Thursday, June 5, 2014

A walk through the Redwoods

This morning was sunny and a little cold out.  I was so glad the fog had lifted early.  We were on our way at 8:00 am and were hiking by 9.  I was disappointed there there were no elk in the meadow this morning.  I really enjoy seeing them in the wild.

The trail starts right at the visitor center, it is 4.8 miles to Fern Canyon.  This is through the one of the old growth areas of the redwoods.  The three big trees on this starting bridge are a small example of what we would see today.



The trail is a nice wide trail carpeted with pine needles.  The forest smell hits you right away, that piney, musty woodsy smell.  I wish I could bottle this smell so I could smell it whenever I wanted to.  There is something about it that instantly relaxes me.  We take a long time to reach Fern Canyon because we stop every 5 minutes to take pictures.  The following pictures show the hike through the redwoods.  I don't feel words can do this awe inspiring mystical area justice, you just need to come here and hike it to understand.



 This is a downed redwood that has become what is called a nurse mate tree.  You can see all the other plants growing on top of it.  They use this downed tree like fertilizer and grow big and healthy.  Sometimes you can see where the tree has decayed away and it leaves the tree feeding on it standing in the air so to speak.  The nursing trees roots grow around the nurse tree and into the ground, so when the nurse is no longer there it leaves the shape of the tree in the roots of the new tree, kind of like a hole in the middle of the root.



I walked a log!!!!




 
In the above picture you can see the root system of three big trees growing together, the eventually become one tree.  The pic next to it is a close up of the roots.
The pic to the left shows you how thick their bark is. The green area is the tree the thick brown area is the bark.  These trees have extremely thick bark, which keeps them from harm during fires.  You see many that have been burned and are still living.


 I am 5'3 can you guess how
tall this big boy is?




Banana slug















We have finally arrived at Fern Canyon.  The following pictures will show you why it is called Fern Canyon.  You walk down a long curvy  flight of steps to get into the canyon then you have to climb, crawl and maneuver yourself through a maze of down trees to reach the canyon.















Once through Fern Canyon we work our way over to the coastal trail. This is only about 0.6 miles. Winding our way through a very sandy trail over to the coastal trail this is what we almost walked into.










We had a hard time finding the coastal trail and the sand was very hard to walk through.



We decide walk the Gold Bluffs Beach Rd to the Miners Ridge Trail back to the visitor center. Another 2 miles to the trail head then another 4.3 miles to the James Irvine trail and about another 0.3 to the visitor center.
This is one gnarly tree
This trail starts out up hill as we have to climb back up to the height we were on before descending into Fern Canyon.  The Miners Ridge trail is on the other side of the canyon from the James Irvine trail that we hiked in on and will eventually join back into close to the visitor center. I didn't think that this side was a spectacular as the James Irvine trial, but still very enjoyable.  We only took a few pictures on this trail, because there wasn't much more to add than we saw on the James Irvine Trail.



Happy Birthday Joe!!!!!
(June 5)




2 comments:

  1. Happy Belated Birthday Joe!! Miss you guys but it looks like you are living the dream!! :)

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    1. Thank you for being one of three people to remember my birthday. Hope everyone is doing good at the D.P.G. as we are both in hiking heaven except for all the SNOW hiking we have had to do lately as summer NEVER seems to happen around here! At least it is summer in Yuma so look at all my snow pictures and APPRECIATE the 105 deg. you have. We are ecstatic when the temperature hits 70.

      Thanks again, Mean Ol Joe

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