Humboldt Bay South Spit

Table Bluff County Park

South Spit Wildlife Area (CDFW)

Humboldt Bay National Wildlife Refuge


(Map link.)

I headed out to the Ocean Ranch Unit of the Eel River Wildlife Area to hike the little bit of old road and levee, making various stops by the waters and looping back along the beach to see what the storms have washed up. That was all very well and good, but as I got there, I saw three diggers hanging out by the ranch and a great big closed sign. It is "closed due to a restoration project until rain and weather shut down operations." I was left with my "rest of the day" plan, which was find things to do on the South Spit. The Ocean Ranch has very little trail, but the spit has even less. My first stop became the parking lot that is the entirety of the Table Bluff County Park that the public may visit. From there, I could check out what was up, at least.

00: dunes behind the block
The road behind the dunes is blocked for the restoration work.

I crossed over to the access road on a small trail and headed down to the beach, then turned south. The beach was full of drift wood up to whole trees, mostly thrown high up above the waveslope where it got stuck. The lower areas were swept nearly clean again by the waves going out.

01: water rolling in
There's a bit of a roar coming from the ocean.

03: cleaner waveslope
There's a lot more trees high on the beach than usual, but the waveslope is fairly clear. At least two more access points for drivers on the beach are open, so there's tracks.

04: lots of fluttering wings
Long lines of geese forming a little after takeoff.

I popped up into the dunes to look out over the waterways to see what I was missing bird-wise. I found where some controlled burn had been used on the invasive marram grass, but was still too far to see the water. I went a little further and found a good spot to look out.

06: foam filled metal tube
Puzzling over the not-tree among the debris.

08: couple different sorts of clouds over the hills surrounding the Eel River
It would have been a pretty day for it.

11: heavy equipment in the distance
The diggers near the barn (or where it was) sit still. The waters appear to be rather still, too, from here.

I continued a little way south along the beach, but it had very much been a secondary thought to roaming the flats. I didn't go far before turning around.

15:lots of high debris looking south
Rough beach, smooth beach.

Knowing I was heading toward a trash can, I picked up those things that don't belong on the beach on my way back. There were a few people sitting out on the logs watching the waves, perhaps looking for whales. (They should be out there once in a while.) I dropped off the trash and headed on down to another parking area along the sandspit.



There are a number of spur roads off the South Jetty Road that extend toward the bay for hunting access. The signs near them suggest they're not for driving your truck down, but that's clearly what happens. I stopped at a parking area near one about a third of the way along.

17: pavement into the mist
The South Jetty Road is generally paved on its way.

I followed the road down to the bay. I turned south and walked on the water rolled eel grass along the edge, disturbing some ravens in the process.

18: swampy excursions of the water from the edge of the bay
You just can't trust the edge of the bay to be travelable.

19: more consistant edge
To the south, it was like a basic lake shore.

21: more marshy water inlets
Got to retreat from the shore and the marshy stuff.

I headed inland and pondered the plants. A few of them headline in the list of species to control over at Ocean Ranch. A few are native.

22: natives in bloom or past
The Pacific glasswort (red stalks with joints) is past the bloom, I think, but the marsh jaumea is getting started.

23: line of birds on the water
More geese forming lines.

25: tall triangles tinged in red
The saltbush is all leaves and seeds along the ground.

27: bay and cliffs and fields
Table Bluff across the bay.

I came back up to the road near one of the access corridors to drive on the waveslope, so followed it to the beach again.

28: chunks of trees on sand with huge foam patchs
The foam was extraordinary in tall clumps.

29: huge star of wood
Had to check out the former root system of a large redwood. It was also fun to watch the waves push around the large tree round obscured by the right hand roots.

I returned through the dunes, stopping by a geocache. It's one of a very few I've signed this year.



I stopped at the current end of the road. The jetty itself is closed for repairs although there was no work being done at the moment. I headed away from the motionless heavy equipment toward the east point. The state of the road makes me suspect that this might not have been okay if work were on.

35: big tree and robot
The cypress at the eastern point and a robot piece of art (*not actually art) in the bay.

37: beach, rock bar, then the other sandspit
Looking across the jetty to the larger north spit.

39: random hills
There are some high points beside the bay, like Buhne Point on the far left.

Walking the beach was too much for many of the pelicans, which took flight. Many of those just circled right back around to settle again.


41: pelicans take off
There the pelicans go.

44: grooming pelicans
Pelicans living the pelican life, itchy or grooming.

I stopped by the tree and it's swing, then found my way to the road again. I turned left to continue along it, but had circled around the end and that just brought me back to where I started.



I spotted a small trail heading to the bay and parked quickly to check it out. Perhaps I should have checked out one of the official ones, but this was getting close to some interesting features.

45: grassy sandspit
The spit at a wide point.

The trail was quite small near the road, but wide and well established further along.

46: wide cut through the grasses
Following the well established trail to the natural canals.

47: pools and connections
The waterways near the bay.

The trail seemed to divide as it got near the bay, but turning toward some spots where tree sized driftwood landed in particularly bad weather, I was able to get to a spot where a waterway splits one last piece of land from the main body of sand.

50: bleached wood with ferns
The driftwood supports a different biome than the surrounding sand.

51: snail with a band of color
A snail seems like an odd find out here in the salt.

52: green powder
Lichen fills in the upper surface of another, hollow log.

53: canal and table lands
It all sits a foot or two above the bay.

I headed back, getting my feet a little moist.



It was getting late, but the gate doesn't close until an hour after sunset and the posted time was 7:45PM, which was actually a bit later, so I parked again at the county park and crossed the road to see where an illegal track road I'd seen might go. It felt like it was getting into the bottom-lands where the trees grow as I walked it.

56: pointed horns and a bib
A buck alerts in the sunset. Deer sign can be found all over the sandspit, not just by the trees.

Then it turned and in quick order I was right back on the main road. I walked back along the pavement.

59: bushes, trees, table-lands
South from the road, layers in the gathering mists are bushes, trees, and Table Bluff.

It was right at sunset according to my GPS, but the colors of the display had already gone ten minutes before. The actual experienced sunset came when it dropped behind the cloud bank out on the ocean.



I made one more stop at the top of the bluffs to look out over the South Spit. The gathering gloom from fog and dark didn't help, but I could find a spot beside where the old road used to go down to see the oddities of the bay side of the land.

60: overview of the sandspit
The sandspit, from bay to shining sea. The road is toward the left and seems to cut the dunes from the flats.

61: waterways and line of islands
A better view of the waterways and a line of islands that must have been a levee once, for whatever purpose.


*photo album*




©2021 Valerie Norton
Written 1 Nov 2021


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Comments

Unknown said…
Beautiful pictures* I will always love visiting the Humbolt County areašŸ’‹ Seeing the landscapes over and over will never get old, its so peaceful*
Wayne W Walls said…
That foam on the beach looked a lot like snow. Until I read the caption that explained it was foam, I thought there was random snow on that beach, haha!
Valerie Norton said…
That was definitely the best sea foam I've come across for a while!

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