hostel or a full service
hostel near a town, the hostel could also have
- a room or two with a lockable door for couples or families
- plenty of shared bathrooms and showers for all guests
- Internet access for guests
- washer and dryer
- a large meeting room for presentations and events
- bicycle parking in the front yard for community members
participating in hostel events
- surveillance cameras for the front and back doors and any other
outside areas where appropriate
- a covered area allowing for a movie screen and small stage in the
back yard, with enough room around it for 50 people in an audience
A wilderness hostel is much more
primitive than a regular, full-service hostel: it has a pit toilet
rather than flush toilets, its water source is a well or nearby river
or creek, the stove is gas, lights are powered by solar panels and a
backup generator and the barracks are thickly insulated because there
is no heat. The
Rampart
Wilderness Hostel in Banff, BC, Canada even has a wood-burning
sauna! People go to a wilderness hostel because of immediate
access to hiking/snow-shoeing trails, rock climbing and scenic views
that cannot be reached by a car.
The
NWConnector,
a network of regional public bus lines that can get you between
coastal towns and Portland or Salem or Albany, would be a good option
for many patrons of such a hostel.
I'm so ready to help make this happen. If
you have a solid interest and passion for this idea, and you want me
to be involved please
contact me. If
enough people contact me, perhaps we can start plans to make this
hostel a reality. Or, as I said before:
steal this idea. I
would be happy to wake up next year and find out someone else is doing
this project - I don't want the glory, I just want this to
happen!