Minus Tide (8x10)
We've been having a really nice summer here in the Pacific Northwest this year (doesn't always happen)...so we headed back to the beach and found some great weather there too (which is also "iffy" when it's warm inland). I spent several sessions painting at Pacific City's Cape Kiwanda where the famed Dorymen launch their boats...
Dory Rocks (8x10)
For more than a hundred years in all kinds of conditions, dory boats have gone to sea from the shelter of Cape Kiwanda. There is no other
harbor, port, or fishing fleet anywhere in the world exactly like this.
The dory's origins come from the turn of the 20th century surf
dories and Nestucca River gill net boats that sold their fish to
the salmon cannery established in 1887 near the mouth of the
river.
After 1927, commercial fishing was only allowed in the open
ocean. Since the Nestucca had a shallow, dangerous bar accessible
only at flood tide, a new larger surf boat was needed to be launched
in the lee of Cape Kiwanda.
Cape Kiwanda Morning (8x10)
When ocean conditions allow, Pacific City dories fish the waters off
of Cape Kiwanda, launching from, and sliding back up on the beach
in the lee of the Cape.
The dory fleet is renowned for its incredible safety record. Dorymen
are often the first responders to distress calls and other marine
emergencies. In 100+ years only 6 known dorymen have lost their
lives at sea, making the Pacific City dory and the men and women
who sail them some of the safest mariners in the marine environment.
North Side Cape Kiwanda (8x10)
In 1996, the Dorymen's Association was founded; a non-profit
organization with the primary mission to preserve and protect the
historic traditions given to us by the pioneers of this fleet. The
Association supports Oregon's public beach laws and regulations
and works with local, state, and federal agencies.