Becca S.
Yelp
We had seen the signs for the Tillamook Forest Center a few times heading back and forth to the beach, and we finally planned to make a stop. Check the website if you're planning on stopping by for a visit as the hours and days open vary through different times of the year.
Free admission, but there is a $5 recommended donation. It looks like they gave out little wood circles with a picture of the Tillamook Forest Center burned into them if you did do the recommended donation. Additionally, if you want to get fancy, it looked like if you donated $75, you could get your name on a little metal tree that is permanently affixed to the metal walls out in front of the center.
The inside of the forest center definitely has bathrooms (I'm guessing most people stop into this place as a rest stop) and local brochures / maps, but the majority of the building is taken up by a museum. The targeted demographic is children, but the displays are something that people of all ages could enjoy.
The exhibits and layout were very high quality. I was even more impressed with how nice it was considering the fact that it was free to the public. There were interactive exhibits for kids where they placed magnetized pictures on different circles as a game, auditory exhibits where you could listen to people gives their accounts of different aspects of the Tillamook Forest history, drawers you could pull out, signs you could read, buttons you could press, a video about the Tillamook Burn, an interactive computer game on how to care for a forest, and more. You could easily spend an hour or two inside of the building with young kids if you go through everything.
Out front there is a tower that you can climb. It is an example of a forest fire watch tower with a mock-up of living quarters at the top, complete with a cot, cookware, written accounts of people who worked the job, and an insulated stool that the people who lived there would stand on in the event of an electrical storm to prevent electrocution.
Behind the forest center is a suspension bridge over a river. There is access down to the river if you want to go play around the stone outcroppings. Additionally, there are a few 2-3 mile hikes that signage points to out back. Between the building and the bridge, there are tables you could eat a packed lunch at, and there were also a few vending machines.
There is a gift shop located indoors as well.
Overall, I was just impressed with this facility. If you're thinking about making a stop here on the drive to the beach, do it. You won't be disappointed.