Clamming is a great family pastime on the Long Beach Peninsula and the counts are up. State announces 5-day dig in Late January.

Day Dig Clamming:  On Wednesday and Thursday, Clammers will be able to start digging when it is still daylight.  If you can travel mid-week, we would like to extend a very special rate to those who can come on Wednesday and Thursday of $69.00 per night for a one bedrooms suite.  This is an incredible deal with regular rates being $179.00 per night.  Dig clams and then come back to the resort, take a hot tub and then curl up next to your fireplace and relax.

 

Our One Bedrooms suites are great for families.  The rooms have a full kitchen, full living room with a fold out queen couch, a fireplace, a private bedroom with a queen bed, deck with view or ground floor patio.

 Weekend Clamming:  One bedroom Suite for $99.00 per night.  Beat the economic crunch.  Families can pack an ice chest with food and eat in your condo with your fully equipped kitchen.  Offer good through 1/31/10.  

 

Razor Clam Dig Dates
for “Long Beach”, which extends from the Columbia River to Leadbetter Point
(Pending marine toxin tests showing
the clams are safe to eat)

Tentative digging days and tides for this month’s opening are:

  • Wednesday, Jan. 27, (4:24 p.m., -0.5 ft.) Long Beach
  • Thursday, Jan. 28, (5:13 p.m., -1.1 ft.) Long Beach
  • Friday, Jan. 29, (5:58 p.m., -1.5 ft.) Long Beach
  • Saturday, Jan. 30, (6:41 p.m., -1.5 ft.) Long Beach
  • Sunday, Jan. 31, (7:23 p.m., -1.2 ft.) Long Beach

 

Call 1-800-219-9833 for Reservations

Go to our web site at www.breakerslongbeach.com to see all the property amenities.

Check out the local happenings at www.funbeach.com

 

For more specials in the future or to keep up with events at the Breakers, please become a fan of our facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/TheBreakers.LongBeachWA

5 days of clamming scheduled!

Razor Clam Dig Dates
for “Long Beach”, which extends from the Columbia River to Leadbetter Point

Tentative; pending testing for domoic acid, a natural marine toxin, closer to digging dates.

• Wednesday, Jan. 27 (4:24 p.m. -0.5 ft.)
• Thursday, Jan. 28 (5:13 p.m. -1.1 ft.)
• Friday, Jan. 29 (5:58 p.m. -1.5 ft.)
• Saturday, Jan. 30 (6:41 p.m. -1.5 ft.)
• Sunday, Jan. 31 (7:24 p.m. -1.2 ft.)

We are so excited to have 5 days of clamming, come down try your luck at clamming, go to Ilwaco port buy some fresh crab, visit our local shops and artist galleries, eat a delicious dinner any of the peninsula restaurants.  Relax in our spacious condo suites, and watch a DVD or play a game with the kids.  Make a memory for your family.

Who’s going Clamming?

IF YOU WANT TO STAY AT THE BREAKERS CALL NOW, ROOMS ARE ALMOST SOLD OUT!

(entry courtesy of www.funbeach.com/blog)

Coastal razor clam for New Years Eve and the days after approved

PHOTO: www.dfw.state.or.us

Time to dig into the New Year by heading to the coast for what should be an excellent razor clam dig barring any rough surf or bad weather.

Long Beach… will be open for clam digging Thursday, Dec. 31, Friday, Jan. 1 and Saturday, Jan 2. All digs will be held on evening tides, with digging restricted to the hours between noon and midnight.

“New Year’s razor clam digs are very popular,” Dan Ayres, the coastal shellfish manager for state Fish and Wildlife said in a news release. “We’re pleased that the tides allowed us to offer another holiday dig this year. For safety’s sake, make sure to check the weather and surf conditions before heading out.”

Harvesters are allowed to take no more than 15 razor clams and must keep the first 15 they dig, regardless of size or condition. Each digger’s clams must be kept in a separate container.

Additional digging dates in 2010 will be announced in January, following review of harvest data, Ayres said.

Make plans for November Clamming

Next clamming dates are (pending):• Wednesday, Nov. 4 (7:33 p.m. -1.3 ft.)
• Friday, Nov. 6 (9:07 p.m. -0.9 ft.)
• Saturday, Nov. 7 (9:59 p.m. -0.5 ft.)

One World, One Sky Kite Festival

A very enjoyable walk down Discovery Trail to Bolstad Avenue to enjoy One World, One Sky this past weekend.  This event takes place around the world and our very own World Kite Museum was connecting with other events via skype.  Awesome!

Clamming Dates Announced!

Razor Clam Dig Dates
for “Long Beach”, which extends from the Columbia River to Leadbetter Point
(Pending marine toxin tests showing
the clams are safe to eat)
• Friday, Oct. 16 ( 5:50 p.m. -0.5 ft.)
• Saturday, Oct. 17 (6:38 p.m. -0.8 ft.)
• Sunday, Oct. 18 (7:23 p.m. -1.1ft.)

• Wednesday, Nov. 4 (7:33 p.m. -1.3 ft.)
• Friday, Nov. 6 (9:07 p.m. -0.9 ft.)
• Saturday, Nov. 7 (9:59 p.m. -0.5 ft.)

• Saturday, Nov. 14 (4:34 p.m. -0.3 ft.)
• Sunday, Nov. 15 (5:21 p.m. -0.7 ft.)
• Monday, Nov. 16 (6:05 p.m. -0.9 ft.)

• Wednesday, Dec. 2 (6:32 p.m. -1.2 ft.)
• Thursday, Dec. 3 (7:18 p.m. -1.4 ft.)
• Friday, Dec. 4 (8:04 p.m. -1.3 ft.)
• Saturday, Dec. 5 (8:51 p.m. -0.9 ft.)

• Thursday, Dec. 31 (6:16 p.m. -1.1 ft.)
• Friday, Jan. 1 (7:01 p.m. -1.8 ft.)
• Saturday, Jan. 2 (7:45 p.m. -1.6 ft.)

Digging is restricted to the hours between noon and midnight. The best time to start digging is an hour or two before low tide.

CALL FOR SPECIAL RATES! ***MUST BOOK BY 10/11/09 FOR OCTOBER DATES.

Who is ready for some Clams?

Washington biologist expects good clam season

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ABERDEEN, Wash. — The razor clam season is just weeks away and the Department of Fish and Wildlife says it should be a good one.

Shellfish biologist Dan Ayres said at two meetings this week in Grays Harbor County that numbers are up at Twin Harbors and Long Beach. If you’re looking for the bigger clams, Ayres says Copalis and Mocrocks will be the beaches to dig.

For the first time in three seasons Ayres says the northernmost beach on the coast, Kalaloch (KLAY’-lock), also will be open for digging.

KXRO reports the season could start on the third weekend in October and it may include a New Year’s Eve dig.

Information from: KXRO-AM, http://www.kxro.com

Post from: funbeach.com

Washington biologist expects good clam season

Long Beach Kite Festival makes the New York Times!

http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2009/05/31/travel/20090531-Summer-Weekends.html#5

(You’ll have to scroll through to weekend Aug 22-23)

Go try your luck at one of the best kite flying venues in the world, the Long Beach Peninsula, known to its loyalists as the World’s Longest Beach and the home of the World Kite Museum and the Washington State International Kite Festival. The festival, held annually in the third week of August, draws kite fliers from all over the world, along with tens of thousands of spectators who marvel at the intricate choreography of so many colorful kites. But there is also plenty of room to buy a kite and take to the skies yourself.

The World Kite Museum has changing displays of colorful and historic kites (303 Sid Snyder Drive in downtown Long Beach, blocks from the boardwalk; 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily; $5). The Long Beach Peninsula Visitors Bureau Web site lists lodging from camping and motels to rental apartments and bed-and-breakfasts.

Discovery Trail

Discovery Trail was surfaced with compacted gravel from the Beard’s Hollow parking lot to SR100 loop this week.  Word is that State Parks requested this section not be paved because it is steep and will be slippery in the wet season.  This being done, Discovery Trail is now fully surfaced, completing the 8.2-mile commemorative project.

Starting at the Port of Ilwaco, at Bart Kenworthy’s Condor Sculpture, surface streets and sidewalks take walkers a short number of blocks to 4th & Main, which is the off-street trail head.  Enjoy several bridges as you go through forest groves and take in some wonderful views, including an overlook of Ford’s Dry Lake/Holman Lake that is expansive and unique.  This section of the trail is the most challenging, with both easy and steep changes in elevation.

The trail continues into Beard’s Hollow, where it begins its journey northward through the beach dunes.  Enjoy gentle twists and turns through riparian habitat with ocean vistas.  Many footpaths leave the trail to the beach itself and multiple sculptures and other markers are found along the way.  Benches are available in some, but not all, sections.

The northern trail head is at 26th North, just in front of The Breakers and marked by “Clark’s Tree”, an 18-foot bronze sculpture commemorating Captain Clark carving his initials in a tree at the most northwestern point of the Corps of Discovery’s journey westward.  [Clark's Tree Cam]

Restrooms and drinking water can be found at the Port of Ilwaco and at the south end of the Boardwalk in Long Beach.

More information:  http://www.funbeach.com/attractions/discoverytrail/

 

Thanks to Beachdog.com/blog for keeping us updated on all the new happenings on the peninsula!  Check them out!

Did you know?

King 5 and Evening Magazine announced the winners of “The Best of Western Washington” today.

Congratulations to the Long Beach Peninsula for winning “Best Beach in Western Washington 2009?!

Long Beach Voted Best Beach in Washington

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