A comprehensive directory of Southern Oregon's arts community and guide to events for its members, local arts enthusiasts, and those planning to visit or move to our region.
The Rogue Valley provides a variety of opportunities for both local supporters of the arts and visitors including art events in their travel itineraries. Over the years many artists have migrated to our area to benefit from the creative inspiration inherent in Southern Oregon's natural beauty and the well established arts communities found throughout the region. The result is a rich abundance of works in a huge array of specialties and styles produced by talented and personable local "outside artists," as well as professionals who have achieved national and international distinction. In Southern Oregon, many cities are separated from each other by short drives past scenic rivers and mountains. As a result, each is a hotspot for the arts with its own unique atmosphere, inviting art lovers to sample their own brand of artistic flair as they explore the area. From monthly Art Walks to markets featuring the work of local artists, artisans and organic flower and produce growers to food festivals and tours of vineyards, wineries and tasting rooms, you will find plenty to do in any given place at just about any time of year!
Below are links by city, where you can learn more about many of each community's art-related events and find links to additional resources and community events:
This high mountain lake resort sits beside one of the most beautiful and rare natural lakes found in the Southern Oregon Cascades. Amidst majesticfirs and lofty pines with fabulous views of Mt. McLaughlin one can enjoy a variety of outdoor recreational activities. A charming resort with 24 cottages, restaurant and bar; incredible fishing and full marina; hiking, biking, swimming, snowmobiling runs, cross country skiing and possible skating areas. Food and groceries available. www.lakeofthewoodsresort.com
Running Y Ranch is your family’s passport to the verdant edgeways of Southern Oregon’s Cascade Range. Here you’ll discover incomparable natural beauty and recreational amenities just outside your door. On 3,600 acres of wooded hills and lush meadows are private home sites and custom designed homes, everything you need to experience the life of your dreams.
Complete resort area with lodge and campgrounds, 97 miles northeast of Ashland. Open year-round. Summer fishing resort. Boat rentals and charters. Mountain biking and rentals.
Located 15 miles North of Redding off I-5 at Shasta Caverns Rd. (exit # 695)
19000 Caves Highway, Cave Junction, OR 97523 541 592-2100
Above ground, the monument encompasses a remnant old-growth coniferous forest including a Douglas-fir tree with the widest known girth in Oregon. Three hiking trails access this forest. Below ground is a marble cave created by natural forces over hundreds of thousands of years in one of the world's most diverse geologic realms.
With its north and south branches, provides the backdrop for one of Oregon's most scenic drive tours - Highway 138 from just east of Roseburg to Diamond Lake. Whitewater rafting, riverside trails for hiking, horseback and mountain bike use, fishing, hot springs, and many spectacular waterfalls can all be found here.
Visit the Crater Lake Lodge page at the National Park Service website to read about activities, hours, park information, webcams, visitor guide and road conditions. Crater Lake is one of the world's greatest natural wonders. A beautiful description of Crater Lake National Park and its story was written in 1910. It's such a wonderful description that it is included here, courtesy the Ashland Springs Hotel website.
" Mount Mazama, on the summit of the Cascade Mountains, in whose ancient volcanic crater Crater Lake rests, and the surrounding territory of scenic grandeur, have been made a National Park by an Act of Congress. This new playground of Uncle Sam's, with its 249 square miles of area, of mountain peaks, lofty crags, deep canyons, beds of lava, plateaus of grassy fields, deep forests of hemlock and pine, and a thousand rippling streams, bids fair to become as famous and as popular as Yellowstone or Yosemite. It is yearly visited by tourists from all parts of the world.
During the glacial period Crater Lake did not exist. What is now the majestic sheet of water was once filled with a towering peak, the greatest peak of all the mountain range. This old volcano regularly erupted its fire, lave and ashes upon the surrounding territory. On the fatal day, described by Indian legends as the day on which the "Bridge of the Gods" fell in, the old hollow mountain, with a thundering roar and a crash that shook the world and upturned half a continent, exploded and dropped within itself. It was one of the greatest tragedies earth has known. With its completion old Mazama, the ancient volcano, no longer looked down upon the surrounding peaks of the Cascades. Nothing remains but the base, which forms the rim of Crater Lake. How this was half filled with water and remains so year after year, century after century, with no apparent outlet, is a mystery beyond man's solution.
Crater Lake is oval in shape, six miles long and four miles wide. The twenty-two miles of shoreline are shear precipices towering from 1,000 to 2,000 feet above the surface of the water. These surrounding precipices, though only ragged portions of the old -time base, are mountains in themselves, some of them having elevations of over 9,000 feet above the sea. At only one point can the water be reached. This is at Eagle Rock, where the wagon road leads up to the brink of the rim, whence a winding trail has been cut down to the lake's edge. The lake surface is 6,239 feet above sea level, and the water has a depth of 2,000 feet.
The water of the lake is cold and pure and sweet. The entire park is one great solitude, reigned over by the wild things of the mountain. Standing anywhere on the cauldron's rim and gazing down on the deep blue surface, or looking out across the miles and miles of mountains, one sees no life save that of the wild, and hears no sound save the dashing of the waves against the rocks or the whispers of the wind through the hemlocks.
Two and one-half miles from Eagle Rock, though it seems but a stone's throw to one who stands and looks across, is cone-shaped Wizard Island, which rises to a height of 845 feet above the water. In the top of Wizard Island is a deep depression, or smaller crater, filled with snow, but which was, no doubt, the last smoking chimney of the great volcano.
Not far from the shore is a craggy little islet known as the Phantom Ship. Its rugged hull, with rocks towering like the masts of a ship, suggest the name, and, phantom-like, disappears when viewed from changing positions and lights from the shore.
Medford is the gateway to Crater Lake National Park, and it is from hear that tourists and campers prepare from the journey on the interesting trip. The road follows Rogue River through a land of scenic grandeur. The river is a wild torrent at every point, with cascades and waterfalls. Mills Falls, Red Blanket Falls and the natural bridge are passed on route, and the way leads also through the center of the Cascades or upper Rogue Forest reserve, the greatest forest of sugar pine in the world, and which is itself a national park and is under the guarding hand of Uncle Sam's vigilant rangers during the summer months. The distance from Medford to the lake is eighty-five miles, and as ideal camping places whith splendid hunting grounds are everywhere, the journey is one of extreme pleasure and delight."