Splish-Splashing My Way to Ona Beach

Ona Beach park, chopped off trees, trail under water, brown sigh pointing to beach access and restroom where you clearly can't get there that way because of the flooding.

Ona Beach, about two miles south of where I live on the Oregon coast, was barely recognizable yesterday, with flooded trails, fallen trees, and other trees that had been chopped off up high so they looked telephone poles or maybe totem poles.

On this rare day without rain, snow, or ice, I needed out, but where was the trail to the beach? It always floods at the northern end. I once tried to convince my dog Annie to wade through the water with me. Being wiser than I, she refused. Now the only way to move forward through the picnic area was to follow the edge of Beaver Creek, my sneakers slapping wet grass.

The creek was wide, gray-green, and still, its edges spilling over. Would I be able to make it to the beach? And why were the trees chopped off like that?

Ona Beach park. Picnic table sitting in the middle of a flooded lawn, trees in the background, stormy sky.

So many memories are attached to this place, my own and the memories of my character PD in my Beaver Creek novels.

Fred and I kayaked here. We played badminton on the grass at an aquarium picnic where nobody brought paper plates so we ate off the lids of our potluck containers. Years later, I sat on a bench here weeping after a visit to Fred in the nursing home while Annie chewed on a bone she found in the barbecue pit.

PD kayaked here, too. She got caught by a sneaker wave. She found jewelry that had traveled across the ocean from the tsunami that hit Japan in 2011. She met Ranger Dave here. It was her place to relax when life got too crazy.

Determined to get my walk in for the day, I kept moving toward the ocean and eventually came to a passable trail, crossed the bridge and emerged on the beach, where a congregation of gulls was having a meeting. Sand, sea, and sky were all shades of pale gray. Driftwood and puffs of foam littered the black-streaked sand. The beach had shrunk to a small half-moon.

Beach littered with driftwood and seaweed, stormy sky.

I was not alone. An older couple played with their Jack Russell terrier along the edge of the water. A younger woman struggled with a giant white dog who had his own ideas about which way to go. Two women passed with three big dogs. My heart ached for my own dog, who passed away in September. We had some good times here.

Clearly the past weeks of stormy weather had taken a toll on Ona Beach, part of Brian Booth State Park. High water, wind, rain, and ice had thrashed it. I learned later that the chopped trees were part of a late 2023 effort to remove dying trees before they fell. They were cut at varying heights with slanted tops in the hope of creating places for birds to roost.

Closed up in my house while ice froze the streets, rain streaked the windows, and wind blew the cover off my hot tub, I did not see the changes happening down the road. Changes are part of life. No place is exempt. I look forward to a day when the sun shines on thick green grass, all the fallen trees and branches have been cleared away, dogs and children run along dry paths to the beach, and gulls perch atop the chopped tree trunks, laughing.

Have you gotten out in nature to see what changes have occurred this winter? Please tell us about it in the comments.

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Up Beaver Creek has been published

Up_Beaver_Creek_Cover_for_Kindle (1)My new novel is available now at Amazon.com. It’s not fully fledged yet. My official launch party is not until July 8. But you can buy it now. (I’ll excuse you for a minute if you want to go do that.) No, it’s not in the bookstores yet. Or the library. I don’t have copies to sell you. They’ve been shipped but haven’t arrived. But all that will happen within the next month.

I’ll be honest. I have published this through my own Blue Hydrangea Productions company via Amazon’s KDP publishing program. I didn’t want to publish my own books anymore. It’s a lot of work. But the book needed to come out. Plenty of famous authors have self-published (Stephen King, Mark Twain, Margaret Atwood, e.e. cummings). Besides, people need to read about the imaginary tsunami before the real one happens.

Tsunami? Yes, in Up Beaver Creek, the long-awaited tidal wave hits the Oregon coast. Read the book to see what happens and hope your neighbors are as well prepared as P.D.’s are.

This book is fiction. The people are invented, but the setting is real. As everyone living on the Oregon coast knows, the big earthquake and tsunami are coming.

Up Beaver Creek is P.D.’s story. She’ll never tell you what the initials stand for. Nor does she want to be called Cissy, her old nickname before her husband Tom died, before she launched herself at 42 into a new life with a new name, a new look, and a new determination to realize her dream of being a professional musician. Am I writing about myself? No. I’m a widow and a musician, but I am not P.D. I wish I were that bad-ass. I would never do the things that P.D. does.

“P.D.” is a state of mind, a tougher, wiser, upbeat attitude that makes the former Cissy work out at the gym, cuss, and try things she would have been afraid to do before. She will not whine or give up.

For a long time, I called the book “Being P.D.,” but the general reaction was “huh?” So I changed the title.

My book launch party is scheduled for Sunday, July 8 at 2 p.m. at the Newport Public Library. There will be readings, discussion, books to buy, and a big cake. I might even give some books away. So come join us.

I welcome opportunities to read and talk about this book and all of my books. For a full list, visit my book page at suelick.com. We can discuss starting over as a widow, living on your own, what to do and not to do when the tsunami hits, how to get books published, and other topics. If you would like a guest post for your blog, I’m interested.

For information about any of this, email me at suelick.bluehydrangea@gmail.com, click on my web page at suelick.com, or visit my Facebook page, www.facebook.com/suelick. You can also find lots of information at my Amazon author page.

As always, I welcome your comments here.