Most entries just said Yes . One from last spring: Creek running high. Found a sand dollar in the mud. No ocean for 200 miles. Another: First time in five years. Cried a little.
The old Jeep’s GPS flickered and died just as the pavement ended. Lena tapped the screen, sighed, and rolled down the window. Outside, the high desert of Oregon simmered in late August heat, juniper scent thick in the air. The dirt road ahead split into two faint tracks, neither marked. Somewhere out here, according to a dog-eared page torn from a climbing magazine, was the Bear Creek Oasis Trailhead.
She’d driven six hours from Portland for this. The name had snagged her: Oasis . In a landscape of volcanic scab and sagebrush, an oasis promised cottonwood shade, the sound of water over stone, a place that held its coolness like a secret. bear creek oasis trailhead
The hike back felt shorter. The sun hung lower, painting the buttes gold and violet. At the trailhead post, Lena paused. Someone had added a small tin mailbox since she arrived, nailed to the back of the wooden plaque. Inside, a spiral notebook and a chewed-up pencil. She flipped through: hikers’ names, dates, and a single column for “Oasis sighting?”
Lena dropped her pack on a flat stone near a natural pool no bigger than a bathtub. Water seeped from a crack in the bedrock, trickled into the pool, and disappeared back underground fifty feet later. She dipped her hand in. Cold. Pure. The kind of cold that made your knuckles ache in a good way. Most entries just said Yes
She shouldered her daypack—two liters of water, a sandwich, a worn copy of Desert Solitaire —and stepped over the fence. The trail was less a path and more a suggestion: a braid of deer tracks and old cattle trails winding through cheatgrass and basalt outcrops.
Bear Creek wasn't much of a creek. In August, it was a thread of silver slipping between dark rocks, no wider than her arm. But along its banks, willows grew head-high, and three enormous cottonwoods raised a green cathedral dome against the bleached sky. The oasis . No ocean for 200 miles
The right-hand track dipped into a shallow ravine. She took it. Dust billowed behind her like a yellow banner. After a mile, the road ended at a collapsed stock fence and a single wooden post with a weathered plaque: