C
O A S T A L H I K E S
Hey,
hikers! Spring is the finest time to exercise your boots on the
trails that meander the California coast. Admire the hills blanketed
in juicy green grass, the redwoods climbing into the mist. Join
the bees dancing in the perfumed gardens of lupine. Slosh through
the singing creeks. Wave to the sea lions, the calling gulls.
We are blessed
to have hundreds of wild and beautiful miles of the California coast
protected in public landsstate parks and beaches; national
parks, seashores, and recreation areas; Bureau of Land Management
areas; and city and county parks. Thousands of miles of hiking trails
lattice the mountains, canyons, bluffs, and beaches in these diverse
entities.
Here, six
writers tell us about their favorite walks along this wondrous coast.
Whether you follow them or find your own pathways, be sure to check
trail and weather conditions before heading for your hike.
FERN
CANYON
I love this 4.5-mile coastal loop trail because it begins in alders
and may end with antlers along a foggy beach. But I would not recommend
it if you are to the slightest degree averse to green. If there
is in your sensibility any such category as "too green,"
it is probably better to point yourself elsewhere than toward Fern
Canyon and these three connecting trails in Prairie Creek Redwoods
State Park.No matter how fond you may be of Roosevelt elk, which
sometimes roam Gold Bluff Beach, where the loop begins and ends.
No matter that you believe the mottled gray of alder bark to be
among natures finest finishes, and you think you might like
to visit the beguiling trailhead alder grove at Fern Canyons
mouth. No matter that old-growth redwoods are your very, very favorite
plant form, and you have heard that the stately redwood groves above
Fern Canyon are among the loveliest in the park. Even if all these
things are true, but you can conceive of "too much green,"
you still might want to leave this loop to those of us who can appreciate
it.
For few things
are greener than the half-mile notch of Fern Canyon, its nearly
perpendicular sides shingled in eight species of ferns, its silence
broken only by the burble of the creek and the drip, drip, drip
of last nights fog. The trail beyond climbs to ridge upon
ridge of sturdy (and occasionally sunlit) redwoods, and descends
to cross dark creeks and wallows thick with huckleberry, waist-high
sword ferns, fat eruptions of skunk cabbage, and fern-feathered
logs. So when you emerge on the beach again, where a bull elk may
be studying you from behind a tumble of driftwood logs, it will
seem curiouseven impossiblethat his proud spread of
antlers is not upholstered in emerald moss.
Getting there:
Best AAA map: Northern California Section. To reach Fern Canyon
in Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park, take Davison Road off U.S.
101, 3 miles north of Orick. After 4 miles, this dirt road dead-ends
at a parking lot, the trailhead for the level, 0.7-mile Fern Canyon
Loop up Home Creek.
In summer,
wooden bridges allow hikers to travel the canyon dry-footed, but
these are removed in the rainy season. Near the head of Fern Canyon,
hikers can pick up the moderately strenuous James Irvine Trail,
which climbs and descends redwood ridges above Home Creek. At 1.6
miles from the beach, the James Irvine Trail connects via the steep,
0.7-mile-long Clintonia Trail to the Miners Ridge Trail. This
in turn heads west another 0.7 of a mile to rejoin Davison Road
1.5 miles south of the parking lot. Get maps at the Redwood Visitors
Center on U.S. 101 southwest of Orick. Phone: (707) 464-6101 ext.
5265.
By William
Poole
LOST
COAST
Several years ago, backpacking along that wild and rugged corridor
between Humboldt Countys precipitous King Range and the crashing
sea, I picked up an enormous glass fishing float. This pale-jade
sphere, encased in meticulously knotted rope netting, weighed 6
pounds. And though Id only begun my 24-mile journey on Californias
longest stretch of roadless coastline, this irresistible treasure
became part of the load on my back.Today, it balances on my desk.
When my eyes are weary I can rest them on that ball and recapture
vivid scenes from this coastal wildlands hike: a raft of gregarious
barking sea lions, bonded in body and voice, riding sea swells with
flippers raised as sails for thermal regulation; the vast ocean
horizon edited through the flukes of a diving whale very close to
shore; a den of newborn garter snakes, a Medusas scalp in
motion; scores of birds (nearly 300 species on the local list) diving,
fishing, and playing in mountain thermals; old Indian middens; abandoned
lighthouses; and what I imagined as the same lone sea lion, who
seemed to tag along for company, swam as I walked, rested the night,
and joined me anew each morning.
Like most trekkers,
I hiked from north to south, from the mouth of the Mattole River
to Shelter Cove with the prevailing winds behind me. But unlike
most, I allowed five days to savor the scene and negotiate the landscapeits
tough going, and you earn your "right to passage" in this
natural sanctuary. Underfoot, theres an ever-changing tidal
terrain, from soft sand, pebbles, slippery rocks and boulders to
horizontal forests of driftwood. On narrow strands, you consult
your tide table before passing. Theres some relief: At infrequent
intervals, the trail climbs onto marine terraces and traverses wide,
grassy flats. At least a dozen freshwater streams cross the route
and theres a waterfall for most lunch stops.
Getting there:
Best AAA map: Northern California Section. The Bureau
of Land Management publishes an excellent free map and recreation
guide plus a bird list for the King Range National Recreation Area
that includes the Lost Coast. Permits required for organized groups.
Telephone Arcata BLM: (707) 825-2300.
The best
weather is mid-spring to early fall. Between October and April,
the King Range, which rises 4,000 feet from sea level in less than
3 miles, squeezes 100 to 200 inches of rain from storm systems.
Unless you
want to walk 48 miles round-trip, youll need a two-car shuttle.
Leave one car in Shelter Cove at the end of Beach Road. Drive north
to Petrolia and west on Lighthouse Road to the parking area at the
beach.
By Linda
Liscom
POMO
CANYON
Most of us who attended grammar school can remember making nature
dioramasthose slightly squashed miniworlds of tissue-paper
flowers, plastic birds, and cardboard trees. Each one was lovingly
crafted. No two were exactly alike.Imagine walking through a life-size
series of these and youve got a good idea of what its
like to hike the Dr. David Joseph Trail in Sonoma Coast State Beach.
Located just south of the mouth of the Russian River, this 3-mile
footpath runs from sheltered valley to ocean beach, shifting often
in temperature and elevation along the way. The result is a back-to-back
series of distinct eco-zonesredwood forest, oak woodland,
coastal grassland, and tidal zoneeach hosting a unique ensemble
of plants, flowers, and critters. No two are exactly alike.
The trail begins
at the Pomo Canyon environmental walk-in campground, open April
through November. Diorama 1 is a shady redwood grove smelling sweetly
of damp mulch and dark soil. Almost immediately the trail begins
its 700-foot climb, winding up past moisture-loving ferns. As you
rise above the valley floor, the redwoods begin to loose a little
girth around their trunks, shifting slowly to Diorama 2, a collection
of oaks and bays sharing the sunshine with small flowers and poison
oak. By Diorama 3, the forest has bowed out to waving grasses and
isolated patches of crumbling rock. Twittering birds perch on swaying
stalks or dart through the scrub. Morose-looking cows stand knee-deep
in the fields, paying little heed to passing hikers.
Its difficult
to pinpoint the exact spot at which the ocean becomes a tangible
presence, but somewhere high in the grasslands a certain saltiness
on the wind announces the Pacific. The smell acts like a drum roll:
When you finally crest the ridge and spot the shimmering, blue-gray
expanse below, its difficult not to break into a half-gallop.
Its straight downhill from here anyway, then a quick look-left-look-right
dash across Highway 1 and down a path to Diorama 4, Shell Beach.
All rough sand, high cliffs, and cold, crashing water, this is a
beach in the true Northern California sensea place to turn
into the wind and appreciate natures force. Scavenge on the
tides edge or enjoy a bundled-up picnic before heading the
3 miles up and over the ridge again, and back down through the shifting
scenes.
Getting there:
Best AAA map: Mendocino and Sonoma Coast Region. To reach
the Pomo Canyon trailhead, turn east from Highway 1 onto Willow
Creek Road, located just south of the Russian River, right next
to the Sizzling Tandor Restaurant. Continue on Willow Creek Road
for about 2.5 miles until the road forks, then veer right at the
Pomo Canyon sign. The campground is a half-mile further. Note that
from December to March, this last half-mile is closed; park your
car at the gate (do not block it) and walk in. A $5 day-use fee
is collected. It is possible to avoid the fee by parking for free
at Shell Beach and doing the hike in reverse. For information on
the trail, the camp-ground, or road conditions, phone the Bodega
Dunes Entrance Station: (707) 875-3483.
By Kristina
Malsberger
POINT
REYES
In early January I was still reverberating from post-holiday-stress-syndrome,
so ignoring an ominous wall of black rain clouds, I called my friend
Lisa and we set off for Point Reyes to hike off the shopping hordes,
the movie lines, the churn of visiting relatives.As we pulled up
to the Bear
Valley Visitor Center, the dark clouds threatened, but behaved.
For the first 4 miles down the Bear Valley Trail to Arch Rock, we
crunched along the gravelly path, side-by-side under a canopy of
mixed Douglas fir and buckeye. Breathing deep the damp forest, I
began prattling on about my 12 days of Christmas: late-night runs
to Target, five adults wasting a lovely afternoon in a dark movie
house to mollify a child, too much rich food.
The Bear Valley
Creek ran thick with rainwater alongside the trail; twisted limbs
of trees covered in brilliant green moss hung over the water. I
complained about the holiday afternoon I frantically searched for
some activity to engage eight different minds with eight different
interests.
As we made our
way down the trail, dark clouds dissolved into white tufts and blue
skies. At the tops of easy inclines were meadows filled with incandescent
green grass. I heard myself muttering about the day-before-Christmas
shopping frenzy. As we turned a corner at the end of a gradual decline,
the tree-thick canyon gave way to a scrubby open coastal hillside
with views across the seashore to Drakes Estero and the Point Reyes
Lighthouse. Waves crashed below the cut-away cliffs. Lisa kept listening.
The sun began
to warm the cool air as we took a right turn on the Coast Trail.
I told the story of the night my family grumbled because my apartment
was cold, and then of all of us huddled around my fireplace, laughing
when the delivery man dropped our pizza on my front steps. Walking
along, we soaked in the new sunshine, and turned up the Sky Trail
for a single-file 4-mile climb up Mt. Wittenberg.
We scrambled
on top of a craggy rock to eat some lunch. Sun and clouds created
a spectacle of blue-green stripes on the Pacific. The ocean glinted
silver near the Farallon Islands. I talked about the day my brothers
and I skated lazy loops, arm-in-arm, around our favorite old ice
rink in Berkeley. After a while, the Point Reyes cold seeped through
to our skin, so we climbed on through forests of tall pines and
eucalyptus.
At the top of
the trail we met a trio of deer, silhouettes frozen, watching us
from just beyond a grass-covered ridge. A few steps down the steep
Mt. Wittenberg Trail, the gray clouds moved in and opened. We pulled
on slickers and moved on in the rain, falling straight and silent.
Soon a thick canopy of trees offered shelter, and a cushion of damp
pine needles softened our steps. I didnt talk much any more.
I didnt need to.
Back at the
visitor center, we shook off the water, climbed in the car, and
drove home.
Getting there:
Best AAA map: Bay and Mountain Region, with detailed inset of
Pt. Reyes National Seashore. This loop covers 10.5 miles. Trailhead
is at the Bear Valley Visitor Center in Olema. Phone: (415) 663-9029.
By Maria
Streshinsky
LAND'S
END
Im not much of one for hikes. My husband Bill, the weekend
warrior, is always in the mood to drive out of the city for a bracing
spring trek. He puts on his Giants cap, fills his water bottles,
and then peels my fingers off the couch leg and stuffs me in the
car, throwing my Timberlands in after me, saying, "Nonsense!
The rain will stop in a minute. Itll do us a world of good
to get out."In self defense, I found a walk right in San Francisco,
along the crumbling, plunging, gray-green cliffs of Lands
End. When I come out here, I can feel the whole American continent
at my back, not to mention my eager husband saying, "I love
this!"
Left behind
are the ambulance sirens and bustle of the city. When I was in college,
Id come out here to be melancholy and try to read Proust in
the original. Its so quiet you can almost hear the smack of
the ball from the unseen golf course up above, hear the far-off
murmuring of occasional other hikers.
Bill is always
ecstatic to be out, exclaiming over the wildflowers, quoting Robert
Frost, urging me to the edge of the cliff, showing me how at low
tide we can see the periscope of a submarine that sank here. Probably
Sean Connery in Red October, trying to defect to a town with really
good French bread.
The dirt path
winds above the sea until we come to Seacliff, a stately Mediterranean
neighborhood that curves around the cove, keeping its back resolutely
to the more plebian Richmond District. Robin Williams lives here,
and with any luck will be out sculpting his cypress trees.
I am always
ready to turn around at this point, hoping to fool Bill into thinking
this is the end of the trail, but hes already striding on
toward the Golden Gate Bridge. At the trails north end, under
the shadow of the bridge, are the naked people, too busy playing
frisbee to pay attention to a smiling man in a Giants cap who appears
to be dragging a protesting woman by one leg.
The whole walk
takes only a couple of hours, and afterward you can do something
sedentary, like see a double bill at the nearby Balboa theater.
Getting there:
Best AAA map: street map of San Francisco. The trailhead is at
the Merrie Way parking lot, off Pt. Lobos Avenue (the far-western
continuation of Geary Blvd.) up the hill from the Cliff House. From
here a 3-mile walk will take you to the Golden Gate Bridge.
By
Adair Lara
BIG
SUR
I watched Sarah take the cure along Big Surs Pine Ridge Trail.For
several years, her husband Arniemy cousinand I have
backpacked into the mountains of California. For a week my cousin
drops his corporate persona and becomes a regular backwoods guy.
Sarah lives each trip through the opportunistic caterpillar, stray
duff, and woodsmoke that hitchhike home on Arnies gear.
One recent summer
weekend, Sarah agreed to a three-day go at this activity that transforms
her husband into a paragon of serenity. I chose for us the Pine
Ridge Trail, reached along the bluff-jumbled Big Sur coast. On this
popular trail, Sarah would have lots of company as we traversed
redwood-shaded glens and fern-filled gullies, held our ear to the
roar of Big Sur Rivers cascades, gazed across a canyon to
chaparral-mantled Mt. Manuel, admired skeletal outcroppings bulging
from the Rubenesque Santa Lucias.
Winter had been
wet, so backcoun-try river and stream beds would be refreshingly
swollen. And the plum: Sykes Hot Springs, tucked deep in the Ventana
Wilderness. All this to distract from our labor up and down the
trails unrelentingly steep grades.
I knew we were
in trouble the first mile when Sarah said, "So, this is what
you do all day, just walk?" I quickly pointed to lingering
wild iris, the carpet of redwood sorrel creeping under its namesake
tree, a surprise pile of coral-tinged flicker feathers. How lucky
we were to spot columbine, a fairy lantern in midsummer, I exclaimed
as we traversed an open marble-stone slope. Sarah wiped sweat with
a bandana and I could tell what loomed for her were intense dry
heat, hot spots on her feet, sore shoulders, tight calves.
Seven miles
out, at Barlow Flat, we pitched tents beside the Big Sur River near
tanbark oaks, bays, maples, alders, sycamores. After several soaks
in the rivers green-tinted swimming holes, Sarah was talking
to Arnie and me again.
Next morning,
we day-hiked 3 miles farther (one-way) to the legendary, if funky,
hot springs. At the Big Sur River, you have to choose a boulder-hop
or calf-deep wade to do the final half-mile to the hot springs.
Dun-colored sandbags that look old enough to be, well, historic,
section the 100°F springs into stone-lined basins. All the mystique
of Sykes has to do with locationremote gushing waters in this
temple, the Ventana Wilderness.
A young man
sharing our tub said to Sarah, "How about a foot massage?"
I saw shades of corporate disapproval cloud my cousins face
as his wife floated her swollen feet, one at a time, into the hands
of the stranger, taking her cure. Pine Ridge was, after all, her
firstand lastbackpack trip.
Getting there:
Best AAA map: Monterey Bay Region. Pine Ridge trailhead is right
off State Route 1, at Big Sur Station, a visitor center just south
of Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park, 26 miles south of Carmel. Self-pay
$4 per night for parking. Campfire permits (no charge) requiredpick
up day of trip at the visitor center, where you also can get a handy
topo, check trail conditions, and find out about the several camps
along Pine Ridge. Phone: (408) 667-2315.
By Camille
Cusumano
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