Saturday, March 28, 2009

Southern Del Norte County

I can't decide if the ruggedness of the North Coast is what makes it so beautiful, or just what keeps it so beautiful. While I'd love to have a condo with this view, I love even more that it's not possible. About the only "improvement" this terrain will allow is the California Coastal Trail, and it is from this trail (somewhere between Requa, at the mouth of the Klamath River, and Hidden Beach, near False Klamath Rock) that this picture was snapped. This was a tough day of hiking (for me), a spur-of-the-moment decision that brought a lot of climbing and scrambling over perhaps 8 miles with it, but it was one of the most rewarding walks I've ever taken. I look forward to revisiting this trail soon.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Goin' to the Sun

This photo was taken at sunset on the Summer Solstice at Gold Bluffs Beach. Gold Bluffs Beach is such a beautiful place. There's a non-descript campground there (which seemed to be hosting some kind of hippie event when I was there), and it's two or three forested miles from the highway, so it's as peaceful as the campers will allow it to be. The beach is very, very wide, and a very relaxing if somewhat chilly place to spend the Solstice. Plus it's a short walk to two trailheads that lead back through the forest, one beginning at Fern Canyon, which I will feature later if I can find a good photo.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Eureka!

There's a lot more Eurekas than I'd have ever guessed. In the US alone, towns or townships in 17 states, plus Eureka Springs, AR. Eureka, IL, is the site of Eureka College, Ronald Reagan's alma mater. Eureka, MO, is home to a Six Flags Theme Park and is next to the now-forgotten Times Beach Superfund site. Eureka, MT, formerly a stop on the Burlington's Empire Builder, until the Flathead Tunnel cut it off. Eureka, NV, "the friendliest town on the loneliest road in America," and (according to Wikipedia), with a population of 650, "by far the larger of the 2 towns in Eureka County."

I should try to design a route from here to Eureka (CA) that connects all of the Eurekas between here and there. I could go just about due west through Eurekas in Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, Kansas, Utah, and Nevada, or take a more northerly route through Eureka Twp. Michigan, Eureka Wisconsin, Eureka Twp. Iowa, and Eurekas in South Dakota and Montana.

I could even visit Eureka, Nunavut, the "second-northernmost permanent research community in the world" (Wikipedia) where the highest temperature ever recorded was 68°F, en route to Eureka, California (where the highest temperature ever recorded was 87°F).

All of that is merely to announce that I'm going to post some of the pictures I took on a recent trip to the Redwood Empire. These were taken at a variety of places between Eureka and Crescent City. Today's photo is of a grazing elk in the tidal marshes near Gold Bluffs Beach and Fern Canyon in Prairie Creek Redwoods State and National Park, about 50 miles north of Eureka. (By the way, did you know that you can click on any photo to see a greatly enlarged version?)