Editorial: Strangers see opportunity, beauty here


Thursday, August 14, 2008 | 17 comment(s)

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Are you surprised? You shouldn’t be.

Seeing Coos Bay listed among National Geographic’s 50 best “adventure” towns shouldn’t have caught anyone off guard. The Bay Area is a fantastic place. Recognition by outsiders is inevitable.

Expect more of it.

If you’ve lived in the Bay Area all your life, you probably see the area through the grimy lens of history. You see the once-bustling waterfront, now largely silent. You see too many empty storefronts in downtown Coos Bay and North Bend.

You see families scraping to get by. You know the disappointment of missed opportunities — major employers that looked but didn’t land, development plans that came to nothing.

But try seeing the area through a stranger’s eyes. Pretend you’re an outsider — perhaps a visiting magazine writer, scouting America’s next hot spots.

On those windblown docks, you see an increasingly rare commodity: waterside property available for visionary development. In those sparse downtowns, you see tree-shaded, pedestrian-friendly streets, and commercial buildings poised for quaint-chic renewal.

The stranger focuses on the South Coast’s obvious assets. Ocean, of course. Proximity to clean, uncrowded beaches. Dunes to ride, waves to surf, forests to explore. A temperate climate, neither blistering nor blizzard-bitten. A remarkable number of sunny days, accented by episodes of mist and bluster.

Looking at the Bay Area, National Geographic paid no attention to past disappointments, because they have no bearing on the future. Instead, the magazine identified a community on the cusp — a great undiscovered locale for vacationing, for raising a family, and possibly for relocating a business.

Incidentally, folks in North Bend and Charleston shouldn’t feel slighted because National Geographic didn’t mention their cities by name. To a national magazine, “Coos Bay” is a handy shorthand for the whole Bay Area. What matters is that National Geographic saw the area’s ripening potential — too often overlooked by some long-time residents.

Fifty years ago, Malibu wasn’t much. Martha’s Vineyard once was just a sleepy waterside burg. Only 30 years ago, most parts of Bend had no sewers. But America is rapidly running out of great undiscovered locales.

If the Bay Area lacks anything, it lacks faith in its own future. Too many people around here wear pessimism like a rain poncho. Hunkered under oilcloth, they may not see the opportunities.

Recognition from National Geographic will bring us some attention from the magazine’s readers, and it might bring us a tourist or two. More importantly, it reminds us how blessed we are to live where we do. Seeing our community through fresh eyes affirms the Bay Area’s underappreciated   possibilities.
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Resident wrote on Aug 21, 2008 10:22 AM:

To Bad News--
Can you prove by the Oregon Blue Book that there are "a lot more cars and people here"?

kat wrote on Aug 20, 2008 6:58 PM:

Don't listen to Bad news, its fantastic here. i don't know what it used to be like as i moved here just a few short years ago, but i can't imagine living anywhere else. i go to Horsfall Beach all the time and have no problems with ATV's. If you just walk 100 yards out from the staging area, you don't run into a soul.

Both my husband and I have jobs we enjoy. I did take a pay cut by moving to this area, but considering we now own a house where in California it was a far off dream, i have no complaints. Hurry back Samuel and DANSFDSA, the coast is still gorgeous!

Bad News wrote on Aug 20, 2008 2:34 PM:

To Samuel and DANSFDSA:
How long has it been since you guys "Visited" here?
It used to be nice, peaceful, clean, and no traffic. In fact you could drive the streets and know who you passed.
Nowadays you can't go onto the beach without a stranger's dog running up to you. There is no parking in Toppit's Park. Libby road is a road course race track, if you don't like to drive 60mph, don't go there! Hwy 101 always has trash alongside. Don't even think about going out to Horsefall due to all of the ATVs If you are trying to get across Newmark without a traffic light, get ready to wait a while.
The service and amenitites haven't changed, same as in the 80's, just a lot more cars and people.
Why do I stay? Maybe we can talk about a trade in 4 more years.

Common Sense wrote on Aug 20, 2008 2:31 PM:

Some real truth in this letter...

Tourists & Baby Boomer retirements number in the MILLIONS as we speak & just waiting on a GREAT place like the Oregon coast! Realitors & State leaders out there, this should be a "hint" on getting more people to visit or live here by mass marketing/advertising nation wide in a BIG way (Believe it or not the real market for this area is DC Washington goin North on the East coast)!

P.S. I've been to every coast in the USA (Including Hawaii) & Oregon coast is as nice as anyone in the USA!

Samuel wrote on Aug 20, 2008 12:15 PM:

DANSFDSA: I can certainly agree with you on that notion. I moved from the Coos Bay area three years ago to Minnesota for job and wifes family. The winters can be a challange to live in after living most of my life in a climate like the Oregon South Coast. I have always felt somewhat blesses when it came to scenery and view of this area.

danfdsa wrote on Aug 20, 2008 10:23 AM:

Residents of Coos bay, count your blessings. I lived in CB 20 years ago just out of college but moved for a job and marriage. I now live in the midwest and gawd its boring, "nice place to raise a family" gets old after a while. Winters suck here, summers are nice. Where I live now does not even come close to the natural beauty of the bay area so I just dont understand all the negative comments on these boards. I cant wait to move back......... I think about it everyday. We will be back when the kids are done with school which is about 4 years!

Rags to riches wrote on Aug 20, 2008 8:48 AM:

"....Proximity to clean, uncrowded beaches. Dunes to ride, waves to surf, forests to explore. A temperate climate, neither blistering nor blizzard-bitten. A remarkable number of sunny days, accented by episodes of mist and bluster."

This place used to be as described, now it is littered, cluttered, and loaded with loud ATVs. Welcome to progress.

chris wrote on Aug 20, 2008 2:31 AM:

The bay area is a GREAT place to live and visit.I returned to north bend after 18 years it was a surprise the towns were still in the 70`s&80`s.There over !The leadership needs to see the potental of the bay area.It can be again! OPEN EYES AND LOOK AROUND

coosbaytv wrote on Aug 19, 2008 10:38 PM:

As a local, I for one have recently tried the approach of taking what we have to offer and showing the rest of the world as well as reminding ourselves.
Sure, it's not like this everyday, but when it is, there really isn't anything better.
Check out http://www.oregoncoastescapes.com to see what I mean.

Onward through the fog wrote on Aug 19, 2008 8:18 AM:

What a hoot! When can see the sunset or better yet the car in front of you?
This place is perfect for WalMart, basket people shuffling along in their Ughs and jackets lining into McDonalds for their fill up on fats.

pril wrote on Aug 19, 2008 3:55 AM:

It's certainly difficult to starve in Coos Bay (what with berries, mushrooms, fish, crabs, clams, etc), which is good, since it's hard to get a job that pays all the bills and leaves money for food, as well. Still it was a pretty place to live for 11 years, and I had many, many adventures there.

kat wrote on Aug 18, 2008 3:11 AM:

Great editorial, and very well said.

Resident wrote on Aug 15, 2008 6:56 PM:

It doesn't matter if the area is beautiful or not without jobs. Personally I would rather do a job I enjoy, that uses my skills and talents than live here. Maybe I'll get lucky and be able to leave, and they can get lucky and move to the wind!

Nancy wrote on Aug 14, 2008 8:47 PM:

I'm not surprised by the obvious. Who could take the ocean, the forests, the climate, the beauty of this area for granted? I know a bunch of mid-western transplants who had this all figured out long before before National Geographic noticed how special this all is. Anyone who is surprised by this needs to go somewhere like Kansas and spend a steamy couple of weeks during August. Or perhaps winter might be preferable if being frozen appeals to you. I am surprised by the surprised tone of the editorial!

Kaye wrote on Aug 14, 2008 5:09 PM:

yes, I whole-heartedly agree.
We moved here 15 years ago from Europe, and ever since people have been asking us incredulously why in the dickens we did.
Duh - it's great here! And a big part of the population doesn't even realize it.
If you don't sit around bemoaning the good old days, when the wood industry and the fishing were in their hey-days, and wait for manna to fall from the heavens, but you'll need to get up and get something going. You don't know how good it is here, just open your eyes!

Thomas wrote on Aug 14, 2008 4:34 PM:

Back in the1800's, a wise observer deemed Coos Bay to be a "poor man's paradise".

THAT is where our real future is, and not in trusting 'cargo cult' hucksters to deliver riches from the sky.

Well Said wrote on Aug 14, 2008 3:59 PM:

Editorial Staff:
I agree with everything you said in this editorial. However, we must have a change of leadership in the county and both cities. We need people with vision who aren't afraid to take action.

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