
Hunting for treasure in downtown Camas
Treasures await the community at the 10th annual Camas Vintage and Art Faire, which will fill the city’s downtown streets from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Saturday, Aug. 25.
Treasures await the community at the 10th annual Camas Vintage and Art Faire, which will fill the city’s downtown streets from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Saturday, Aug. 25.
Every morning, seven days a week, the parking lot at Hathaway Park in Washougal is packed with pickleball players.
Interested in finding new, locally made art? Head out to the 2018 Washougal Art Festival in downtown Washougal Saturday to view work by 26 professional regional artists.
Thousands gathered in downtown Camas for last weekend’s 2018 Camas Days festival. Some even donned paper outfits for the event, helping to celebrate Camas’ longtime traditions and mill town pride and honor this year’s Camas Days’ theme of “Celebrating Papermaker History.”
Camas and Washougal were recently included in an all-day bus tour that transported representatives from the Columbia River Economic Development Council (CREDC), the Vancouver Downtown Association, the ports of Vancouver and Ridgefield and several cities around Clark County.
A building in downtown Washougal that combines historic and whimsical touches is the newest addition to the Clark County Heritage Register.
Janice Ferguson and her husband, George Gross, enjoy gardening and the opportunity to talk with other gardeners.
If you’ve ever wandered around a classic car show and pondered how tough it might be to restore one of those gleaming beauties, Steve Chaney can assure you: It’s tough … like, “scouring for original parts for the better part of a year, spending more than $100,000 and throwing 1,100 hours toward restoration work” tough.
Home to several community-created public art forms, Washougal City Hall stands out with its golden black heron sculpture, birdhouses decorated by community members and Capt. William Clark bronze bust.
Dressed head to toe in gear that would make any early-19th century Pacific Northwest history buff jealous, Roger Wendlick produces bags of fresh smoked salmon and offers it as a sort of parting gift to the Washougal middle-schoolers surrounding him.