Oregon Restaurant Guide
Whether you live in Oregon or are moving into the area, this guide to Oregon restaurants should be helpful to you.
Most searched Oregon restaurants:
Oregon's four largest cities are all clustered in the Willamette Valley, bordered by the Pacific Ocean to the West and the Cascade Mountains to the est. The remainder of the state is very sparsely populated. Oregon's climate is tempered by the warming effects of the ocean's Japan Current with temperatures averaging in the mid-forties in the winter and mid-seventies in the summer.
Oregon's economy has been primarily based on the lumber industry and farming since the state entered the Union in 1859. The state was populated when the Oregon Trail brought German, Scandinavian and English settlers. The economy and population today are much more diverse.
The state enjoys some of the most beautiful natural attractions in the country, including volcanic Crater Lake (the deepest lake in the United States), beautiful mountains used for skiing, fishing, hunting, caving and hikes through the dense forests. The largest known lode of nickel ore in the US has been mined under Nickel Mountain since the mid-1800's.
We Have Restaurant Guides For The Following Cities:
- Albany
- Beaverton
- Bend
- Central Point
- Clackamas
- Coos Bay
- Corvallis
- Cottage Grove
- Creswell
- Dallas
- Eagle Point
- Estacada
- Eugene
- Florence
- Gladstone
- Grants Pass
- Gresham
- Hermiston
- Hillsboro
- Independence
- John Day
- Keizer
- Klamath Falls
- La Pine
- Lake Oswego
- Lebanon
- Lincoln City
- Lynnwood
- Madras
- Mcminnville
- Medford
- Milwaukie
- Molalla
- Myrtle Creek
- NE Salem
- Newport
- North Bend
- Oakridge
- Oregon City
- Philomath
- Portland
- Prineville
- Roseburg
- Salem
- Sandy
- Scappoose
- Sheridan
- Silverton
- Sisters
- Springfield
- Stayton
- Sunriver
- Sweet Home
- Tacoma
- Talent
- Troutdale
- Tualatin
- Vancouver
- Veneta
