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Hike With Your Dog State Park Pass - Oregon
by Doug Gelbert
Sponsored
Synopsis
National parks are America’s best idea - state parks are a dog’s best idea. National parks may have been called “America’s best idea,” but for dog lovers, they often feel like the nation’s biggest tease - epic trails and grand vistas, yet dogs are restricted to paved pull-outs and ...
National parks are America’s best idea - state parks are a dog’s best idea. National parks may have been called “America’s best idea,” but for dog lovers, they often feel like the nation’s biggest tease - epic trails and grand vistas, yet dogs are restricted to paved pull-outs and campgrounds in all but a handful of parks. Enter state parks: America’s second best idea, and arguably the best idea of all for those who hike with four paws in tow. With hundreds of hidden waterfalls, forest loops, seaside trails, and historic landscapes that welcome dogs as fellow adventurers, state parks offer an affordable, wide-open alternative to crowded national parks. That’s the promise of the Hike With Your Dog State Park Pass Guides—a roadmap to the trails, cabins, and quirky treasures where America’s natural wonders aren’t just admired from the parking lot, but experienced side-by-side with your best friend.
State parks are America’s democratic idea - affordable, welcoming, and dog-friendly. They preserve local pride and natural beauty while inviting everyday use, from a Saturday morning hike to a week-long family vacation. The National Park Service, created in 1916, saw its role as protecting landscapes and sites of national wonder. In the early days few qualified; even today there are only some five dozen. Over the years another 400 or so national monuments, historic sites and seashores have been placed with the park service.
Today there are over 10,000 state parks across 18 million acres - a patchwork quilt of lakes, beaches, forests, and historic sites with roughly one billion visits annually - far surpassing the attendance at national parks. It all began with Niagara Falls in 1885. America’s greatest natural attraction of the 19th century was becoming tawdry with sideshow attractions and industrial development so New York created the Niagara Falls State Reservation, the nation’s first true state park.
By the onset of the Great Depression in the 1930s there were still relatively few state parks. Many states had no state park system at all and the parks that did exist were largely undeveloped. Franklin Roosevelt created the Civilian Conservation Corps to put young men to work and between 1933 and 1942 more than 700 parks were constructed in 40 states. Since the federal government was footing the bill, these new natural playgrounds could easily have been absorbed into the National Park Service system. But the NPS wanted no part of running these “picnic parks.” Washington’s logic was: wonder and grandeur belong in the national system; recreation belongs to the states.
And America’s dogs have been wagging their tails ever since.
Pick a state. Now go build your next doggie dream vacation around state parks.
Oregon might just be the most dog-complete state park system in America. While national parks shut the door (Crater Lake is little more than a paved sniff for pups), Oregon’s 250+ state parks swing the gate wide open. For dog owners, that means the chance to share the state’s most iconic landscapes — Pacific headlands, volcanic canyons, old-growth forests, and desert sagebrush — with four-legged companions.
What makes it special? Variety.
Along the coast, dogs can pad through rainforests to secret coves (Oswald West), perch on cliffs above migrating whales (Cape Lookout), and nose around shipwrecks (Fort Stevens).
Inland, pups trot beneath towering ponderosas (LaPine), lap the edges of alpine lakes (Wallowa), and stride into desert canyons (Cottonwood Canyon).
Even history comes with pawprints: ghostly bunkers (Ecola), frontier homesteads (Champoeg), and WWII lookout posts (Port Orford Heads).
From a pup’s perspective, Oregon offers the ultimate sampler plate. One weekend it’s digging in dune sand, the next it’s howling at canyon cliffs, and the next it’s sniffing salt spray on a hidden cove. If a tail-wagging road trip has a home state, it might just be Oregon.
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