-
Permits aimed at crowd control affect Deschutes and Willamette National Forests.
-
A Corvallis researcher contributed to recent discoveries about an elusive mammal found in southern Oregon and northern California.
-
On June 3 and 4, Oregon will allow the public to fish, crab and clam without a license.
-
Portland's Mount Tabor Park has been designated the first Urban Quiet Park in the United States by Quiet Parks International.
-
In a press release, zoo leaders said the bear, named Takoda, went under cardiac arrest while under anesthesia. Staff performed CPR for more than 30 minutes, but they couldn’t revive him.
-
Even with all of the technology available to meteorologists today, forecasting snow is still a tricky business.
-
A young otter rescued from a Central Oregon golf course last year found a home at the High Desert Museum. He now has a name.
-
The Oregon Coast Aquarium in Newport has announced the passing of Nuka, the Aquarium’s resident northern sea otter.
-
Oregon's fee break is an attempt to encourage more people to head outdoors to start 2023. Washington's fee-free day was put in place in 2011, when that state started charging for vehicle access to its parks and other state recreation sites.
-
Recent winter storms have added another threat to drivers navigating Oregon roads: falling trees and branches.
-
The right mixture of cooler temperatures and consistent precipitation on Wednesday night allowed for what meteorologists call the “wet bulb” effect.
-
If you think the weather in western Oregon has been a bit wacky, keep watching. There's an atmospheric river event producing heavy rainfall across the northwest and the National Weather Service has issued a high wind warning for the Cascades and the Coast Range. Now, there is even a 20% chance of snow in lower elevations on Monday or Tuesday.