Overview
Introduction
Together with its neighbor, Springfield, Eugene forms the second-largest metropolitan area in Oregon. The surroundings are still pristine enough, however, that white-water rafting and fishing take place within the metro area.
The range and quality of cultural offerings in the cities are top-notch, both in the performing arts (particularly at Eugene's world-class Hult Center) and in such renowned institutions as the Maude Kerns Art Center and the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art at the University of Oregon. While at the university, take advantage of the extensive network of walking paths and bike trails.
Other worthwhile places to visit are Alton Baker Park, the city's largest developed park (canoe rentals are available); the Eugene Science Center and Planetarium; the Owen Rose Garden; and the rhododendron collection and native plant garden at Hendricks Park. Several of the forest-products mills in the area offer tours.
Nearby Veneta is the site of the annual Oregon Country Fair (second weekend of July), which is not a fair in the traditional sense: It's closer to a Grateful Dead concert (the Dead even played it several times), with people wearing costumes, characters on stilts, face painting, food, crafts and a wandering parade featuring such oddities as the "mud people."
Other notable events on the area's calendar include the Scandinavian Festival in nearby Junction City (August) and the Oregon Bach Festival in Eugene (June and July).