r Mountain Times - Lead
   
  Your Mountain,
 Your Newspaper
· Home ·  Classifieds · Columnists · Events · Gallery · Opinion ·
· Local Links · Story Archives · Tell A Friend · Contact Us ·
 
Pic of the month

Main Menu
· Home
· Classifieds
· Columnists
· Contact Us
· Event Calendar
· Gallery
· Lead Stories
· Tell A Friend
· View from the mountain

Who's Online
There are currently, 6 guest(s) and 0 Staff Online.

Search for stories containing:
Mountain Makes the Map posted on 02/01/2010
National Geographic has given us a nod.

The publishing giant launched its Central Cascades Geotourism Mapguide in January and the Mountain garnered plenty of attention.

From Welches to Timberline, local businesses and tourist sites are scattered throughout the Web site and in the Mapguide.

Among those recognized was The Rendezvous in Welches, with NatGeo citing the natural, fresh, organic, products sustaining and supporting local and regional farmers, fisheries and hunter-gatherers.

Kathryn Bliss, chef and co-owner of The Rendezvous, was flattered by the attention.
“I work very hard to create that environment,” Bliss said. “I’m out and about once or twice a week for veggies – hitting growers and farm stands for things you just can’t always get from distributors. I certainly support organic, but it’s also important to sustain local growers. And there’s nothing like fresh produce from the ground that very morning.”

Tom Anderson, co-owner, was equally impressed with the Rendezvous’ mention.


“It’s very cool,” he said. “After 15 years it’s satisfying to know we’re in that league.”
Also making the NatGeo map was Mt. Hood Roasters coffee business in Rhododendron as an example of experiential tourism combining elements of historical, cultural, agricultural and culinary tourism.

“There are only eight of these maps that National Geographic has completed, there are more to come,” said Rick Applegate, owner of the coffee roasters. “But of the ones completed, we are particularly proud of the fact that we are the only coffee company listed.”

The publication is dedicated to sustainable travel – a cornerstone of geotourism – highlighting forms of travel that aim to sustain or enhance the geographical character of a place, including its environment, culture, aesthetics, heritage and the well-being of its residents.

“On a personal level, this has the potential to get our message out in a way we could never have imagined,” Applegate said. “Rhododendron pops out (in the Mapguide) and this should do a lot for establishing a new and broader identity for all of us.”

Rhododendron scored highly with notice being given to several sites, including:
Buggy Trail Lane with 17.5 acres of preserved land, plus American Indian and pioneer historical sites.

The Laughing Bear cabin built by the Steiners in the 1920s with original furniture, bear locks, bent wood and Dutch doors.

Enola Hill on south side of Zigzag Mountain which boasts a sacred area for American Indians for vision quests, ceremonies, huckleberry picking, medicine gathering and other activities.

The stately pair of bigleaf maple trees on each side of the replica tollgate that marks the westernmost tollgate operated on the Barlow Road.

Other Mountain sites noted by NatGeo include:

The Fly Fishing Shop in Welches that is dedicated to the principles and actions of sustainable fisheries long before the concepts “green” and “sustainability” became mainstream.

The Doublegate Inn, Welches, built in 1919 by the Anderson brothers who started a limousine service from Portland to Welches and the enchanted old home continues to provide a place for visitors to stay in one of the oldest private estates in the area.

The Barlow Trail Roadhouse dates back to 1926 and was built by the legendary cabin creator, Bill Lenz, originally to serve as a general store and as the legend grew it became an inn known for the “Best Food on the Loop to Timberline” downstairs and the “Best Girls” upstairs.

National Geographic was attracted to Oregon because of its ongoing sustainable travel initiatives. Since passing America’s first bottle deposit law in 1971, Oregon has been a trailblazer in both land preservation and sustainability. In 2003, the Oregon Tourism Commission initiated research on national and international best practices to tourism to shape a set of sustainable tourism principles to guide local tourism planning. These principles have been refined by the Oregon Sustainable Tourism Advisory Committee.

The entire NatGeo Mapguide can be viewed on the Web site at: http://thecentralcascades.com.

by Larry Berteau/MT

Weather

Advertisements


Information

Valid HTML 4.01!

Valid CSS!



 
All material ©2008 The Mountain Times and may not be reproduced/distributed in any form without written permission from the publisher.

Web Site Design Precision Artists
PHP-Nuke Copyright © 2005 by Francisco Burzi. This is free software, and you may redistribute it under the GPL. PHP-Nuke comes with absolutely no warranty, for details, see the license.