Skip to content

Seaside Stories

Seaside: More Than Just a Resort Town

September 23, 2010 | by Gini Dideum

I was reminded again this week that Seaside is more than a resort town.  It’s not all about pronto pups and beach mementos.  It is a small community made up of people who open their town to visitors year round, particularly in the summer.

During the summer, we deal with overcrowded highways, surreys being pedaled slowly down Broadway, and waiting lines at our favorite dining places.  And, yet, we take it in stride.  We take back roads when we have to travel north or south, we give the surreys room because we can see that the pedalers are having fun, and we eat at home more frequently.  We park our cars and walk or bike to the stores.  The trade-off is that we get to live in a beautiful part of the country, see the most awesome fireworks display on the 4th of July from our front windows,  and attend pumpkin weigh-offs, Miss Oregon pageants, and cat fancier conventions.

What happened last week?  I went to two breakfasts—one was for the Seaside Downtown Development Association (SDDA) and one was for the Chamber of Commerce.  They were both packed and featured the same speaker, Seaside’s new tourism director.  He spoke about what the Visitors Bureau is doing to promote Seaside as a vacation destination.   At both of the breakfasts, there were managers and owners with businesses that are directly involved in tourism but there were others, too.  Retired residents, insurance agents, business journal writers, city officials, and state employment representatives attended.  We all work together, sometimes loudly, and sometimes quietly.

The other reminder was bell choir practice.  I haven’t played bells in years but I got up my nerve (and received several reminders of when practice started) and went to the church down the street.  The first person to meet me was a lady that owns her own marketing company who wanted to make sure I knew which door was unlocked.  The next person I met was a lady whose husband is a well-known artist.  Then there was the director, a retired music teacher that moved to Seaside from somewhere else.  I was introduced to two other women but don’t know their story yet.  Two that didn’t make the practice were the assistant to the director of SDDA and her daughter.  We had an hour of laughter as we struggled to play the right bell on the right beat.  By the end, we were nearly able to recognize the piece as a minuet by Bach.

The real sound of Seaside isn’t the ocean, or the arcade, or the seagulls squawking.  It is the sound of laughter, with a little bell thrown in here and there.

Leave a Reply

and so much more!

The Spirits of Seaside Inside

Above photo: An old fashioned cask of beer in the historic Seaside Brewery by Jon Rahl, Seaside Visitors Bureau. Seaside has a lot...

The Big Storm

The Oregon Climate Service calls it the Great Coastal Gale of 2007, but here in Seaside we just call it The Big Storm.

Seaside Golf Club

A look at the history of the Seaside Golf Club.

Farmers Market Means Summer on the Coast

The Seaside Farmers Market has become a staple of summer in Seaside. Now in its ninth year and one of Seaside’s eight stops on t...

Guide to Spring Events in Seaside

If you think Seaside is simply a summertime destination, get ready to adjust your mindset! Seaside offers something for all visito...

King Tides Safety and Viewing in Seaside

King Tides on Oregon’s North Coast (photo by Don Frank) ** Story updated for the 2023/2024 King Tides ** King Tides come eac...

How to Treasure the Beach

No one owns the Oregon Coast — it belongs to everyone. Thanks to 1967’s landmark Beach Bill, Oregon has some of the most prote...

After the Storm

A look at a storm from the early 1900s in Seaside

A Beach Bicycle Built for Two

Beach Bike Rentals in Seaside, Oregon

Golfing at the Beach

I adore golfing! I love walking along the greens, the feel of a driver in my hand, and I love watching the ball fly through the air. Unfortunately for me, I’m not very good at golf. I can hit the ball straight but not far, and my putting is atrocious! Regardless of my lack of skills I still love it, and thankfully my boyfriend is also incredibly patient while I putt away. As a treat for his patience I’m planning to take him golfing in Seaside. Golfing on a green course with the Pacific Ocean nearby is an incredible experience. There is one golf course in Seaside, and a few close by in Gearhart (just two miles from downtown Seaside).

Celebrating the Moms in Our Life

Honoring motherhood through a photo on the beach

For a Taste of Oregon’s Beautiful North Coast, Visit Seaside

Seaside has been a vacation destination for nearly as long as Oregon has been a state.

Eat Your Way along the North Coast

Seaside is now the starting point for the self-guided North Coast Food Trail that travels south to Neskowin and includes more than...

A Dog’s Guide to Seaside

Where else in the United States will you find such a welcoming expansive beach, where Fido can run into the tides, kick up some sa...

Dining Gluten-Free in Seaside

Potato Leek Soup and Kale Salad from Dough Dough Bakery / photo by Jon Rahl Avoiding gluten doesn’t mean giving up flavor or var...

How to Sip Coffee Like a Local

Want your favorite coffee drink for free? Easy! Help us keep the beach clean and your coffee is on us. Seaside has something for e...

Mural Walking Tour

Seaside has a flourishing art scene with quaint galleries and a monthly art walk in the historic Gilbert District, but it also has...