Big Tree and the Rhododendron Trail to Brown Creek
Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park
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I decided I wanted to do the Rhododendron Trail entirely, and up the California Real Estate Association Trail (CREA Trail), and connect the loop via Prairie Creek Trail (now called Karl Knapp Trail) and Big Tree and Cathedral Trees even though the rhododendrons are long gone now. Maybe I'd get to see more of those various parasitic flowers? I really only expected the ghost pipes to still be around in some form, but the others I have found in the area are not such long shots at this time either. All of this encompasses a length much further than I really wanted to go, but I've gotten it into my head that CREA is important to seeing the strange flowers as they seem more abundant along its little trod length. I've done something similar before, when they foolishly closed off parking in the park due to Covid starting. My legs didn't fall off. My feet weren't worn to stumps.
I started at Big Tree. The trailhead has the park's usual signs with detailed maps, except here they come in two layers. The first details the whole park and shows the single big loop of trail and road where bicycles are allowed. The second shows the local area in much better detail. There's a few extra trails at this spot. I noted Foothill and Cathedral Trees, the second being the important one to me at the moment. I didn't note the tiny Circle Trail.
So when a trail curved off to the left of what I thought was my trail, but it could well be the other way around, I got confused. So I got out the handheld and asked it for a map, which it refused to draw. It looks like when I swapped the memory card for a known good one, it didn't fix the problem that the card keeps becoming inaccessible. I rebooted and had to reset some settings and got it to work, but that puts the handheld on the might-be-wise-to-replace list. Also, it would have taken less time to wander around the tiny Circle Trail and get right back where I started and know I needed the right side trail for sure.
The trail quickly becomes covered in big roots, notable after the paving and then smooth gravel. It jogs to the left as it crosses Cal Barrel Road. The old trail has a sheltered bench beside the giant tree that came down across it to force that jog. Brush and branches resting on that log provide the rest of the shelter, leaving plenty of room to stand because this was near the base of one of the bigger trees. No wonder they decided to go around.
A smaller trail breaks off at a sharp curve of Cathedral Trees Trail with a sign a few steps down. The start of the Rhododendron Trail marks it as lesser used.
The climb is easy and the temperature was not particularly warm, but the air felt oppressive all the same. Humid and overcast, but with brief patches of blue somewhere above the canopy. My lens didn't like it either and fogged over every time I capped it. Once it was only capped a few seconds and had clouded up again!
The first part of the trail takes an awkward loop around another huge downed tree before ending at Cal Barrel Road just short of its end. Keep on climbing to find more trail.
Not far along the next section of the Rhododendron Trail, I found a stand of ghost pipes. Little pink remains in them at this time. They actually seemed faintly blue to me as I pondered their tubularity.
As the day wore on, the weather improved and the air no longer felt oppressive. The lens stopped insta-fogging.
I stopped by some red huckleberries and ate a while, then taste tested some of those berries as I passed more along the trail.
Seeing the ghost pipes already and only really expecting to see ghost pipes, I allowed myself to shorten the hike from the one I didn't really want to do anyway. But I wasn't going to go down South Fork Trail. It's steep. I don't like it. Brown Creek Trail is much better. I did go ahead and wander the flat bit at the top, though. I remember finding ghost pipes along there once. I didn't spot them this time.
Less remembered, the Rhododendron Trail also sheds some feet quickly, at least at first. Down I went, past one bench. I stopped for a while at a second simply because it has a very excellent view out over some big stream watered redwoods.
A pair of hikers, the middle two of four hikers I saw while not at Big Tree and experiencing its crowds, came by. They assured me that I was about to follow the best trail in the park. I'm not sure how many of the trails they've experienced given that they were speaking something Germanic amongst themselves and the fact there is a choice of trails up ahead. They meant Brown Creek Trail.
Fallen flowers alerted me to a late blooming rhododendron. There were a couple others fallen, but this one still held a few flowers aloft. The rhododendrons are not quite long gone after all.
Getting to the junction with Brown Creek, I took a couple extra steps to the short memorial grove trail. It isn't too badly overgrown, but it has been shortened by the falling of a tree far wider than I am tall. Presumably there are memorial plaques or boards beyond, but I've not seen them.
The detour didn't cause much delay before heading down the quickly widening and well used Brown Creek Trail. It probably does sit somewhere very close to the top in a ranking of trails to see the trees in this park. There are some very nice trees along it.
There's a memorial grove loop trail along the way that I decided to wander. It's actually a figure eight lined with numbered and named posts. The numbers suggest there might be a little more to the second loop, behind a huge log. On the other side, a more recently fallen tree crosses the wide valley.
There's a bit more of the Brown Creek Trail after the memorial grove.
There were children shouting down by the road as I got to the junction with Foothill Trail. It was happy shouting, but I was still glad not to be going toward it.
I noticed that the day had become positively pleasant with the sun coming out. It actually felt cooler than in the morning with cloud cover. The trees were doing it. I looked up as if I could see the many gallons of water coursing toward the leaves that were turning it and carbon dioxide into sugar to become cellulose to add a few grams to the many tons of tree already there. The giants were growing! I could feel it!
The screaming children had found the Big Tree too. I decided it was time to take the rest of the Circle Trail.
They didn't stay long and I arrived at Big Tree in a rare moment when no one was pondering it.
After about nine miles of looping through the trees, I felt good. Hum. I wouldn't want it to get too crowded, though. You don't want to come. It's a green tunnel. Never mind the spaciousness of that tunnel made of old growth building blocks. All you can see is green trees and green undergrowth. Solid green up to 350 feet high.
*photo album*
©2024 Valerie Norton
Written 22 Aug 2024
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