Dry Lagoon and Stone Lagoon, California Coastal Trail explorations

Humboldt Lagoons State Park



Click for map.


I was thinking I might try to write up a guide to hiking the California Coastal Trail through the Redwood National and State Parks, where quite a lot of it actually is trail. Then I reflected how much better I knew the southern parts of that especially as I found out there's a little trail before getting to Crescent City north of the Last Chance Section. Then I realized that there are parks nearby to the south of the redwood ones and... where does it go there? It only gets the briefest thought on the Patrick's Point State Park map, out on Agate Beach. It is actually marked on the Humboldt Lagoon State Park map, but with holes. Mostly it follows along the sand spits that wall off the lagoons from the ocean. There is one bit of proper trail to get around Sharp Point that I have actually hiked before, albeit in a hurried fashion. The north end of that is one of the holes. I already knew that was real for official trail. There are bits of use trail after, though. Surely someone has pushed their way through? Also, I just really wanted to take the spur trail out to Sharp Point. Finally, I wanted to investigate another hole in their mapped trail south of Dry Lagoon. I found an as hiked track from 2016 that continued along the beach but it looks a bit tight along that rocky shore. From there, it is beach all the way to the Agate Beach Trail at Patrick's Point.

danger sign at the start of the trail
From the Dry Lagoon parking area, the trail starts by the northern "danger" sign and progresses past the picnic tables. There is no sign for the trail itself. The danger is due to "strong backwash, sleeper waves, rip currents" which make swimming unsafe.


The tide was high, about 6.7 feet and it wouldn't get much higher, so I didn't bother to check the segment to the south. I could see lots of splash on the rocks as I made my way north through the sand. Lots of water out in the Dry Lagoon, too. It is winter and it's been wet. I was expecting plenty of mud once I got on the trail, too.

splashing waves on the shore between photo location and a sharp rise of land to a point that hides all further coast
The waves coming up against Sharp Point and the shore south of it.

puddles in the flat
Dry Lagoon is in prime migrating bird stopover shape.


At the first opportunity to climb, the trail starts up into the hills around Sharp Point. There's no sign to mark this, either, but the trail is quite clear. I felt no need to cheat and consult the GPS enabled map at all on this second time hiking it.

nude alders along a dip of land
The trail climbs around away from the surf and into a dip of land in the hills around Sharp Point. There's three spots this invasive pampas grass encroaches on it.


pink blooms
The current has been blooming for a month at least.


It's a nice trail with the vegetation cleared away from the sides. That which is trying to grow back is full of thorns, so I expect it takes a bit of work. There are wooden platforms and trail reinforcements trying to deal with the muddy spots with varying degrees of effectiveness. I was glad to have water resistant shoes on.

skunk cabbage on one side of a stream and salmonberry on the other
Skunk cabbage and a few little purple salmonberry flowers by one stream with an outsized effect on the trail.


As the trail swings around to a south face, there are huge trees mostly of Sitka spruce and the trail is nice and dry. Further around, the drop away again and it is alders and brush. There is the hint of a visual of Stone Lagoon, at least until the spring leaves fill it in. Across a bridge falling into disrepair are more hints. Mostly, it is a bit of a green tunnel.

fat alder in the middle of a view of Stone Lagoon
One of the better winter only views of Stone Lagoon along this section.

ferns rolling out spore producing fronds
The fresh growth of the deer ferns offers orange and red.


At the narrow point of the hills, there is a trail that heads off to the west. This is the trail to Sharp Point. This is not an official trail. Since it was basically high tide, I decided the time to go was then and not later. The vegetation is not cleared back quite so far nor away from the top and there are plenty of logs to go over and around. Once out of the trees, it winds a bit extra getting to the saddle.

well used use trail
This is well used trail, but can't be confused for something official.

green succulents in a rose pattern with red tips
Getting a good close view of the stonecrop often called bluff lettuce. Yeah, that's a little ice plant at the top.


Once out there, I found the trail doesn't just go to Sharp Point but right on up to the top. I took great care in the last few feet of it.

lots of sandy beach and a distant lagoon
North shows lots of sandy beach and a little bit of Stone Lagoon.

more lagoons with hills between
To the south, the parking lot is visible and Big Lagoon beyond.

snow on high mountains and points in the ocean
There's snow out there with enough zoom. The near point with the bright streak is the end of where I wanted to go at Gyon Bluffs. The further point is Mussel Point, the south end of my beach hike including the Skunk Cabbage Section.


I came back down even more carefully to the saddle, which has a pretty good view too. Then I gave in to the temptation to drop down one of the little trails that went on down to the beach on the north side. I found strange things that had been thrown out of the sea about halfway down. I knew they were from the ocean because they had barnacles on them. The bottom third became problematic for travel as my trail just dumped me into a stream and the stream was flowing over a very soft mud. I was down, but there was no going back that way.

short stuff on a hill
A mysterious post buried vertically in the sand marks nothing apparent at the bottom of the hill. This would have been a better place to come down, only disturbing invasive plants at the bottom.


I headed up the beach really hoping finding the trail would work out even though I suspected that doing so would be harder from the beach side than the rest of the trail side. The ocean was rolling some beautiful barrels with its waves.

tubular water
It's totally tubular.

figure on the top of a rock
I ran into a bit more serious photographer with nicer camera on a tripod. He climbed the smaller rock.

hills dropping down to the lagoon
The spot I was hoping to find trail usable in the winter months.


I got to where there should be trail, but the looking could wait. I headed along the sand spit. The narrowest and shortest part is there on the south end and it showed evidence that a few waves had recently been washing right over the top and into the lagoon.

sand spit and lagoon and fisherman
The sandy route between brackish water and salt water. The fisherman in the distance stayed at the lagoon the longest.

sea gull by another barrel wave
The sea gulls would sit on the water floating inward until the waves started breaking by them, then up to settle a little further out.


I spotted the road up on the other side of the lagoon. That is where most visitors come from and where maps indicate hikers have to go, but it looks like the county wants the trail to go up the Gyon Bluffs, so I kept on walking the beach to the end. I didn't spot a trail although it looks like someone might have done it once or twice.

end of the line, waves washing the rocks
There might be passage around the point at a low enough tide. It's getting there.


I found a pair of mystery posts at that end of the beach, but the tall one was no longer so perfectly vertical. They certainly didn't mark any trail up as it was a small cliff. I returned, stopping by the parking area and then walking the trail through the dunes by the lagoon. The sand hills served to mute the waves a bit.

path in the dune vegetation
There is a well established path past the dunes beside the water. It isn't misty in the distance. That's 20% chance of rain.


At the far end of the sandspit, I just found the start of the hills and no trail. Disappointing although expected.

edge of the lagoon
According to OpenStreetMap, the trail should run along the edge of Stone Lagoon. It clearly does not and willows would push a wader away from the edge, but there is a track plunging right into the water.


I followed around the edge looking for something and it didn't take long to find it. Most of the trail was being used to get up on that first little point, but some continued back around the lagoon and it was well enough used to be somewhat established through the blackberries. With blackberries, that does mean a few random branches to push away anyway. Then it was somewhat established through the nettles. I hadn't noticed the nettles and I paused before stepping into them. They stung right through my trousers occasionally.

cypress across a field of nettles
A particularly thick patch of stinging nettles on the way to some cypress trees.


My path get less used, which meant an even thicker field of nettles on the way to some cypress trees. I found someone's shelter, buried deep under a bush, but not much more of trail going around the lagoon. I tried going higher. There was some pretty good trail that way, but I'm pretty sure it's bear trail. The clue is in the bear scat and the way everything that turns off in the direction I wanted to go became bear height in a few feet. Still, it was a tall space I was working through so surely people go that way? If they do, they're fools like me pushing to see what route might be there because it just got to resembling bear trail more and more. After too long of slow moving, I was looking over a little canyon running with water and full of brush that would present a difficult passage. I went a little higher. Going higher seemed to work best. If I go high enough, there's a top and I can go anywhere without actually crossing a brush choked gully. I didn't get that high.

by some trees
Ready to give up. Travel is easier going up under the trees. Not remotely easy, but easier.


I gave up and turned back. I kept trying more direct routes, but eventually just had to go the way I'd come. And then another stalk across the nettles. The stings were already bad enough to keep my mind off thorns even when they were coming at my face. Which is worse? Short pain, but actual injury from thorns or the long pain that usually lacks an actual injury?

trees and branbles
Oh, look, brambles if I try to go more directly. Just follow the trees down to those same cypress at the bottom.


So I headed down the beach back to Sharp Point. With the tide out, I had easy access to the rockfall coming off the point itself. I got up that easily enough , although I did almost lose a hiking pole dropping it down a chimney. It was a lot more stable than the collapsing mud and rock shards I came down. I found paths further up.

minor point of rocks
Past the big rock, there's only my footprints.

loose rocks
Keeping to the rockfall meant leaving less evidence of my passage, so that's really good. Some of the rocks to come up are quite big.

explosed rocky beach
The beach to the south has become quite passable with the low tide.

further rocky beach
The question is, is the beach south of the parking lot passable in this low tide?


Having got to the saddle once more, I had an easy time reconnecting with the trail to follow it around. At the junction, the main trail was blocked by a tree and I let it steer me to the camp without too much thought. I did look over the blocked trail just enough to spot the first trillium of the season next to it.

bleeding heart
The bleeding hearts are out too.


I hadn't explored the camp before, so it was on my list of places to visit. There's a bridge over a small creek and then a campsite. Some sites are better than others, and that one hardly has any room to put a tent. There are six and they all have picnic tables, bear boxes, and an iron fire ring. There's more room in the next two and the last three are practically connected in a triangle. In between is a pit toilet and by the lake is a launch with picnic tables for day use.

launch point with steps
The day use area beside Ryan's Cove and the camp.

campsite under the trees
Campsite #1, which is quite close to #2 and #3.


Explorations complete, I headed back to see about the rest of the trail. There is the first view of Stone Lagoon that won't get blocked by spring foliage, then it starts to drop, gets very soggy with creek water, drops some more and gets very soggy with lagoon water. I almost lost a shoe in the deep mud when I didn't step on the sticks people have tossed down.

view over Stone Lagoon to the sandspit
That view of Stone Lagoon.


I cleared my throat and there was suddenly the noise of a large animal heading the other way. I just missed the bear. Admittedly, turning a corner about 30 feet away on a narrow trail probably isn't the best spot to meet a bear.

bear prints in the mud
I see where the bear turned and ran. There's a reason for those bear boxes.

bright yellow bract around flowers
The soggy trail had lots of skunk cabbage and that was blooming. This one really is blooming. I suppose it does smell a bit, but nothing so bad as skunk.

right into the lagoon
There goes the trail, into the lagoon as expected.


I tried the little trails. Sure, a bear had just gone along one, but it was long gone. They break off to try to make a way around frequently, but the one with the best use goes up. I tried up for a bit, but didn't try nearly so hard as on the other side. It was slimming down to a bear trail, mostly. I passed a bit of irrigation tubing which was also making me hesitate to continue. I tried some of the side trails, but they quickly go nowhere. At least there were fewer thorns and no nettles. The nettles I'd already encountered were still making themselves known. They tend to go for about a day.

trees sticking out over the water from above
There certainly looks like no attempt to make the edge passible from the vantage of one of those side trails above it.

tree with bear sign beside the lagoon
Sit and rest and grump a bit. Pay no attention to the bear sign on the tree.


I sat on a log beside the lagoon and snacked. Humboldt Lagoons State Park actually states this trail "washes away" in the winter, but it is clearly just flooding. In the winter, the water table rises around here. (It says so on one of those interpretive signs along Hammond Trail, one about half a mile south of Strawberry Creek. I think there's another copy in Samoa Dunes somewhere.) It's quite a significant rise and leads to pools all around the dunes but I expect it raises the lagoon too. Based on tracks on AllTrails for last year, this trail was finally passable sometime in mid-July and flooded again right at the end of November. That's no more than 5 months of the year it was useable, which is sub-optimal. Just a little bit. Of course changing it would take money and the park has closed the walk-in camp south of the parking lot due to budget constraints, so that's clearly in short supply. (The boat-in/hike-in camp by Ryan's Cove is open and there is a self-pay spot by the visitor center to use it.) I headed back.

misty hills with trees on top
There seem to be more hills on the way back.

under the trees with a hint of distance
Back to the dry trail under that first, larger, denser forest.


Once back to the sand, I headed toward the water. The tide was coming back in, but still not much more than half a foot high. It as minus half a foot at the lowest. I headed for the rocky section south of the lot. There were quite a few people out enjoying it.

footprints in the sand
All kinds of sand and all kinds of footprints.

arch of colors
Now more like 12% chance of rain plus a low sun makes a rainbow at golden hour. I could see the whole arc.

rocks and water
Is it passable? Probably, so long as the waves aren't much and the tide very low.


The park states the trail, which is to say beach, "washes out" in winter here too. This is probably true. For now, it would take a very low tide and a gentle sea and some care over the rocks to cross it. If wading is acceptable, there is a little room without too much care over the rocks. I headed back. It closes at sunset after all.

sun over the ocean
The sun set a couple minutes early behind a distant fog bank.




©2021 Valerie Norton
Written 14 Mar 2021


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Comments

That certainly gives the impression of being one of the most beautiful, wild-feeling stretches of the north coast. Though it looks a bit chilly in March!

The state park says that what we now call Dry Lagoon was drained for agriculture around 1900, but is now being restored. How's it looking?
Valerie Norton said…
Well, in the picture of the trail dropping into Stone Lagoon (about 9 up), the road cut across the lagoon is US-101. It's a relatively quiet stretch, but it's there. There is definitely some wild stuff in there too. Weather was great, I didn't even feel like I needed a windbreaker.

I didn't see any indications of restoration, but maybe I shouldn't. I'm not seeing anything about it online, just references to it as restored. Ponds are usually unstable, filling in over time. Whatever trenching was dug to drain it is probably long gone and winter pools and summer marsh to dry might be its natural state.
Margaret said…
I miss living by ocean. Beautiful pics

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