If anyone has access to an old record or tape with those lost songs, please get in touch with the North Lincoln County Historical Museum. We would love an opportunity to preserve and publish that lost media if possible! northlincolncountyhistoricalmuseum.org
@adam8502 жыл бұрын
I wonder if the original score was preserved?
@roberthand38362 жыл бұрын
I sure miss the Oregon Coast. Glori and I live in Colorado now and haven’t been back in a long time decades. Just don’t have it to go anymore! Maybe before we die, we will make it home again
@tonyrosa20722 жыл бұрын
Fond memories indeed. The ones that know will not forget Little Black Sambo"s also.
@sandyclaymon97892 жыл бұрын
Awesome 👍 did you send it to Molly
@sandyclaymon97892 жыл бұрын
Our whole family loved pixieland. I loved the scones the kids loved everything
@zamis21 Жыл бұрын
I worked as food prep at Pixie kitchen when I was 16. It was a fun place to work! The Cod Balls and battered oysters were so popular!
@mdebacker1003 ай бұрын
Awesome!!
@drmoynihan Жыл бұрын
The Pixie Kitchen was my FAVORITE RESTAURANT on the Oregon Coast. As a child I would ask and be taken there for my birthday. The memories of their bringing out a cake and singing HAPPY BIRTHDAY along with playing on the playground still warm my 72 year heart! :)
@BlackFlagHeathen Жыл бұрын
Oh man as an Oregon resident I had no idea this is how Lincoln City came to be! This was such an interesting story. I just wish I could’ve gotten to try Pixie Kitchen’s food. Thank you for this video!
@lamarravery4094 Жыл бұрын
I remember growing up in Salem in the early 1980s and my dad would drive us to the beach, Lincoln City. We'd drive by these billboards that would say come to Picieland with cartoon drawings of pixies. I told my dad, I wanna go there, he said something like it's not there anymore. I was bummed, but later I learned the history of Pixieland from a PBS documentary. It was established in the late 60s and finally went belly up in the mid 70s. I had just missed it.
@VroomTech Жыл бұрын
Also fun to mention thats why Lincoln City also has a huge golf resort, to keep its town alive. I went for a job interview there after culinary school and everything was super expensive looking for a coastal Oregon town.
@melodylorts10105 ай бұрын
Me too! Grew up in Oregon my whole life but had no idea this is how Lincoln City came to be.
@spotterinc.engineering5207 Жыл бұрын
I lived in Oceanlake in the early 1960's and I had dinner at the Pixie Kitchen every week with my mom and brother. It was a great family restaurant. We joked that my big brother could eat them out of business because he really loved the fried chicken. This is a fond memory and the coastal town was a great place for a kid to grow up. In winter it was nearly deserted. We lived a few blocks from the beach.
@lamarravery4094 Жыл бұрын
Man, an all you can eat restaurant? Wow, I'd be in heaven.
@cynthiamason40692 жыл бұрын
Well, this made me cry...every Easter Sunday, starting in the 50s, our family made its way from Portland to the Pixie Kitchen. It looms large in some of the best times in my childhood. This was so well done! Beautiful work! When you spoke about the appetizer tray, all I could think about were those incredible Fish Balls and that Blue Cheese dip!!!
@kathyinwonderlandl.a.89342 жыл бұрын
Awwww that’s so cool to have such great memories with your family💙
@scottwhite27572 жыл бұрын
Tears for me as well as my brother is gone now ,, man that place was awesome ..
@FlyingDaddy7212 жыл бұрын
You folks are so lucky. I live in Springfield and would travel there regularly if that vibe existed today.
@krafty0519902 жыл бұрын
This brought a bit of a tear to my eye as well. Our family would go to Lincoln City often and, invariably, go to Pixie Kitchen each time. As a little boy, I LOVED the collection of pin ball machines in the basement! And, a little latter, the "Museum" next to the arcade. The fish ball appetizer was incredible! And I loved the warmed crackers that would be next to them. I had no idea, until years later, they were just Wheat Thins right out of the box! I remember the food was great! And big portions! They would always give me a little teal bag after dinner with the restaurant info ink stamped on the front with four or five jelly beans and a little plastic toy inside. A teal bag for boys, a pink bag for girls. I had several of the Pixie Kitchen/Pixieland coins in my room at my parents house. But, sadly, both the coins and the house are long gone.
@scottwhite27572 жыл бұрын
@@krafty051990 really cool memories for you me as well ,, Thx for sharing.. 👍
@stackthelions Жыл бұрын
Let me tell you it was crazy to see my aunt being interviewed at the very end of this film! I was already going to send this to everyone I know because it's beautifully done, touching, and informative, and part of Oregon history not many of us new generation know, but now I can also bribe them by saying Aunt Myrl is in it! :) Thank you so much for your work preserving this history!
@peterdibble Жыл бұрын
That's wild! Thank you very much!
@MagnetikHearts Жыл бұрын
That’s so cool ❤
@davidtaylor5007 Жыл бұрын
I remember me around age 10 and we'd go by Pixieland at least every year and often stop by for lunch and walking around to enjoy the displays. Over the years after we'd see the place fade away. Neat memories. Nice to come accross this documentary.
@angelalewis3224 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so very deeply.my grandparents lived in pixieland with the "30" year lease ,at least until it closed in 85-87.so many years visiting them there&had several family reunions in the rec hall&swam in the pool &beach&flying kites& going to sambos,pixie kitchen &..of course mo's after a day at tact crabbing to hopefully have the crab Louie with family visits to the coastal community filled with so many good childhood experiences ..thank for this much needed remembering of a era filled with magic,fun family filled years ,now fresh and just a hour it seems but was 35 good years .I am blessed -grateful to your story..
@PerspectiveEngineer Жыл бұрын
Oh lil sambos the butt,er ciggeeetes
@davidrichter572 жыл бұрын
I'm speechless. What a beautiful tribute to the lives of an ordinary couple doing their best to make something from nothing. The quality of this documentary is staggering, utterly professional in every way. The script allowed the daughter and son-in-law to relate their bitter memories of the Forest Service's actions of the early 1970s while also telling the story of the damage being done (collectively) to the estuaries and wetlands of the area. The degree of polish and shine on every aspect of the documentary -- music, editing, pace, script -- is something I'd never expect to see on YT. My hat is off to this channel and all of its content! You deserve 35M subscribers, not 35K.
@peterdibble2 жыл бұрын
Thanks a lot for the kind feedback, David!
@retrovideoquest Жыл бұрын
Agree 100%! I specially appreciate the balance of giving voice to the 2 sides of the story (commercial development vs environment conservation), presented factually without drama. Very professional.
@katherinelwooley7891 Жыл бұрын
@@retrovideoquestI totally agree with you - very professional, and all sides of the story were given fairly. Excellent video!
@lucasjohnstone64192 жыл бұрын
I just called my mom because she was born in the area in 1962 She says she remembers pixie kitchen and pixieland and she says "Oh my gosh, I haven't thought about that in so long"! And continued to list her favorite parts It was fun listening to her excitement :)
@ronaldhall97012 жыл бұрын
I was born in New. Orleans in 1960 what's yor mother look like??
@lucasjohnstone64192 жыл бұрын
@@ronaldhall9701 she's got brown hair 2 eyes Oh and she stands upright
@HallsofAsgard962 жыл бұрын
@@lucasjohnstone6419 I think someone's tryna b ur stepdaddy! 🤣🤣🤣
@shannonjones3714 Жыл бұрын
We used to go there in the early 70’s and then we moved to Rose Lodge around 79. By then it was all barely visible. I loved that amusement park. The restaurant was open for a few more years and had a great arcade downstairs. Thank you for sharing this with us! Excellent video!
@danandtab7463 Жыл бұрын
I love how you got the daughter and the son in law included on this to talk about their experiences. Running an amusement park is hard, but clearly he did everything right in terms of getting some experienced experts and a solid business model together to make a go at it.
@cromnax2 жыл бұрын
Makes me proud to see our little local oddities retold with such care to detail and top notch production, thank you!
@billyhatcher643 Жыл бұрын
im just mad at the evil environmentalists they ruined the states growth and development theyre a bunch of bullies this is why theyre so hated cause they bully u
@Dagger13824 Жыл бұрын
This is an Amazing documentary! I loved it! I live in Ky., but I truly wish I had gotten to take a trip to the West Coast back when I was a kid… and gotten to eat at The Pixie Kitchen and go to Pixie Land. Watching this has me feeling totally nostalgic for those bygone days of my childhood. These types of places, and the whole family / community atmosphere, environment, and unity are just so rare these days… or just don’t even exist anymore. It’s a sad, sad loss. I remember growing up - we ate dinner as a family every night, and once a week we would have some kind of family outing - whether it was a dinner out, a trip to the lake, a drive-in movie, a carnival or fair (when there was one around), driving around town to see decorated houses during the holidays, or whatever -> all that really mattered was that we did it as a family!!! We were never financially able to take a big/long trip, like Disney Land or anything like that (I am the only member of my family who has ever even been on a plane)… but we did things as a family - that’s what mattered…. that’s ALL that mattered! I remember even doing super simple things like sitting together at night during the X-Mas season - we would decorate the house as a family, and sit around together at night with the lights out… in the quiet… and just watch the lights on the Christmas Tree. I really think that is missing in most of society today, and it has caused irreparable damage to our culture and society. It’s not anyone’s fault alone, it’s a great many things - like stagnant wages making people Have To Work More just to afford to live, rising prices of housing food and healthcare, single parent homes, lack of discipline for children, schools that don’t teach anything except the test, and - of course- Technology separating us All from each other! I know I sound like an Old Fuddy Duddy / Boomer (even though I am Gen-X) / and like I am out of touch… but honestly - I think a lot of what is wrong with the world right now is that we have lost the connection with others… especially the people that we Live and Grow Up With! I am the last surviving member of a family of four. I do watch what’s happening in the world around me, and I do believe that the connection between people, especially our own families has been lost for most people and it has / is / and will continue to cause harm to all of us. I don’t know how to fix it… I don’t even know if it can be fixed… all I know is that It Should Be Fixed! Alright… I will step down off the soap-box now.
@betterinthe80sdude2 жыл бұрын
I grew up in the Newport/Toledo area in the 80s and have always wondered how Lincoln City got to be as long as it is, and why they call their high school Taft High. I've driven past the site of Pixieland hundreds of times and would never in a million years have suspected a major theme park was once there. Great Documentary, you always make the best documentaries about Oregon's hidden history. Fascinating...
@seymourmaupin63952 жыл бұрын
I thought L.C. was originally 5 to 6 towns that incorporated into one. She did change with the mall then the casino.
@quipalco2 жыл бұрын
Here in Coos Bay they call the high school Marshfield High. The town down here used to be called Marshfield lol. But they merged with like Empire and Eastside and it's all just Coos Bay now, North Bend got left out though. Happened more in like the 30s here though instead of the 60s.
@RogueSmithersCouple2 жыл бұрын
It's surprisingly common for many small towns to become one big one.... Kelso and Longview were originally 20-30 separate small boom towns which were more like neighborhoods but named and on record as towns, and the areas still carry the names locally to describe the different areas of town or the schools tend to carry the names of the small towns or founding families.
@markcarbaugh54162 жыл бұрын
@@RogueSmithersCouple Like the eastside of Portland. Maywood Park, Parkrose, Gateway, Lents, etc. All small towns before being swallowed by Portland.
@CallieRoseMartinsyde2 жыл бұрын
I've wondered that about Lincoln City too. It just keeps going and going and going doesn't it? lol Great to know what the history of it is.
@countrymouse472 жыл бұрын
My former father in law was the train’s engineer for awhile around 1973 or so. My children loved the train, and especially that Grampa was the “driver”! Nice memories. That would have been just before the worst of the decline brought on by the USFS. We’ve often wondered whatever happened to Pixieland, since we could never find a hint of where it had been. Now we know. Thank you for a lovely film and a walk down old memories.
@peterdibble2 жыл бұрын
That's really cool, thanks for sharing!
@GaryWalter Жыл бұрын
Pretty sure the USFS was acting at the will of "we the people" in protecting the land. Indeed, as the film made clear several times, the economic downturn really liked the park - like it did my Dad's business at that same era.
@EMTevjorgensen2 жыл бұрын
I remember going there in 1973 on an Oregon costa road trip, wow what a fun blast from the past. Thank you Peter! I hope the Enchanted Forest stays around for my two year old grand daughter to take there, at least they're on I-5 and survived Covid. So few small amusement parks still around.
@robertjonas62162 жыл бұрын
I drive past The Enchanted Forest all the time (I’m a truck driver) and yes, there are lots of people visiting again, especially on the weekends. Wasn’t sure if they would survive the Covid shutdowns.
@samsmom14912 жыл бұрын
The Enchanted Forest was a real treat. We rarely got to visit despite living very close. I absolutely loved that place and have wonderful memories of it. My favorite things were the rabbit hole/tunnel that took you to Wonderland and Snow White & The Seven Dwarves cottage. I want to go back one more time as I haven't been since the 'roller coaster' was added and other new (to me) attractions. I live on the east coast now and trips back home unfortunately don't include places like this, so I'll need to make an exception!
@prophetessoftroy2 жыл бұрын
Enchanted forest was definitely my favorite growing up!
@chandica2 жыл бұрын
@@robertjonas6216 That's good news to hear! I was aware it had been struggling some in the past and was hoping Covid didn't take it down.
@magdatorruellas91222 жыл бұрын
My grand daughter just went there… alive and fun still
@chandica2 жыл бұрын
I grew up near Salem and visiting the coast was one of the best things about growing up in Oregon. I'm almost 49 years old and was beginning to think I had imagined the Pixie Kitchen from when I was so young. I'm so glad I didn't! I never knew about the amusement park and yet it seems we passed it all the time. Thank you for this lovely documentary and trip down memory lane.
@lamarravery4094 Жыл бұрын
You passed by the same billboards that I did in the 1980s, still advertising Pixieland, which by then ceased to exist, on the way to Lincoln City.
@yoggysothoth Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this. I was born in 1970 in Corvallis and my mom would always take me to Pixie Kitchen in the summer. I got to go to Pixieland when I was 4 and still have pictures. What a wonderful flood of memories this wakes up 🥰
@markcarbaugh54162 жыл бұрын
Thank you Peter for telling an amazing story. We owned Neskowin Beach Golf Course, just over Cascade Head, from 1962 to 1978. The glory years of the Pixie Kitchen and Pixieland. We ate at the restaurant probably once a month and visited the park numerous times. So much fun to spend a day there, instead of working on the golf course. Pixieland is where I grew to appreciate scones, thanks to Fisher Mills! Thanks again for reviving my memories!
@sti4fun2 жыл бұрын
I am going to assume that Stan Carbaugh was your dad. My dad was an Elk as was he. Dad told several stories about Stan, but the only one I remember was joshing him about renting canoes at the golf course as it was low terrain and a lot of it was under water in the rainy season. Worked at Pixieland summers of 67 &68. See previous post. Also loved the scones and ate lots of them. A couple named Stan (different) and Rosie made and sold them. Brion
@markcarbaugh54162 жыл бұрын
@@sti4fun indeed! Stan was my father and we had to close the golf course from November 1 until it dried out the following spring. We were known to take the drift boat out onto the course, checking for storm damage.
@steveblair3688 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for a wonderful documentary of pixie kitchen and pixieland. As a young boy we lived in Portland Oregon, we would often go to the coast for the weekend. My grandfather had a motel in South Beach Oregon called Blair's bungalows. We couldn't go past pixieland without stopping. I've seen a number of shows at the Opera, log rides, and sat on the train as well. I still have some wonderful memories of pixie land and the pixie kitchen. I never knew until now why the Park closed. Thank you again for a wonderful and memorable documentary.
@DelbertStinkfester Жыл бұрын
I remember driving by Pixieland on our way to the coast as a kid and I always wondered why was it shut down and abandoned. I remember thinking how much fun that place must have been. Very interesting documentary...Thanks for posting this.
@clayton973302 жыл бұрын
I love your content. My grandpa was an avid Oregon historian, he would have loved your content if he was still around.
@S.E.C-R2 жыл бұрын
This was fantastic… This is by far the BEST and most complete video I’ve ever watched about the Pixie Kitchen, thank you for putting this together!! Mom moved us to the Willamette Valley south of Portland in 1980 from LA. By the time we’d settled and gotten comfortable driving around the country and back roads compared to big city drivig in our new area Pixie Kitchen was gone. I remember hearing about it and passing it when we’d go to the coast but never stopped to eat. Mom always thought (not knowing any history of it) it was just a run down, gimmicky, hole in the wall and refused to stop. I’ve since learned a lot about it and love what it was. A few years ago we stopped at Granny’s Attic antique shop in LC, they had/have a section dedicated to Pixie Kitchen Memorabilia. We bought a set of the PK postcards and a print pack shown at 52:30 they were out of tshirts and menus at the time, but we plan to go back at some point and purchase those too if they are still available. We also need to go to the museum. I didn’t know they had so many pieces from Pixie Kitchen!!
@halfkinrainbolt70412 жыл бұрын
This is Memory Lane For Me! I spent most of my summers and many weekends growing up on the Oregon coast in the sixties. I always remember calling it Lincoln city, I was only 7 evidently when that became its name according to what I learned here! My parents went all times of the year as they loved going to watch a good storm. We lived inland, south of Portland, and it took an hour and half to drive to the coast, before newer highways went in. I remember driving through the Tillamook burn and my father commenting on a log truck that had three logs on it and him saying, "they sure are taking them small these days." Of course those three logs filled the truck! We were used to following those old trucks on those narrow winding roads that carried that old growth harvest. We had many lunches at the Pixie kitchen. I remember several funny mirrors and loved watching the moving characters of the display. I also remember the go-carts and the doll museum across the street not far from there. Ten cents to get in the museum and it had a life size wax figure of Queen Elizabeth in a glass case and a live talking myna bird. Does anyone remember the sign near the kitchen that said - this is the 45th parallel, halfway between the equator and the North Pole? I moved to the coast as a teen and went to Taft High School in the early seventies. The senior class sold donuts and coffee to the people waiting in lines for gas in 1973. My memory is that Pixie Land always seemed unfinished and never quite the big thing they hoped it would be. I did ride the log flume a few times, (it was rather slow except for the one drop,) and the train around the mostly empty park some. It definitely seemed like a marsh land, and was rather boring. I don't recall much there, I'm not sure if I remember grunikin land! Maybe we stopped going after the first soft opening. I remember Tom McCall. He promoted bumper stickers that said, "Don't Californicate Oregon". I did not know about the whole forest service theft but it doesn't surprise me. Oregon was always progressive towards saving the environment, even at the cost of people or their livelihoods. Too bad that concern didn't extend to limiting all the toxic dioxin sprays, 24d and 245t they allowed Weyerhaeuser to poison us with. I finally had to leave the coast in 1979 because I was bleeding to death from the poisons. Walsea county, just south of Lincoln county had the highest miscarriage rate in the nation in the late seventies. We were second. The president of Weyerhaeuser said, "babies are replaceable and that women should plan their pregnancies' around the spraying cycle." No Joke. I miss the Oregon of my early youth.
@sti4fun2 жыл бұрын
Great job on the video. Went to work at Pixieland summer of (had to be) 1967 as a general laborer. Helped finish (re)building the train tressel. Dump truck hauling fill for the trailer park tried to go under it with the box up and tore several hundred feet of it down. Then worked with 3 other guys as track gang ballasting and leveling the track. Following summer my job was relief operator one day a week each for log flume, shooting gallery, Grunnyken (spelling) land, Jungle gym and kiddie rides, but the most fun job was the relief driver for " Little toot" on the engineers day off. Originally fired with coal, can still smell the smoke if I think about it, and after I was long gone, propane. It was a true steam engine. Renamed "Little Pixie" if memory serves me correctly. I was there for the beginning of most of the rides. Would go to the opera house on lunch breaks and take in the old time melodramas that were put on. Lots of found memories of those days. You could make another vidio just on the smaller rides and places you did not mention, the go cart track, whale boat rides, candle store (and two other small stores but memory fails me), ice cream at the Darigold barn (they served a float or split in a huge glass goblet, must hold over a quart and I still have two of them), and, I doubt if they ever were recorded, the melodramas at the opera house. In your post you are looking for a recording of the theme; I have it clear as a bell, but only in my mind. Must have heard that music a hundred thousand times. Played continuously from an oversize 4 track tape (who remembers those) that was in Grunnykin land and a player that was with the Merry go Round (a true historic wooden ride). Again great vidio that sure brings back lots of memories. Brion sti(the number 4)fun(the number 2)@yahoo.com
@TheRopenNetwork Жыл бұрын
I have to admit that every time I drive through Otis or Lincoln City, I always look for the spot where these attractions once stood.
@6610bach2 жыл бұрын
My mother took my brother and I to this park many times on the way to the coast. In fact we are on the small Farris wheel at 37:25! I remember years later finding it closed. Great memories.
@peterdibble2 жыл бұрын
Wow, very cool!
@matthewrodriguez17172 жыл бұрын
I’m from Utah. I’ve been on that log and train ride countless times, out here. Who would have known where those originated from without this video? Thank you for sharing! Great research and very interesting!
@mayyourwishesallcometrue2 жыл бұрын
Same here! I had no idea that the Lagoon had purchased the log flume and train from Pixie Land!
@PurpleRoseMe2 жыл бұрын
Oh my! Thank you for this! As a kid we stopped at the Pixie Kitchen every year on way to and back from visiting our Grandmother. When Pixieland opened, we stopped on way up every year. It was a high point in our formative years. I often reminisce about both. Great documentary.
@cascadeguy Жыл бұрын
What a terrific film! I ate at the Pixie Kitchen and went to Pixieland many times as a kid. This brought back so a ton of fun memories: the mirrors, the food, the sand boxes in the table, the train, the log flume. Wow! I only wish my parents were here to watch this. They would have loved it! Thank you!
@MaxximusRadimus2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for bringing this memory back to life for me Pete! Growing up we didn't have a lot, but every year our (single) Mom would throw the 3 of us into the back of the wagon and we'd head over to the coast for a long weekend. The trips were never complete until we had visited Pixie Kitchen. Good times, good memories, and a couple of tears shed for nostalgia's sake watching this.
@kenbrown28082 жыл бұрын
one detail missed: After the Echo Mountain wildfire in 2020, the old pixieland parking lot had the brush cleared off and it was used as a staging area for the salvage logging operation to clear out the fire killed trees.
@davej74582 жыл бұрын
It's surprising that all of the knee jerk environmentalist didn't demand that those trees be left standing for the beatles and the next fire. I'm bitter about the people who won't allow our grasslands and forests to be managed properly the results are obvious in the past two years of fires in the West. The first people's had a tradition of managing grasslands and Forest lands but of course the settlers stopped that when they came to this country. Because they thought the land was beautiful as it was and didn't care that the First Peoples had been managing it for generations. We are supposed to be stewards of the land but that's not being allowed.
@whidbeyben2 жыл бұрын
As I watched this wonderful documentary, I had this feeling that something about the whole place had an eerie familiarity. So I dug through my parents' old photo albums, and sure enough, I found a picture of our family standing in front of the Pixie Kitchen backyard display with the waterwheel in the background. I must have been 10 years old at the time. Thanks for that journey in the Way-Back machine!
@quondamreveries72582 жыл бұрын
I remember going to Pixieland twice in my youth, when my parents lived in the Portland area. I still have a Pixieland arcade token in my memorabilia, all these years later.
@robertrowan56612 жыл бұрын
Funny...so do I life's good take care my freind
@MarkSwitzer-mu2dj Жыл бұрын
What a history !! Our family first visited the Pixie Kitchen in 1966 while vacationing the Oregon coast . Excellent video and truly a " learning experience !!"
@william_mac2 жыл бұрын
The first real job I ever had was being a busboy at pixie kitchen when I was 14. I also later lived at pixieland. And then of course I graduated from Taft High School in 75. It's so nice to see all those old shots. Thank you!
@halfkinrainbolt70412 жыл бұрын
Taft High School 1972 for me! Graduating class of 60 students. Five years later, 10% of them had died.
@william_mac2 жыл бұрын
@@halfkinrainbolt7041 You probably know Vicky and Cindy Bartels then. My stepsisters. Their mother ran the motel right across the street from pixie kitchen up on the hill there in Ocean Lake. We had 82 in our class of '75. Good to hear from you!
@halfkinrainbolt70412 жыл бұрын
@@william_mac The Bartells sound familiar but we always stayed in the motels on the ocean side so we could watch the surf. Would we have gone to school together?
@william_mac2 жыл бұрын
@@halfkinrainbolt7041 '73 was my first year at Taft High. I was a Sophomore. I only went to Taft the last quarter of that year. But my Junior and Senior year I was there the entire year. I was on the wrestling and football team in 74 and 75 and worked as a box boy at the old Safeway store where the casino is now. Vicki, my step sister graduated in 72 from there. After my graduation the summer of 75 Safeway transferred me to Dallas as an assistant produce manager. So anyway I lost touch with most of my friends that were around wrestling and football there. Last time I was there in Lincoln City I went to my 40th graduation reunion. There was probably 10 or 15 of us there. In terms of the last 20 years I live about 450 miles due east of there now near the Snake River in North Central Idaho.
@DuckGuy-19574 ай бұрын
Reading the people's memories and personal ties to Pixieland is almost as much fun as the documentary!
@kstahr24632 жыл бұрын
Wow, What a wonderful documentary film. You should get an award for this one. You even brought in the information that no one wants to talk about with the politics of the times and the surge of environmentalism that changed the Oregon way of life. That was also during the same time of the timber wars. Politicians learned how to make more money from lobbyists than from businesses and residents and the "little guy" paid the price. Good for you. This is a part of Oregon history that got swept under a rug. I am an Oregonian and still live in the area. We have lost so many dreams along the way.
@alllifematters4 ай бұрын
Oregon was made to be a slave to big business
@ryanarnell5543 Жыл бұрын
I believe this is pure justice of the 80's. Thank you for putting together such a great tribute of my childhood ❤️. I am super appreciative. 🙇♂️
@melodyolson13282 жыл бұрын
Oh man did this documentary make my eyes leak. I dearly loved Pixieland, I grew up in Lincoln City and remember this place very well. I became a good shot with a gun because of the shoot 'em up gallery and I adored doing the spin art pictures but by far my all time favorite part of the park was the live theater with the hero, damsel and villain dramas and those awesome can can girls - i loved their dresses and the way they were all in sink and the music I could watch that for hours if they would have let me. My family went to this place every chance we got and we lived pretty close to it in Neotsu but with 5 kids in my family money was not abundant but still we managed to go there many times while they were there and we all still reminisce about this place periodically. Thank you to the family that owned this place for making some of my happiest childhood memories and thank you for making this documentary, my daughter is excited to watch it since she's heard many of our stories of this mini disneyland that was in our backyard.
@kjohnson92 Жыл бұрын
Oh. My heart. This was such a wonderful memory. Visits to pixie kitchen and pixieland live in our hearts with love and joy forever. I have loveingly collected original menus (reprints dont include the open/close fish mouth on the crease) and ceramic pixie figurines in the original boxes. I set them in a table top sand "box" - like the tables at pixie kitchen for family gatherings. Always brings on telling of the delightful memories that are family lore now. I LOVE this real story and interviews - even the heartbreaking parts. Thank you!
@traceyscadden8576 Жыл бұрын
I just watched this ! How fun my summers were spent on the Oregon coast growing up . We never got that far south we hung out in Seaside . I’m sure my parents and grandparents spent time there. I swear I’ve seen pictures and recall gifts they brought back to us grandkids. I took a gasp when I heard where the log flume is ! I live less than 20 mins from Lagoon and even have grandkids that work there . Thank you so much for the incredible history .
@deijix2 жыл бұрын
I used to live in Lincoln City when I was younger. My grandparents ran the hotel (was an econo lodge, now it’s a travelodge I think) on 101 and 21st for quite a while. All the time I lived there and never knew about pixieland! You learn something new everyday.
@robinlocher1509 Жыл бұрын
This was absolutely fascinating and pleasurable to watch and learn about! Thank you so much for creating and sharing it!!
@drmattmspeaks31873 ай бұрын
Shared this program with a U of Oregon friend from many years ago. He had actually visited the area during his teenage years (growing up in Salem). He enjoyed the program very much. Thanks for putting this together.
@Game_Hero2 жыл бұрын
The way you popularize and preserve Cascadian history is just amazing, thank you so much!
@AshitakaYakul3 ай бұрын
I've lived in Oregon all my life and I have never heard of this place until your video (35+ years). I actually cried a little. Thank you. Thank you so much.
@henningerhenningstone691 Жыл бұрын
What an interesting and touching documentary. Fantastic work and production quality! Times were so different back then. I can't even imagine what it was like since it all happened even before my parents were born, but from today's perspective, Jerry and Lula seem like the very definition of the American Dream. Thanks for including the interview with their daughter and son-in-law, always great to hear such stories and their anecdotes told by those who were there, while they are still around to tell them.
@imcodefour Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for making this wonderful documentary! My wife’s dad took her to the Pixie Kitchen and it was a memory that was all but forgotten by her until I came across your film! Thank you!
@BeautifuLakesStreamsBiologists2 жыл бұрын
You could fill 1000 pages with fawning memories of Pixie Kitchen from grown-up kids today. . Our family was at Neskowin every summer for decades. Mom knew we were NOT going home until we got a dinner at Pixie Kitchen. I don't know how many hundreds of pennies went down the Wishing Well! Even though the food quality declined after the Park's sold out, we still loved that place! It certainly brings a tear to my eye as I remember my parents. This time and place in Oregon was magical.
@hughjass5286 Жыл бұрын
What an amazing story. I have lived here my entire life, and my family before me too. I never heard about Pixie Kitchen or Pixieland.. this video was amazing & provided so much good information & visuals. Lincoln City is an interesting town today...lots of commercial businesses, a large casino, and the town stretches VERY long...on one side you've got the bay with a smaller area of businesses now mostly vacant minus a few restaurants (like Mo's) and then you've got everything else on the other side of town. Their "main street" is really not walkable...traffic runs right through it and it, again, stretches long. In between these points you'll find a pretty decent sized outlet mall. KFC, Taco Bell, Dollar Tree, Goodwill, McDonalds, Safeway, etc. It's not what I picture when I imagine the perfect, relaxing beach weekend. Their beach is good depending on which access point you choose..but I much prefer beaches like Cannon Beach, Manzanita, and Pacific City. Lincoln City has recently become more run down...a lot like Seaside is. A new crowd of sketchy visitors has emerged and our last visit we called it our last. It would've been so amazing to see Lincoln City survive better through the changing times & commercialization like some other nearby towns did. The Parks sound like great people who truly cared about providing fun for their community. The themepark was such a dream!! How amazing they made it come to life. The way they incorporated local companies is EXACTLY what Oregon is about..and the brilliant idea to model ideas after Disney & Knots is admirable. It's unfortunate our environment here just doesn't suit well for these big plans. It's a shame that land was sold to them in the first place...it's not their fault for damaging the ecosystem there, nor is the forestry service to blame. The land should've never been sold.
@modelrailpreservation2 жыл бұрын
Another great video. This is just perfect right now. Got home from the museum I work for, worn out and sore but happy some big projects got done ahead of schedule, the old trains on the Lionel layout I manage were running smoothly, made a deep dish pizza, settled in to watch this. Perfect. Just absolutely perfect.
@thegreatvanziniphotos5976Ай бұрын
Went to the kitchen & pixie land numerous times. I loved the seafood platter at the kitchen & the plays at pixieland.
@brianaglenn37063 ай бұрын
No idea how I found this video, but it’s so cool to learn and hear about this historical place. Gone too soon!
@luz1959 Жыл бұрын
So much effort to create fun and happiness for kids and adults, and to bring up the economic growth of those beautiful cities and towns, lost to the passing of time and incomprehensible laws. The building of the new highway, minimizing the affluence of tourists, the sudden interest in ecological recovery and the increase in oil prices, all lead to the downfall of a dream. That's the way life goes. Fortunately, there are still many people who enjoyed the dream in all its splendor. May they find ways to allow the new generations to know that time of the Oregon coast. Great work, @Peter Dible. Great sources of information. Thank you for sharing this interesting documentary.
@AngieSmith-sz4dx Жыл бұрын
Oh how I wish someone would re-open PixieLand again. What a great story
@rzan17008 ай бұрын
Love how you get and are able to interact with the daughter and the son-in-law of the owner With this content and kind of quality, this is such an underrated channel, this deserved to be high like Wendover or Mustard
@somedudeinminnesota2 жыл бұрын
This is a crazy underrated channel my friend. These documentary type KZbin videos are freaking sweet.
@retrovideoquest Жыл бұрын
Very interesting and well-made documentary. I had never heard of Pixieland or the Pixie Kitchen. Fascinating story!
@robertsherrow36272 жыл бұрын
I hope your videos are being seen on OPB and shared with Oregon citizens. These are excellent productions and enjoyed even by a guy from Michigan!
@deeteebee11 ай бұрын
This brought back a vivid memory from 60-some years ago, visiting Pixie Kitchen with my parents and godparents who were avid beachcombers. I was a very slow eater and when the waitress came to clear the adults' plates, she took mine away too, thinking I had finished. Well, I started to cry and the waitress felt so awful about the mistake, they presented me with the most gigantic ice cream sundae imaginable! :) This was a wonderful presentation and so nostalgic, thank you!
@henryseldon60772 жыл бұрын
I grew up in Salem, Or in the early 70's and my parents took us to PixieLand many times. One of my fondest childhood memories. So many good times of laughter, rides and food. Thanks for the memories!
@theone31man Жыл бұрын
This place was even more magical than Disneyland. It was up close and personal an absolute first class experience for kids.
@kevennorcross12252 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for sharing this. As a kid my Grandparents would take us there during the summer months and now I'm 58 years old often wondered where and what ever happened to pixieland? Thank for bringing this to everyone that as a kid what joy it brought to so many people. Sad that it never took off like predicted. But sure made millions of smiles and memories.
@cambridgeh.lutece66582 жыл бұрын
Mr. Dibble on his way to pump out the best high quality documentaries ever for literally anyone on youtube
@mackpines2 жыл бұрын
This is incredible. I'm a huge fan of Pixie Kitchen and Pixieland. What a fun place it was. Sadly, it was long gone before I was born. Every time I go to Lincoln City, I always make sure to stop at the historical museum and see their pixie exhibit. I have a set of coin purses and some menus from the restaurant. If you weren't full from eating at the restaurant, you got seconds at NO CHARGE! Thanks again for this video.
@oldhick90472 жыл бұрын
Ya shouda been there kid, it was great !
@oldhick90472 жыл бұрын
Are you always so literal
@Emiliapocalypse2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for making me feel less weird for being fascinated by old stuff like this, even if it existed before I was born and I never went there Lol. Never heard about this place before an hour ago but it looks awesome. I’m literally on eBay looking at old pixie kitchen placemats and collectible coins just to get a get a better mental picture of it all. Someone in another comment mentioned they gave out gift bags with a toy and jelly beans to the kids when leaving the pixie kitchen. I was looking around to see if I could find any pics of those. Your collection of stuff from Pixie Kitchen and Pixieland sounds pretty neat. Take care ✌️
@Studio23Media2 жыл бұрын
@@donHooligan It was just a light-hearted comment... Don't take everything so seriously
@eddyfox7963 Жыл бұрын
I grew up near here in Willamina. As a boy in the 70’s this was our weekend destination. I remember going to the pixie kitchen with my grandparents and hearing this story. I always ordered clams steamed/fried and as a cook I carry those memories.
@jeffreyhunt17272 жыл бұрын
You continue to impress me (& my friends) with your outstanding documentaries. This is absolutely fantastic. It brings out so many emotions. Thank you for creating & uploading this wonderful video!
@lightbeingform11 ай бұрын
Incredible piece! This was before my time. I was born in 1980, and went to Camp Westwind on the other side of the estuary from Cascade Head in the late 80s/early 90s. Then, 10+ years ago, my son also went. Both times, little boats ferried kids across to the remote camp. The nature there really is incredible. It's wild to think that just a decade before me, children were having a very different summer experience just upriver. Being a lover of local seafood, wacky commercial art, and the concept of a restaurant full of free babysitters, I am sorry to have missed the Pixie Kitchen. The Motel 6 made me laugh out loud. Great work here, very cool footage, images, and interviews.
@brettoberry35862 жыл бұрын
The only memory of my parents together was at Pixieland circa 1973. I remember them together waiting for me to finish a ride.
@lexio439513 күн бұрын
This is amazing.
@RonCobb-co6dr2 ай бұрын
Definitely a great time to be a kid in the Pacific Northwest, I know! I lived it being a long time resident of Centralia WA. I had first cousins in Sheridan and they had a family owned logging Co. Grimm Logging. So I remember Manny trips to the area. I don't remember Pixy land but do remember Knott's Berry Farm and a trip to Disney land in 1963 at the ripe old age of 6. Yep, growing up here was almost magical ! We had a blast clear through highschool and for a bit there after. Sadly, I could hear I-5 from our house so the " progress" hand writing was on the wall. The beautiful family filled neighborhood I grew up in and have soo many wonderful memories of is now a complete wreck. mostly because of incompetent flood water planning and large timber companies being able to clear cut Way ! Too much ground in one area at a time. For 15 yrs major flooding from the Chehalis river was a huge problem and instead of fixing the old dike system and holding W. And a few others responsible for small disasters, many homes were put up on blocks, ours, 6' in the air ! A 3 bedroom Brick ! House. But today, you can hardly recognize the place. Progress to some, the greedy, is a strip mall and idiotic freeway ramps. Thanks for your work! Enjoying your history saves over some early morning coffee today. We " Had " a nice place to live 40 years ago, now my quiet little town is a cross between down town Seattle and little Tiawanna. Absolutely Destroyed.
@Dinner422 жыл бұрын
The harvest table in my dining room was built using the square nails from the Pixieland caboose. Great story that needed to be told!
@onceagainvideos2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for putting this out on KZbin. So many memories for so many Oregonians. ❤️
@gregparker970132 жыл бұрын
Peter, what an amazing documentary. My family has a cabin on the Cascade Head Ranch and I am on its board of directors. We strictly follow the federal law and directive of the forest service. Several of my neighbors still work on the Salmon Creek Restoration project.
@Jason-lw7tk Жыл бұрын
WOW this was an amazing memory jog! I got to go to the Pixie Kitchen a couple times when I was very young. I still have vivid memories of the interior and the view but haven't actually seen it in decades. This was fun. Thank you!
@davidgjam76002 жыл бұрын
Are you planning on talking about Enchanted Forest too? It's interesting that the 2 problems, climate and the gas shortage, didn't effect that one enough to close down. My dad lives in that Cascade Head / Three-Rocks area, and I didn't know anything about Pixieland until I saw a random sign in the estuary park, so it's cool to see neighbors' perspectives and that local history. You really have a way of telling Oregon stories that I had no idea existed, thank you.
@peterdibble2 жыл бұрын
Thanks! I'm not planning on covering Enchanted Forest, but I'm guessing it was able to survive those factors (and more recently, the pandemic) because of its proximity to Salem. I was also going to theorize that the weather stays nice in the Willamette Valley a little longer than on the coast, but EF's operating schedule appears to be pretty much the same as Pixieland's was, so that may be a moot point.
@lamarravery4094 Жыл бұрын
@@peterdibbleWhen you decide to cover Enchanted Forest, don't forget to include the wildfire from 3 or 4 yrs ago and how it was damaged but the locals crowdfunded it for repairs and it still is in business.
@jazzyfizzlefazz Жыл бұрын
I live in the Pacific Northwest and have visited Lincoln City a handful of times. I have also visited Lagoon Amusement Park in Utah multiple times! I loved learning the history of Pixieland and can't wait to make these connections when I revisit Lincoln City and Lagoon.
@annieis3002 жыл бұрын
I just LOVED Pixieland... good times!!! ❤❤❤ Thank you so much for sharing!
@hollyberry864 ай бұрын
Wonderful memories! … pixie kitchen and pixieland when I was a kid were magical! Truly fascinating history. Thank you!
@elizabethchapin54662 жыл бұрын
Found this channel on accident and now I think I’m hooked. I love history so this is right up my alley. Amazing work!!
@paullogan-yl6ru Жыл бұрын
Brought Up in Newport - Since 1957 - Mom and Dad took us up to Pixeland Many Times as Great Treats ! ❤
@toddbendall518 Жыл бұрын
Lagoon is my family's home park! It's fun to learn the history of some of the rides that we go on every year! Thank you for sharing the history of this fun little park and the impact its founders had on the community.
@aronkerr4 ай бұрын
My family has lived in the Willamette valley in Oregon for 6 generations and I had never heard about this. I am going to have to ask my older relatives if they ever visited this place. Really interesting and well put together. Thanks for sharing!
@roberthand38362 жыл бұрын
I grew up in Oregon. Our family used to stop there. During the 70s. My brother and I would hitch hike over to the coast and ride the go karts there. This has brought back some great memories of our family trips to the Coast. Fogarty park was a normal stop and hunting for agates, fishing and a stop at Barnacle Bill sea food stand was the norm! Thank you
@brendad9402 жыл бұрын
I'd forgotten about the go karts in Lincoln City!
@sabastian28142 жыл бұрын
I love Fogarty Park. I go there every time were in Lincoln City!
@halfkinrainbolt70412 жыл бұрын
I remember the go carts and the Doll Museum next door to the track. It cast 10 cents to get in. They had a life size wax figure of Queen Elizabeth and a live talking minor bird.
@backwoodzbigfoot Жыл бұрын
I live here now, wish it was still here......Awesome video, thanks !!!
@screwthecabal6453 Жыл бұрын
I live a couple of miles away from lagoon. I'm 57 now and I remember when the log flume was introduced as well as the new train. The log flume has gotten bigger, the old train that ran around the whole park doesn't exist since the new train came but if you know where to look one can still see the old tracks. I had no idea the history of these new rides till now. Thank you.
@kcindc55392 жыл бұрын
Wow, what a well-done video, and a fascinating topic. I really enjoyed learning about this innovative family and their unique contribution to an entire generation of Oregonians who had the privilege of experiencing all things Pixie. RIP Lu and RIP Jerry. You’ve earned it.
@debbiebird11602 жыл бұрын
This was awesome - I totally remember this as a child, the mirrors - it's so sad how such vivid memories have been taken - thank you so much for this, brought tears and smiles.
@Pangoban Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this historical program on pixieland. I remember it very well and enjoyed the log flume ride, the dark ride and many other fun attractions. I even remember the first time I was in a helicopter at Pixie Land, the pilot charged $15 for 15 minutes to go up in the helicopter and tour over the park and area. That was a huge and amazing memory for me. 😊
@ElDJReturn2 жыл бұрын
I always love your videos and how you teach lost Oregon / PNW history especially, but this one was truly fascinating and the way you told it had me enthralled. Thank you so much for all you do! Your production value is top notch and I really had an emotional reaction to your story.
@teknightrider2586 Жыл бұрын
An absolutely fantastic documentary... well done! 😇 I have so many memories of my parents taking me to both the Pixie Kitchen and Pixieland (having been born in 1968). I had just read that the Log Ride was retired, just this last year (2022), at Lagoon Park in Farmington, UT (basically Salt Lake City). And it appears the original Train Engine was retired several years back, but is on display at Lagoon Park where there is another engine that looks very similar that still runs. I'd really love to go see the train again! Thanks so much!!! 👍
@wendy428422 жыл бұрын
Made me cry. I lived in Lincoln City and went there as a child
@wheninroamful Жыл бұрын
Superb job here. Just some random recommendation; I do live in Seattle and lived in Portland, so up my alley, but didn't know all this. Thanks for making this well done documentary. Im gonna check out more of your work. Bravo.
@GoodGuy-wq4md2 жыл бұрын
I have to admit that my heart sank when they showed an excavator, and said that they had cleared an old lumber yard. That's a piece of history that can never be replaced.
@brisonb85164 ай бұрын
As a born and raised oregonian, I really like to learn about our history. This was a great video. Well thought out, and packed with good information. Not only to learn of this but to kinda feel like you were there. Great job! Keep it up Peter Dibble !
@kayerains35132 жыл бұрын
Where oh where, in the year 2022, could you, would you ever find a place like this??!! Nearly every Oregonian has fond memories of the Pixie Kitchen! Love, love, love to the family who brought it to us. Thank you is not enough!
@bugnbubsdad497217 күн бұрын
Wow, I lived in Lincoln city for four years, my wife grew up there, I never heard about any of this before watching, so fascinating!
@catherinelutz2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this great walk down memory lane! Many of my childhood memories took place at the Oregon coast, including my grandmother, hounding my parents to take us all to Pixie Kitchen every time we were at the coast. Sadly, I didn't experience Pixieland, but would have loved to. Great job on the documentary!