Bureau of Land Management - Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area

Company/Agency Description: 
From exploring tide pools teeming with life to witnessing Oregon's tallest lighthouse, there is something for every visitor at Yaquina Head. Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area extends out from the Oregon coast, one mile into the Pacific Ocean. Standing 93 feet tall at the westernmost point of the basalt headland, the lighthouse has been a bright beacon of the night, guiding ships and their supplies along the west coast since the light was first lit on August 20, 1873. Click here for Lighthouse Tour Information. The offshore islands are a year-round refuge for harbor seals and a spring-summer home for thousands of nesting seabirds. Gray whales can be spotted during their annual migrations to Mexico (late fall-early winter) and Alaska (late winter-early spring). During the summer months some gray whales take the opportunity to feed in the shallow waters around the headland. Cobble Beach is compiled of millions of round basalt rocks that produce an applause-like sound as the waves roll in. When the tide is low a vibrant ocean floor is revealed—pools of colorful animals including orange sea stars, purple sea urchins, and giant green anemones. Rangers are at hand to answer questions and point out all of the amazing plants and animals that call the tide pools home. Visit the Interpretive Center and discover 140 years of lighthouse history and thousands of years of natural and cultural history. Friends of Yaquina Lighthouses, a non-profit organization, offers site-related books, maps, and postcards in their interpretive store. Whether you want to see raging winter storms batter the Oregon coast, learn about the role lighthouses played in the westward expansion of the United States, or watch peregrine falcons at play, visit Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area and experience something wild.
Contact Name: 
Meredith Matherly
Company Address: 
750 NW Lighthouse Drive
Newport
OR
Job shadow description: 
Yaquina Head Outstanding Natural Area receives over 340,000 visitors annually with visitation highest in the summer months. Those interested in getting an idea of what a day in the life of a Yaquina Head Ranger might look will have the opportunity to shadow some of the different duties involved: • Costumed, interpretive history tours of Yaquina Head Lighthouse. • Informal interpretation for the general public focusing on intertidal ecology, seabird rookeries, harbor seals, and migrating whales. • Promote both visitor safety and resource protection in the tide pools. • Staff the Interpretive Center desk and provide visitor services. • Greet visitors and collect fees at the Entrance Station. • Perform administrative tasks and projects associated with park operations.
Available job shadow times: 
TBD - open 7 days/week
Length of job shadow experience: 
up to 1 day or more if desired

Please contact the College of Forestry Student Services Office for this company's contact information.

Brooke Harrington

541-737-1593

Employers can submit job shadow opportunities by contacting Brooke Harrington, 541-737-1593.