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Netarts Bay is an estuarine bay on the northern Oregon Coast of the U.S. state of Oregon, located about 5 miles (8.0 km) southwest of Tillamook. The unincorporated community of Netarts is located on the north end of the bay and Netarts Bay Shellfish Preserve, managed by Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, is located on the south side of the bay. The sand spit on the west side of Netarts bay is part of Cape Lookout State Park.
The bay is approximately 5 by 1.5 miles (8.0 by 2.4 km) and totals 2,325 acres (9.41 km2) in area, making it Oregon's seventh largest bay. Of that, 812 acres (3.29 km2) are permanently submerged—the balance of 1,513 acres (6.12 km2) is intertidal land. It experiences a maximum tidal range of 9 feet (3 m).
The bay is part of a watershed of 13 square miles (34 km2) that is fed by at least 16 small creeks. From north to south, there is Fall Creek, Hodgdon Creek, O'Hara Creek, Rice Creek, two unnamed creeks, Yager Creek, three unnamed creeks, Whiskey Creek, an unnamed creek, Austin Creek, two unnamed creeks, and Jackson Creek. (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Netarts_Bay)
"Preemptive tagging" is about predicting certain things, tagging one of the blanco photos with relevant tags, and as soon as the event really happens, there isn't a Google vacuum, but instead there's the tagged photo instantly at the number 1 spot in the Google-searchresults when people start Googling for it.
A Flickr/tagging experiment.
A sign on a dune at Cape Lookout State Park directs people to the proper entrance to the beach. (photo by Tiffany Woods)
Michel Mandiberg, AfterSherrieLevine.com, 2001, Screenshot of website, CC BY-SA.
The hi-res images for print are available directly from the website (e.g. aftersherrielevine.com/images2.html)
March 1, 2015. Paragliding from Anderson's Viewpoint, Oregon located north of Cape Lookout State Park and south of Netarts on the Pacific Ocean. 45 21 14.86 N 123 58 16.36 W .
The series, 'Phenomenon' features amazing, other-worldly sand shapes that were formed naturally by the changing ocean tides and constant wind, found only for about half a mile along the Oceanside, Oregon, USA beach. The formations shown in this set, about 6" x 6" in size, were taken on two separate days. I have been back on numerous occasions, but have never seen another cone, or any shapes as prominent as those found on Sept. 9th and 10th, 2013. Sometimes there are none at all!
Oceanside, Oregon is about a 2 hour drive from Portland, then about a mile long walk along the beach to Netarts Bay area.
Cape Lookout State Park is a state park on Cape Lookout in the U.S. state of Oregon. It is located in Tillamook County, south of the city of Tillamook, on a sand spit between Netarts Bay and the Pacific Ocean. (oregonstateparks.org/index.cfm?do=parkPage.dsp_parkPage&a...)
Coast Guard crewmembers aboard a 47-foot Motor Life Boat transit out of Tillamook Bay, Ore., responding to a search and rescue case near Netarts Bay, Ore., Feb. 13, 2019. .
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The SAR case involved two boaters who had capsized and were in immediate need of assistance. .
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U.S. Coast Guard photo courtesy of Station Tillamook Bay.
This image of beach bikers was taken on a misty morning along Oregon’s Pacific coast, south of Netarts at Cape Lookout. In the background of this north looking telephoto view, 7.5 miles away, are the sea stacks of Three Arch Rocks National Wildlife Refuge. Presented are two versions, the original image and a wide low crop.
beach bikers _ 1b (crop) _ cape lookout, oregon _ (© 2014 megart)
Companion files:
beach bikers _ 1a _ cape lookout, oregon _ (© 2014 megart)
beach bikers _ 1b (crop) _ cape lookout, oregon _ (© 2014 megart)
Three Arch Rocks, located just off Oceanside, OR, is a National Wildlife Refuge. Established by Theodore Roosevelt in 1907, it was the first NWR established in the western US. It has huge seabird breeding colonies, including the largest nesting colonies of Common Murres and Tufted Puffins south of Alaska.
A view from the mouth of Netarts Bay at Netarts, OR
January 26, 2010