Student & Educational

Nov 23, 2015 | Archive

“Through the Looking Glass”
Day one of a three day tour:

• Photography 101 class with renowned artist as instructor
• Lunch on the pier
• Boardwalk photo points
• Dinner dine around

“Through the Looking Glass”
Day two of a three day tour:

• Photography 202 class with renowned artist as instructor
• Box lunch
• Cape Disappointment photo points
• Dinner dine around

“Through the Looking Glass”
Day three of a three day tour:

• Photo development
• Scrapbooking lessons for photo inclusion
• Lunch at downtown Long Beach restaurant

“An Ocean of Art”
Day one of three day tour:

• Oil painting classes with renowned artist instructor
• Lunch on the Pier
• Dinner at restaurant overlooking Ocean

“An Ocean of Art”
Day two of three day tour:

• Water color painting classes with renowned artist instructor
• Box lunch on site in historical home
• Oyster BBQ with artist and family

“An Ocean of Art”
Day three of three day tour:

• Modern art drawing classes with renowned artist instructor
• Lunch on Pier
• Dinner at restaurant featuring local poster art

“This Land Through Tribal Eyes”
Day one of a three day tour:

• Tour and presentation at historical museum featuring Chinookan display
• Lunch at waterfront
• Hands on learning experience about Bald Eagles at historic site with crafts and nature walk (weather permitting)
• Visit with Chinookan Tribal Chair and Salmon dinner at historic site

“This Land Through Tribal Eyes”
Day two of a three day tour:

• Hands on learning experience about Salmon Life Cycle with crafts and visit to oldest Salmon Fish Hatchery
• Box lunch
• Hands on learning experience about Cedar, a staple for the Native Americans…clothing, transportation, art and everyday life
• Visit to ‘Longhouse’ at historic site
• Dinner at historic hotel and restaurant

“This Land Through Tribal Eyes”
Day three of a three day tour:

• Visit to oldest registered village on Peninsula – presentation on Oysters and its connection to the Native Peoples.
• Lunch in village

Explore more of what Pacific County has to offer.

LBP to see 97-percent coverage during Aug. 21 eclipse

It’s not often we get a front-row seat to a once-in-a-lifetime event. That’ll be the case Aug. 21 when the Long Beach Peninsula will see 97-percent coverage during that morning’s solar eclipse. The peninsula hugs the eclipse’s path of totality, meaning the area is...

Tourism works: It’s all about the visitor experience

We’d usually do this kind of thing around November – you know, with Thanksgiving and all – but May seems like an appropriate time to thank all the wonderful visitors who spend their hard-earned time and dollars in Washington’s Pacific County. So, to our visitors:...

EV Drivers: Get a charge out of the Long Beach Peninsula

Electric vehicle owners driving the West Coast Green Highway will get a charge out of visiting Washington’s Long Beach Peninsula, one of the eco thoroughfare’s newest stops. Pacific County’s first public charging station is in downtown Long Beach near Veteran’s Field...

Greater Pacific County: Go further than Lewis & Clark

No trip to the Long Beach Peninsula is complete without venturing into greater Pacific County. In other words: Go further than Lewis & Clark. Northern Pacific County is dotted with charming hamlets like Bay Center, South Bend, Raymond and Tokeland, all bayside...

Break from the ordinary this spring break

Here’s an almost irrefutable fact: Spring break is best at the beach. Yep. Hard to argue that one. But all spring break beaches are not created equal – that’s where Washington’s Long Beach Peninsula comes in. U.S. News & World Reports recently released its top-10...

The Peninsula’s autumn bounty is yours to enjoy

From kites to cranberries and music to mushrooms, late autumn on the Long Beach Peninsula is a time to celebrate the region’s culture and history. Autumn in Pacific County is marked by its harvests, many of which helped form the bedrock of Peninsula communities. Think...

Visiting the LBP? Stop by the Visitors Bureau & say hello

Stop in, say hello. Maybe stay awhile. The Long Beach Peninsula Visitors Bureau is more than a destination marketing organization. It’s an information center, a community hub and a rest stop; a dog-friendly biscuit bar, PokeStop, geocache location and Wi-Fi hotspot....

Celebrate by the beach: Historic milestones and more in 2016

It’s a birthday year on the Long Beach Peninsula – both the Shelburne Inn and the Pacific County Fair turn 120 years old, Washington State Parks celebrated 103 years and the Astoria-Megler Bridge is turning 50 – so join the celebration! The Shelburne Inn, Seaview: The...

#LongBeachWA: Bigger than the Peninsula

William Shakespeare once asked, “What’s in a name?” Fair question, old bard. #LongBeachWA is a favorite hashtag here on the Peninsula, but with Shakespeare in mind, we have to ask: “What’s in that name?” Well, a lot more than sometimes meets the eye! Let’s talk about...

That Pacific County feeling

By Drew Foster, Visitor Bureau communications coordinator The feeling. It begins somewhere west of Interstate 5. Six speeding lanes condense to two, and the horizon-stretching straightaways slowly bend into wending country lanes. Nature encroaches. Night grows darker....

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