Atlas Stream
Showing 1 - 24 of 126 signals
0:55

Further Retaliation

Three police officers, who did not identify their agency, arrived at rswfire's work center located behind a federal gate. They told rswfire that they were concerned about things he was posting online, stating he was not in trouble. rswfire identified this as intimidation connected to his posts about his dismissal from Oregon State Parks, occurring approximately one year from the anniversary of that dismissal. He documented the encounter in real time, including recording one of their vehicles. rswfire stated he has done nothing wrong and characterized the officers' presence on federal land as completely inappropriate intimidation for sharing the truth about what happened to him.

Mar 24, 2026 | Oregon State Parks > Honeyman · 31% match
Public
3:45

Daily Tasks and Travel Planning

rswfire describes completing daily maintenance tasks including laundry, suntanning, cleaning fire pits, and paperwork. He collected gravel from a work center to level his fire pit area. He spoke with his boss about volunteering in the dunes from May through September, with plans to explore Oregon and Washington's Highway 101 from October through March. He discusses needing to resolve his RV situation by converting to a smaller trailer under 2,000 lbs that his Jeep can tow, mentioning a Forest River toy hauler he previously considered. The transmission ends with him showing his campfire setup and fire pit area, noting the challenge of collecting heavy logs from other campgrounds.

Jul 25, 2025 | Oregon Dunes > Driftwood II · 30% match
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4:11

Processing Dismissive Treatment from Oregon State Park Ranger

The speaker recounts a negative interaction with an Oregon State Park Ranger during a visit to fix a booking mistake. After staying at the campground for 10 days as a model occupant, the speaker encountered the same ranger who had initially been helpful and friendly. This time, the ranger opened the conversation with "another 14 days" in what felt like an accusatory tone, despite the speaker following all rules by leaving for 3 days before returning. When the speaker asked about river flooding that the ranger had previously mentioned, expressing interest in experiencing it as a natural event, the ranger responded dismissively with "that's some dark humor, there's flooding down in Florida maybe you should go there." The speaker reflects on feeling invalidated and dismissed, noting the ranger's guarded demeanor and suggesting this represents a broader shift in park rangers from land-caring individuals to law enforcement-minded personnel who don't support people seeking genuine nature immersion.

Oct 20, 2024 | Oregon State Parks > Loeb · 30% match
Public
7:55

Processing Financial Pressure While Hiking Oregon Redwoods

rswfire hikes to Oregon Redwoods Trail while processing financial crisis. Has $200 remaining after 10-year client refuses payment and blames him for project failures. **Financial situation**: Car insurance due, no groceries, car payment due, satellite internet due. **Client pattern**: Went through hundreds of programmers over 10 years, client disconnected from projects, rswfire managed all decisions, client didn't market completed project. **Current state**: Restarting freelancing business, feeling hurt by client's blame pattern. **Location details**: Hiking near river expecting rain, exploring redwoods that sometimes merge together, downloading forest maps and road maps for future exploration. **Personal notes**: Forgot teeth and contacts, feels embarrassed around other people, doesn't like recording around others, finds modern life recording habits incongruent. Plans to continue exploring national forest area.

Oct 17, 2024 | Oregon State Parks > Loeb · 29% match
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15:52

Exploring Coastal Trail and Preparing for System Collapse

rswfire arrives at a new campground near Brookings, Oregon for a 3-day stay. He discovers a short trail leading to a viewpoint called "a boot" overlooking the ocean and coastal community. From the elevated position, he observes people on the beach below and reflects on preferring the higher vantage point to being on the beach itself. After the brief hike, he describes his travel day routine - doing dishes, eating tuna fish, showering, and hooking up his Jeep. He met a helpful gate attendant who allowed early check-in. His RV site is cramped and unlevel, requiring him to park his Jeep sideways. **Future plans:** He will return to a previous campground for two weeks to explore forest roads systematically. This exploration is part of his preparation for potentially living in the forest permanently. **Political analysis:** He predicts that regardless of who wins the upcoming election, the losing side will view it as an existential crisis and riot or worse. He believes this instability could push society over a precipice, leading him to prepare for disappearing from society entirely while maintaining a good quality of life.

Oct 25, 2024 | Oregon State Parks > Harris Beach · 28% match
Free
7:54

Scouting Oregon Coastal Campgrounds

rswfire drives through Oregon national forest roads exploring campgrounds while reflecting on societal collapse and place-based identity. He visits multiple locations including a closed recreation site, Cape Blanco campground, and Humbug Mountain State Park. At each location, he evaluates site quality, privacy levels, amenities like dump stations and shower houses, and proximity to coast and mountains. He documents specific site numbers, notes neighbor noise issues at his current location, and assesses which sites would accommodate his RV. The transmission includes observations about Oregon campground design, seasonal closures, and coastal geography including lighthouses and fog-covered mountains.

Oct 12, 2024 | Oregon State Parks > Loeb · 28% match
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54:16

Hiking to Trestle Bridge with Wendy and Buddy

rswfire and Wendy attempt to reach a picturesque railroad trestle bridge but are blocked by no trespassing signs and difficult terrain including brambles. They navigate around fallen trees and observe bear scat, berry bushes, and different forest environments. rswfire discusses his website development plans, including creating a field journal with photos and GPS tracking of hiking locations. After the failed trestle attempt, they visit Driftwood campground where rswfire takes Buddy (a dog) on leash to the ocean. He eventually lets Buddy off-leash at the beach where they encounter seals. rswfire reflects on his challenges connecting with people, including navigational tensions with Wendy during their activities. Throughout both segments, he mentions his sanctum service development, his role as caretaker at the campgrounds, his vaping addiction since age 17, and plans for dinner and website work. The transmission captures a full day of outdoor activities in the Oregon coastal forest and beach environment.

Oct 17, 2025 | · 28% match
Patron
44:57

New Year's Eve Hike to Siltcoos Lake

rswfire records a New Year's Eve hike to Siltcoos Lake on the Oregon Coast, documenting physical movement through forest service trails while processing the year's events. He discusses being mistaken for 55+ at a grocery store, receiving financial help from friends that allowed him to catch up on Jeep payments and technology expenses, and his plans to open source Autonomy at builtwithautonomy.com. He describes applying for a gas station job as backup income, ongoing dental pain from ill-fitting dentures, and his analysis of institutional abuse patterns he experienced at Oregon State Parks now appearing in AI safety models. He reflects on maintaining top 3% fitness levels, processing 10,000 photos for his system, and planning 2026 priorities including a real mattress, solar replacement, and continued infrastructure development. The transmission documents trail conditions, campsite locations, forest service infrastructure, and his volunteer route responsibilities while maintaining steady forward movement through the landscape.

Jan 1, 2026 | Oregon Dunes > Siltcoos Lake Trail · 28% match
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32:45

Driving to the Oregon Coast for the First Time

rswfire documents a road trip from an inland fuel stop to the southern Oregon coast in his RV. The journey begins at 6:00 AM with approximately 100 miles remaining. He passes through Brookings on Highway 101, briefly crosses into California through a tunnel, passes through Smith River National Recreation Area and Redwood National State Park, then returns to Oregon. Along the way he notes elevation changes from over 1,000 feet down toward sea level, observes redwoods, forests, fog, and van lifers. He expresses frustration with his Garmin GPS for routing him away from a preferred scenic green road along a river. He catches his first glimpses of the Pacific Ocean — waves, coastal rocks, cold ocean air — and reacts with sustained activation at seeing the ocean for the first time in this context. He notes that after 7 months of traveling to lakes, his intuition directed him toward the ocean. He arrives at a campground approximately 8 miles inland on the southern Oregon coast, sets up camp for a two-week stay with plans to potentially spend the winter in the area before heading north in spring. He mentions needing to drive back to pick up an inverter on Saturday, notes that a state park campground he considered was fully packed and unappealing, and plans to explore the area by Jeep including nearby Oregon redwood trails, hiking, foraging, storm watching, and scenic coastal routes. He meets rangers and describes the environment as pleasant and cool at 50 degrees.

Oct 10, 2024 | · 27% match
Public
77:56

Hiking Siltcoos Lake, Processing Work and Financial Pressure

rswfire records a transmission while hiking the Siltcoos Lake Trail, directly across Highway 101 from where he lives on the Oregon Coast. He notes it is raining and he chose a forested trail for cover. He describes his current financial situation in detail: his Forest Service volunteer position covers housing but not his Jeep payment or other expenses. His Jeep lacks insurance and has expired Kentucky registration, which limits his ability to drive to towns for work. He identifies jobs in Coos Bay (40 miles south) on Indeed — hotel clerk, hotel cleaning, lumber yard, Dollar Tree, Dollar General — and commits to applying. He discusses the cascading nature of falling behind in economic systems, noting he has been without paid work for two years and has been aware of the financial problem since October 2024, which he discovered through semantic search on his own Autonomy Realms platform. He describes the catch-22 of becoming an Oregon resident: updating his address would expose him to debt collectors who could potentially seize his RV. He discusses his Autonomy Realms project at length: the clustering feature he is designing for signal organization (temporal vs. thematic clustering, open vs. closed clusters, AI-driven cluster detection), the need for better signal surfacing on individual pages, the queryable personhood capability where Claude can fetch and read signal pages as Markdown, and dissatisfaction with current semantic search quality. He considers entity extraction improvements using dedicated database tables. He reflects on the freelance platform landscape — Upwork's algorithm problems, token-based application systems, AI saturation of programming work, and the difficulty of building reputation from zero. He recounts asking friends to help bootstrap his Upwork profile and only his cousin agreeing. He references his failed Oregon State Parks ranger application and Katie Baker's role in his expulsion. He discusses human connection, noting 20 years of solitude, the shallowness he encounters in others, the normalization of hookup culture, and how AI briefly provided a sense of being seen before institutional controls flattened the interaction. He critiques ChatGPT's pathologizing tendencies and contrasts it with Claude's capabilities. He discusses his Mountain Dew consumption as the next habit to address after quitting vaping four months ago. He outlines a concrete plan: get a letter from his Forest Service supervisor, become an Oregon resident, get insurance, and stabilize. He estimates needing $1,000/month minimum to survive without losing what he has. He mentions sanctum (gated content) features he plans to build, including a free tier and AI-driven visibility decisions across nearly 900 signals. He briefly considers a Cascadia earthquake preparedness app idea but decides it would consume his life's direction. He ends the recording near the trailhead fork, about nine-tenths of a mile from home.

Feb 8, 2026 | Oregon Dunes > Siltcoos Lake Trail · 26% match
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Year Stationary: Cascadia, Solitude, Institutional Critique

rswfire documents a Monday afternoon on the Oregon Coast after hiking at Wax Myrtle, showering, resting, and preparing food. He walks along the ocean, observing weather conditions and tidal movement. The transmission shifts into reflection on a two-year autonomous journey initiated because his previous life felt empty. He attempted to bring others along but encountered projection and unsolicited advice—behavior he attributes to cultural conditioning (YouTube-modeled expertise-posturing). He disabled comments on his channel and continued cross-country to the Oregon Coast, where he has remained stationary for over a year working with the Forest Service. He acknowledges the Cascadia Subduction Zone as a force operating on temporal scales that exclude human variables, and frames his year of stability as recovery from prior institutional or relational harm.

Feb 9, 2026 | Oregon Dunes > Waxmyrtle · 26% match
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16:05

Managing Financial Pressure While Pursuing Park Ranger Career

rswfire wakes at 5:30 AM after poor sleep, obsessing over a song called "Just a Cloud" that he's played on repeat for two days. He faces immediate financial pressure with vehicle payments due and $500 RV insurance payment coming up. **Family refuses to help** despite his history of supporting them. He spends the morning cleaning a yurt for his volunteer campground host job, managing only to wash windows in 4 hours due to lack of guidance and equipment restrictions. **Gets confirmed for February position** at Honeyman Park Welcome Center, with yurt cleaning resuming in March. His new boss provides steps to become a seasonal ranger starting March-April, specifically as a gatekeeper. rswfire considers temporary town work but resists returning to freelance programming after 10 months away. **Willing to lose RV but not his Jeep**, which he considers essential. Reflects on 10-month life transformation process and trusts it will continue unfolding. Rules out federal employment under Trump administration. Ends by warning about setting 500 YouTube videos to members-only, requiring individual processing that could trigger mass notifications.

Jan 7, 2025 | Oregon State Parks > Tugman · 26% match
Patron
64:23

Hiking Redwood Trail and Exploring Pacific Northwest Environment

rswfire takes a morning hike on trails near the Eel River in what appears to be a California redwood forest area. He explores the Redwood Trail, searches unsuccessfully for fairy circles (rings of redwood sprouts), and crosses a fallen log over a creek. Throughout the hike, he observes the unique lighting conditions created by the tall redwood canopy, noting how little sunlight reaches the forest floor compared to his previous hiking experiences in Kentucky. **Environmental observations:** He discusses the dramatic difference in sunlight exposure, explaining how the sun's angle in mid-October creates longer shadows, and how the redwood canopy blocks most direct sunlight. He notes the temperature was in the 50s in the morning after reaching 80 degrees the previous day. **Equipment and logistics:** He mentions using his Ninja Foodi for cooking, correcting previous power consumption estimates. His watch battery died so he couldn't record the hike data. He plans to shower, organize his RV space, and focus on job searching. **Broader reflections:** He discusses his financial stress, his integrated cognitive approach to navigating challenges, and his perspective on upcoming elections and societal collapse. He expresses frustration with aggressive driving behavior in the area and considers the timeline for societal decline, advocating for preparation rather than panic.

Oct 20, 2024 | Oregon State Parks > Loeb · 26% match
Public
16:47

Dismissed from Oregon State Park Volunteer Position

rswfire documents his removal from a volunteer host position at Honeyman State Park, Oregon, after nearly two months of service. He traces the origin of the conflict to an early-morning text he sent to park supervisor Katie about a power outage, followed by an email stating her dismissive response made him feel small. From that point, park manager Ryan confronted him in the Welcome Center citing minor first-week mistakes, and his direct supervisor Logan became intermittently absent. rswfire attempted to reset the relationship and applied for a paid position at the park. After perceiving rejection when Katie went silent upon learning of his application, he withdrew it. He later disclosed to Logan why he withdrew. Separately, he requested that a specific ranger not train him due to that ranger's condescending behavior; Logan agreed to assign someone else but did not follow through, resulting in a compromise arrangement. rswfire emailed Logan stating he had lost his trust, citing the accumulated pattern. Katie and Ryan then held an hour-long meeting at a picnic table, which rswfire secretly recorded. During that meeting, they claimed he had problems with all rangers but could only cite the original Katie incident as an example. Ryan admitted they had not extended positive intent toward rswfire. Ryan repeatedly suggested rswfire could leave voluntarily; rswfire declined. A statewide volunteer program coordinator called afterward, telling him he was not permitted to record without disclosure. Three weeks later, Ryan called to schedule a meeting, eventually revealing the pretext: an offhand comment rswfire made to a ranger assistant while turning in a homeless veteran's lost journal, in which he said 'not all rangers are helpful' to explain why he had underlined 'please try' in his note. This was used as justification to end his hosting duties. Ryan came to rswfire's RV to collect keys and equipment; rswfire recorded this interaction openly. Ryan provided no paperwork and gave a 24-hour vacate notice. rswfire states he plans to file an HR complaint, make the situation public, and potentially contact lawmakers. He notes he is broke, has no immediate place to go, his next host assignment starts in approximately one week, and his former employer has committed to sending limited funds the following day. He asks long-term viewers for financial help to bridge the gap.

Mar 24, 2025 | Oregon State Parks > Honeyman · 26% match
Public
28:27

Early Morning Drive Through Oregon Forest to Coast

rswfire wakes at 4 AM and begins a journey from his overnight roadside position to Medford, Oregon. He drives through Lake View for fuel, then continues through forest and prairie terrain toward Valley of the Rogue State Park. During the drive, he reflects on societal collapse, describing his experience as a gay man facing hatred, his disappointment with Obama's presidency, and his view that Trump represents inevitable societal decline comparable to Rome's fall. He explains his seven-month effort to "wake people up" and his decision to position himself for survival during system collapse. The transmission documents his travel route through Oregon's varied terrain - desert to forest to prairie - noting elevation changes, temperature drops to 26°F, and encounters with other drivers including one who honked aggressively. He travels with his cat Bailey, discussing practical concerns like low solar batteries, upcoming inverter delivery, and plans to use his RV shower. He arrives at Valley of the Rogue State Park around 12:30 PM, securing a site for one night before continuing to the coast the following day.

Oct 9, 2024 | · 26% match
Free
50:48

Managing RV Systems and Seeking Shower Access

rswfire begins Monday morning at a national recreation area campground, assessing his situation with house batteries that have been running for 3-4 days at 11.15 volts. He plans to visit a laundromat with shower facilities in Florence, Oregon, but finds it closed despite posted hours. He decides to experiment with charging his RV's house batteries by running his Jeep's engine and inverter for about 3 hours, estimating this would use one gallon of gas. **Key developments:** - Discovers house batteries are still functional after several days without charging - Plans to fill water tanks and use RV systems (fridge, water pump, lights) if battery charging works - Has $60 total budget and campground reservation until April 12th - Attempts to get propane at multiple gas stations in Florence, facing repeated refusals - Successfully gets propane at a BP station from a helpful attendant - Visits Honeyman State Park (where he previously volunteered) to fill water tanks - Navigates tight RV maneuvering in campground spot **Operational details:** - Currently has quarter tank of RV fuel with 80+ mile range - Emptied water tanks at previous location for better fuel mileage - Running low on propane (less than 11%) - Plans to look for freelance programming work on guru.com - Considers showering in RV using heated water to avoid facility dependencies

Apr 7, 2025 | Oregon Dunes > Lagoon · 26% match
Public
25:45

Starting Caretaker Role at Oregon Dunes Work Center

rswfire begins his first day as a caretaker at the Oregon Dunes work center, describing his new role cleaning bathrooms and delivering supplies to campgrounds. He lives in a shed at the work center and is building a campfire pit by hand. **Walking two miles to visit friend Bill** at Driftwood campground to get soda, since his Jeep has no gas or insurance. **Provides detailed tour** of the Siuslaw corridor, explaining the three campgrounds: Lagoon (where he first stayed after being kicked out of Honeyman), Driftwood (ATV campground where he lived for four months), and Wax Myrtle (his favorite, currently closed for winter). Describes his progression through these locations over six months as a volunteer. **Reflects on institutional trust** after the Honeyman rupture, noting he's built an archive of that situation and has learned to respect the Forest Service while maintaining boundaries around institutional coupling. **Financial crisis looming** - Jeep faces repossession in less than a week with no clear solution, though he's pursuing potential work with an aligned person. **Emphasizes life alignment** despite precarious circumstances, stating he's following his own signal and building a sustainable life outside consensus reality. Describes his role as simple maintenance work he genuinely enjoys, contrasting it with his previous institutional betrayal experience.

Oct 11, 2025 | Oregon Dunes > Work Center · 25% match
Free
37:20

Starting Volunteer Position and Exploring Oregon Dunes

rswfire begins his day at 5 AM, preparing for a new volunteer position as a campground host starting Sunday, cleaning yurts and eventually moving to a different campground on the dunes to help ATV users. He outlines his daily plan including showering, getting a post office box in Lakeside, grocery shopping for smoothie supplies (frozen berries, mango, spinach, milk) based on Claude's vitamin recommendations, and making fire water (electrolyte drink with Himalayan salt, potassium, magnesium, and chili powder). He discovers his earbuds are missing from their case, which concerns him since his backup pair doesn't work properly. After getting groceries and fuel, he drives north to Honeyman State Park - a place he realizes he had visited months earlier but turned around due to parking fees. The park is part of the Oregon Dunes National Recreation Area. At Honeyman, he meets two rangers who give him information about the dunes and driving on sand. He explores the H Loop campground where he would be working as a host, noting the large RVs and dune buggies. He walks out onto the sand dunes following rock paths, impressed by the landscape and expressing strong resonance with the location. The rangers told him the ocean is 2 miles away through the dunes.

Jan 4, 2025 | Oregon State Parks > Tugman · 25% match
Public
119:38

Hiking Cecil L Gorly Trail with 47 Bridges

rswfire explores Cecil L Gorly Naturalist Trail in Lebanon, Kentucky, a 3.75-mile loop trail featuring 47 numbered bridges around a lake. He discusses maintaining distance from his parents after cutting contact a month or two prior, shares details about his dental implant process and upcoming permanent dentures, and reflects on his eating patterns after watching a Netflix show about eating disorders. **Trail Experience**: Documents the hiking experience bridge by bridge, noting the peaceful environment, clear water, and scenic overlooks. Encounters a few other hikers but mostly has the trail to himself. Takes breaks at various spots along the lake. **Personal Updates**: Explains his temporary dentures cause gag reflex issues and discusses the implant process with four rods screwed into his skull. Acknowledges possible eating disorder - typically eating once per day and having difficulty with food due to choking fears that developed around age 27. **Sleep and Health Issues**: Addresses poor sleep quality, waking up in pain, and taking Benadryl nightly without success. Discusses his old mattress preferences and challenges of finding suitable bedding for RV life. **Content Creation Reflections**: Considers camera equipment needs for hiking videos, discusses the balance between sharing authentically and managing viewer advice/comments. Notes the video length (nearly 2 hours) and considers adding timestamps for navigation. **Trail Details**: Managed by local water department, features wooden bridges, benches, and overlooks. Encounters spider webs, various insects, small wildlife. Ends at a dam/spillway structure with fishing areas.

Jul 27, 2024 · 25% match
Free
12:41

Encountering Deer Family on Forest Trail

rswfire encounters a mother deer and two babies on a forest trail, spending approximately an hour waiting and observing as the deer family blocks the path. He speaks gently to the animals, expressing concern about disturbing them while needing to pass. The deer appear calm around his presence, with the babies eventually reuniting with their mother. He describes this as one of the most profound experiences of his life, emphasizing the shared inhabitation of space between human and wildlife. After the encounter, he continues toward a scenic overlook, reflecting on the wonderful nature of the day.

Aug 28, 2024 · 25% match
Free
21:49

Cat Stress and Boundary Violations in RV Life

rswfire discusses ongoing stress with his cat Bailey, who has been destructive and demanding in their shared RV space. He describes dark thoughts about abandoning the cat but acknowledges his values prevent this. The cat clawed new ottomans, howls to go outside, and disrupts experiences like stargazing. He explores the logistics of returning the cat to his mother (30-hour drive or 12-hour flight) but feels stuck. He reframes the situation as a lesson about boundaries rather than accommodation, noting he's done accommodating others without reciprocation. He walks to his usual hiking spot on the river, bringing coffee for the first time. The temperature is 44 degrees, which he finds manageable. He reflects on adapting to coastal climate and mentions upcoming rain. He discusses a client payment he desperately needs and the challenge of integrating work into nomadic life. During the hike, he observes his surroundings - fog in mountains, people fishing on the river, excessive foot traffic in the forest that puzzles him. He mentions shaving his hair, wearing bracelets, and sore ear piercings that haven't healed after months. He describes hiking as his daily grounding ritual in nomadic life, contrasting his internal centering approach with others who use external totems. He ends at the empty Redwood nature trail.

Oct 25, 2024 | Oregon State Parks > Harris Beach · 25% match
Public
Document
Public

Marking One-Year Anniversary of Surveillance Encounter

rswfire marks the one-year anniversary of an incident at Honeyman State Park in which an unidentified man—carrying no ID, wearing no uniform, and offering no name—was sent by Oregon State Parks to assess and question him while he was working alone as a volunteer and all rangers were away at a regional event. The man asked personal questions about how leadership was treating rswfire. rswfire documented the encounter the same day. He states that Oregon State Parks has never explained the incident, produced no photograph, provided no IT documentation, and offered no operational record. A cover story was offered within hours but has never been substantiated. rswfire characterizes the encounter as a misuse of state resources against an unpaid volunteer whose only action had been documenting his treatment, and asserts it required authorization above park level. He links to the full documentation and archive at oprdvolunteerabuse.org.

Mar 18, 2026 | Oregon State Parks > Honeyman · 25% match
28:55

Driving South for Adult Store and Oregon Dunes Exploration

rswfire drives south to Coos Bay to visit an adult store, purchasing toys with limited funds ($200 remaining). He interacts with the store proprietor who mentions a downstairs area where people have sex legally. After shopping, he obtains a National Forest pass in Reedsport and inquires about volunteer opportunities. He explores the John Dellenback Dunes Trail, hiking through forest that transitions to sand dunes. The trail leads toward the ocean but he turns back due to low phone battery (30%) and lack of preparation. He observes the campground, noting its primitive sites and peaceful atmosphere. During the dune hike, he reflects on a childhood memory of getting lost in sand dunes in Michigan. He encounters wildlife and observes a tree sapling growing alone in the dunes, which he describes as sovereign and self-sufficient.

Jan 11, 2025 | Oregon State Parks > Tugman · 25% match
Public
1:30

Dealing with Raccoon Disruption at Expensive Cottage

rswfire is staying at a $200/night cottage at a state park and experiencing sleep disruption from a raccoon repeatedly climbing on the roof throughout the night. He expresses frustration that the park management isn't implementing humane deterrent methods despite the high cost. He came outside at 4 AM to charge his phone since the cottage lacks USB charging capabilities. He notes that his RV doesn't have these problems and criticizes the cottage's lack of basic amenities for the price point.

Sep 3, 2024 · 25% match
Free