Rolling Out All-Terrain Track Chairs at the Coast

Davids Chair on the beach
On the beach with David’s Chair

Oregon Parks Forever is committed to providing a variety of healthy outdoors experiences so that everyone can enjoy the benefits of nature. Part of this mission is to see that those with mobility challenges can partake in outdoor activities that would otherwise be unavailable to them.

Oregon Parks Forever (OPF) and David’s Chair Outdoor Mobility Systems have recently secured grants from the M.J. Murdock Charitable Trust, the Marie Lamfrom Charitable Foundation, and the Biefke Vos Saulino Endowment at OPF, and with funds raised by donors from David’s Chair’s “Big Weekend” which will allow us to place three new electric all-terrain Track Chairs in Manzanita and Pacific City this spring and Seaside this summer.  

The Manzanita chair was given in memory of Beifke Vos Saulino. Biefke Vos Saulino immigrated to Canada from Holland as a child after WWII. She worked to put herself through college, and began an illustrious career in education spanning three decades; she taught, worked in administrative roles, and was superintendent of a school district in California. Upon retirement, she and her husband moved to the Pacific Northwest.  An avid environmentalist, Biefke was diagnosed with a condition that severely limited her favorite outdoor activities. She would be delighted that an endowment in her name will offer others with mobility issues easier access to the trails and beaches she loved so much.

When used properly, battery-charged track chairs will run for 6-8 hours without recharging, are quiet, and have rotating treads, designed to be used on various terrain, and allow the user to get onto the beach or on trails. 

Last year, Oregon Parks Forever helped fund a Track Chair and trailer, located at the American Legion Post in Tigard, OR.  The chair is available for free, by reservation through the David’s Chair website. This Tigard chair has been very popular, so plan ahead, especially in the busy spring and summer months. You will need a vehicle with a trailer hitch to pick it up. 

The three new chair locations are a result of Oregon Parks Forever and David’s Chair Outdoor Mobility Systems working together to raise funds and locate hosts at veterans and tourist locations such as the American Legion, VFWs, and Elks Lodges.  These organizations will host an electric all-terrain track chair and (sometimes) a trailer. Our goal is to arrange the funding for and determine host locations for 10 chairs or “Tow and Go“ chair/trailer combinations in order to make Track Chairs more readily available along the Oregon Coast in places like: Warrenton, Cannon Beach, Rockaway Beach, Lincoln City, Newport, Florence, Bandon, and Brookings.

David’s Chair was born in 2017 after David Hatrick, an avid outdoorsman, received a diagnosis of ALS, a paralyzing disease. A number of his friends got together and formed a non-profit organization to purchase a Track Chair allowing him to enjoy outdoor activities for eleven months as his mobility declined. Since his death in early 2018, the organization has grown and currently has eight Track Chairs in Oregon, with seven in Medford and one in Tigard. David’s Chair has taken people and their families on exciting outdoor excursions at locations that are inaccessible to regular wheelchairs.

You can watch a video of the Track Chairs in action, click here.

We are excited to bring the beach to those who couldn’t access it easily.

Trailer for Track Wheel Chair
Tow and Go: Trailer for Track Chair

Want to try out a Track Chair?  Join David’s Chair for an In-Person Event on March 31 – April 1 at their Annual Spring Break Excursion at Harris Beach in Brookings, OR.

10 thoughts on “Rolling Out All-Terrain Track Chairs at the Coast”

  1. Pingback: Adaptive Recreation – Oregon Parks Forever

  2. This is the most awesome thing ever! You rock. Hope to make the trip to check this out at Harris Beach State Park!

  3. Hilary McDonald

    This is fantastic!

    I would also love to see Oregon Parks Forever help work with the state to develop a long section of bike trail off the highway but near the highway, for our bike travelers.

    Thousands bike the coast every year along a dangerous highway. The coasts could use the tourism business/dollars and the state should be investing in making this a positive and welcoming experience. Perhaps Samuel H. Boardman State Scenic Corridor or somewhere?

    Cars and big trucks dominate the coast, and it hasn’t made for the most attractive development (highway towns). Let’s bring walking and biking energy there!

  4. *** Wonderful news for the disabled community!! Thank you for working with David’s Chair to secure grants that will allow access to more beaches all along the Oregon Coast. We along with what I imagine would be others, do not have a truck to haul them as we often utilize vans for those who are disabled (unsure if the weight can be hauled by a van or not, but do have a hitch.) It is amazing what David’s Chair has done to provide an opportunity once again for families to be able to enjoy “walking” on the sand together. Warm appreciation goes out to both Oregon Parks Forever and David’s Chair for all of their work and advocacy.

  5. The two mile stretch of Tierra Del Mar beach north of the beach access (No Motor Vehicles Allowed) would be a great place for these electric track machines. There is easy access to the beach and the terrain to mild. Cape Kiwanda is rediculously hazardous for even healthy people, especially if they have dogs and/or children. The three mile stretch of the beach from Pacific Avenue (at the Turnaround) south to the mouth of the Big Nestucca River does not have a reasonable access to the beach, plus many of us older (but not officially ‘handicapped’) citizens can still access this portion of the beach with our four wheel drive vehicles. My wife and I are the Oregon Solve, Adopt A Beach ambassadors for this three mile section of beach which is recorded as ‘Pacific City South’. We use our little Four Wheel Drive to patrol this for trash.

  6. As an adventurous outdoors person forced into a chair by an ALS type dx, this is something I’d like to support. Son Rise Ranch would love to be a location people could come pick one up & more teach them how to use, even practice in our outdoor environment.

  7. Carol Christine Neumann

    This is so wonderful. Where can I find information on the points of entry for these chairs? Are electric vehicles considered motorized vehicles?

  8. Larry Lansdowne

    People I talk to in other states are always saying ‘Only in Oregon; or Oregon was doing that first and years ago…’
    Well Yah, and Oregon Parks Forever are still out there leading the pack>>>>>>>

  9. Pingback: March 12 – DEC Weekly Updates – Disability Equity Center

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