The Willamette Valley is
is what most people think of when they think of Oregon. A lush, flat
valley marked on the west by the rainy Coast Range mountains and on
the east by the snowy Cascades, the Valley is a place of one small
town after another, their regularity interrupted only by a handful
of big towns on or near I-5: Eugene,
Salem and Corvallis.
Compared to the rest of
the state, the Valley is liberal, churchy and educated. Outside of
the towns, the Valley is all farmland. Woody Guthrie once sang about
going "up north to Oregon to gather your hops." That was
here. So are berries -- strawberries, blueberries, raspberries and
wild blackberries all grow in profusion in the moderate Northwest
climate of rainy winters and summer drought. Much of the crop picking
now is done by immigrants
instead of children. But the hops farms have given way to grass seed
farms. And despite decent land-use planning laws, many fields are
being suburbanized.