Coastal Trail Tey-wo-lew section

Redwood National Park


Click for map.

The California Coastal Trail is a long trail in the making. Unlike the "Pacific Crest", it goes through areas where people crowd in, so it might forever be in the making. It also has an awful lot of road hiking, but maybe less so in the north. This part is a mostly abandoned piece of the Coastal Drive that is about 3 miles from gate to gate. It seems likely to be a lovely bluff top excursion through the trees above the roaring surf. Also quite easy.

blocked road
The start of the restricted section of road. Hikers and bicycles only, no dogs or horses.

It is foggy and it is paved, although the paving is inconsistent. It does look like someone gets to use this road. Coming to a turnout, it is clear that this road was built for public use. On the left edge, there is an interpretive sign. The surface has nearly become a uniform yellow from age, but it can still be read. I stop for a moment to learn about the beach below and how gold has been found on it and various attempts to collect it on an industrial scale were made but never paid off. Jeff will come by a little later and read it too and be appalled by the thought of anyone using mercury so close to the ocean. Stand beside the ocean and it will tell you that it is infinite and powerful. All that goes into it is lost forever unless the ocean itself chooses to give it back. Of course, this is bluster, but humans used to believe it.

large tree with many branches barely visible in the fog
There seem to be monsters in the mist!

small parking area with a sign
Turnout on the side of the mostly abandoned road. Almost lost in the vegetation on the left is the brown edge of an informative sign.

The turnout is clearly meant as a lookout as well. Surely the beach it refers to is stretched out below. As I look out, the cliffs simply vanish into the fog maybe as much as halfway down. I can hear the surf below crashing against rocks and cliff, but there is not even the slightest visual clue of its reality.

nothing but a fading tree
All kinds of nothing out there.

So I have to pay attention to the things closer at hand although I can often hear the surf below. There is a little more visibility along the road.

leafy succulent in the grasses
A cluster of leafiness from a small succulent.

trees around, brush abound
A fair bit of plant diversity looking down the road.

Then I spot the banana slugs. And more banana slugs. Actually, they are quite hard to miss. They are in the road and on the leaves on the side and there may be more than I have ever seen before in a single area. Oh, and they appear to think there are not enough so they are making more banana slugs.

pair of banana slugs paired off
One pair of banana slugs. They all seem to have holes in their sides indicating they have mated.

banana slugs parting
Another pair of banana slugs as they part.

The banana slugs thin out and vanish as the vegetation changes and I have another chance to see nothing below. The churn of the surf still assures me that there is a below and it contains the ocean.

open space
Looking back over a more open area of road.

alder and conifer surrounded by ferns
Back to more forest with a thick coating of ferns.

tuft of purple flowers around a barrel shaped center
Some flowers with a sage look. I should have given the leaves a sniff.

The road turns slightly away from the bluff edge and hits a gate meant only to block vehicles. A thin trail continues along the bluff, but I am not certain if it is official. My map does not indicate there is any intersection to worry about along this trail. A sign to the side of the gate does not actually forbid entry, but it does identify the land as state prison property and warns that all who enter may be subject to search. I think I will take the thin trail instead. Upon greater reflection, the thick growth around it does seem to be coming from a wide, flat area as though this, too, is old road bed. Its abandonment is simply more complete than the previous section.

gated road
Never mind. Especially if you are going to forbid cameras.

thin trail in undergrowth
Finally it looks a bit like trail.

Nature pushes in just a little bit further along this section. There are even more banana slugs along the way, some trying to get stepped on.

pine cones
The pine cones hanging overhead change from male to female toward the end of the branch.

thick cluster of white flowers
Lots of delicate white flowers that are themselves composed of more little flowers.

blackberry flowers and fruit
Blackberries from flower to ripe fruit. 'Tis the season and quite a few have been eaten this trip.

purple flowers with bell shapes hanging in a column showing spots on their inside
These put me in the mind of an escaped flower garden plant, but they probably grow wild somewhere. Maybe it is here.

sign for a bump
Ah, ha! So this is still a bit of road.

Gradually the road looks less abandoned. There is a small turnout with a thin trail heading out onto the bluff from it. This looks too well used to ignore, so I start down it. It pops over a little rise becoming enveloped in the green and starts down with enthusiasm. I would really like to go down it as it seems to be heading for the beach just north of Split Rock, but I also had a time to finish which leaves no time for casual excursions down more than 400 feet of bluff.

thin trail
A thin, but clearly used, trail down from the road. It appears to go down the bluff quite a ways. The map also shows a headland (Split Rock) with a benchmark and a section corner.

vanishing white line down the middle of vanishing pavement
A little bit of the lining for the road, done in white. It might have been one way or it might just be that old.

There is a road above me and then a gate. End of the line. I asked to be picked up at the High Bluff Overlook, so I have a little bit of road walking to finish up. It is all very much downhill, then the coastal drive continues (one way going north) to the right and there is a big parking lot with bathrooms and picnic tables a little further down to the left. I have to go out past the picnic tables to see if maybe I might finally find a bit of ocean.

another gate with a sign for miles
The end of my protected hike and bicycle only roadway.

churning water in the fog
Finally, I can see the ocean!

After finally confirming that there is an ocean, I watch it for a bit, then wander over to the actual overlook which goes off a trail out the north end of the parking lot. This drops down a little more to an area that appears to have been flattened out at some point. The sign by the lot indicates there is beach access, but the only marking for it is another sign saying it is closed and dangerous. But there really is a beach to look out over.

black sands below
The beach below the overlook.

Then it is time to head off for new adventures.




©2017 Valerie Norton
Posted 9 September 2017

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Comments

Valerie Norton said…
After checking on the benchmark I found, I could not help noticing that the reach (written 1939) states, "THE STATION IS BEST REACHED BY TAKING THE HIGHWAY 101 S FROM THE TOWN OF KLAMATH TO THE POINT WHERE IT REACHES THE COAST LINE." Perusing the current maps makes this seem nonsensical, but on the one from 1945, highway 101 came across the river on a different bridge, took a diagonal to the coast, then turned south. Part of the bridge still stands on this side of the river and is still guarded by bears similar to the ones that guard the current bridge. They might be a little smaller; they are certainly less gold. From there, the left side of the fork heading southwest is the old highway. It came down to near High Bluff and went along the route I took north. The bridge was destroyed in 1964 and the highway followed its current route by 1966. That is not when it was gated as it did become Coastal Drive. It was still marked as a secondary highway in 1997. I'm a little suspicious that the decay of it has been happening for a maximum of 20 years, but that is what the maps indicate. Since it is old US-101, there is likely a more exhaustive history somewhere on the internet for those more deeply interested.
Anonymous said…
The purple-flowered 'sage' is Self-Heal (Prunella vulgaris). It's in the group of things called 'mints' (which doesn't include garden mint and similar plants), and that group is in the same family of plants that sage is a member of.

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