Sunday, August 31, 2008
Samuel P. Taylor Hike (September 2) Preview
Directions: Take Sir Francis Drake Blvd. to the main entrance of Samuel P. Taylor State Park. 35 minutes from COM. Restrooms at trailhead and at lunch.
Enjoy the cool weather today (Sunday). The National Weather Service is forecast more hot weather for Marin beginning on Monday (Labor Day) and continuing through Thursday. Tuesday's forecast for Forest Knolls, just east of the park, is sunny, with a high near 95, and west northwest wind between 5 and 11 mph. (Click here for a updated forecast). Hopefully, we'll have a lot of shade on these walks.
Martins' book, Hiking Marin, shows the hike to the Pioneer Tree and the trails on both sides of the park:
(Click here to view and print out a complete description of the hike and map from Martins' book. If you have Adobe Acrobat Reader on your computer you can print the document. Once you see the document on the "Scribd" Web site, click on the "Download" icon and then on the "PDF" icon to open the document on your computer).
Wednesday, August 27, 2008
What We Saw on The Dogtown to Five Brooks Hike (August 26)
FLOWERS
White: YAMPAH
Purple: giant coastal hedge nettle
Orange: poppies, Crocosmia (not native)
BUTTERFLIES:
Satyr comma (aka satyr anglewings, host plant stinging nettles), buckeye (not netted, one host plant is English plantain), California ringlets, Mylitta crescents (host plant thistles, not netted)
TREES
Bay trees have bay nuts, BOX ELDER (aka ashleaf maple) which is common in the eastern half of the US from Texas to Canada, hazel with catkins, red alder (same family at birch, different genus), English hawthorn with berries
MISC PLANTS
Native blackberry, Armenian blackberry, stinging nettles, horsetails, huckleberries, thimbleberry leaves (no berries), blue elderberry
FERNS
Chain, lady, bracken
SPIDERS
Condominium spiders (aka labyrinth spiders), one with Multi-color Asian Lady Beetle (Harmonia axyridis) in web
BIRDS
Heard: wrentit, osprey
Saw: winter wren, scrub jays, CA quail, chestnut-back chickadee, song sparrow (only seen by Karen)
(Click here if you want to view and print a copy of this list. If you have Adobe Acrobat Reader on your computer you can print the document. Once you see the document on the "Scribd" Web site, click on the "Download" icon and then on the "PDF" icon to open the document on your computer).
Sunday, August 24, 2008
Olema Valley "Final Exam" Shuttle Hike (August 26) Preview
Meet at Five Brooks and we’ll carpool to the bottom of the McCurdy trail near Dogtown. We’ll hike 5.5 miles back to Five Brooks on the Olema Valley trail. Mostly level, less than 500’ elevation gain. SHUTTLE HIKE, so please call or email if you want to do it. Bring a snack as lunch will be on the late side. We’ll head over to Bear Valley to enjoy our gourmet feast.
Meet at St. Rita’s at 8:50 to carpool.
As of Sunday evening, the National Weather Service forecast for Olema on Tuesday is for sunny skies with a high near 71 and northwest winds between 9 and 14 mph. (However, it looks like we're in an overall warming trend this week, so don't be surprised if the temperatures are a bit higher than predicted. As usual when heading toward the coast, bring a warm top and jacket in case the fog rolls in and stays in, but expect to sweat if it doesn't! Click here for an updated forecast).
Here's how the Martin's book, Hiking Marin, describes this hike:
(Click here to view and print the hike description and map. If you have Adobe Acrobat Reader on your computer you can print the document. Once you see the document on the "Scribd" Web site, click on the "Download" icon and then on the "PDF" icon to open the document on your computer).
Thursday, August 21, 2008
Up High and Down Low on the Muir Woods Hike (August 19)
As we climbed towards the ridgeline, we passed first through a forest of bay trees and ferns, then into the open chaparral (with lots of large spider webs flecked with dew-drops), through Douglas firs taking over from the Coyote Bush, through darker groves of Redwoods, and back into a forest of firs. We reached the junction of the Dipsea and Ben Johnson trails after about an hour and a half and took advantage of this relatively level spot for an earlier-than-usual-when-hiking-with-Wendy lunch break.
It was all downhill after lunch as we descended switchbacks on the Ben Johnson leading steeply into Muir Woods National Monument. After about an hour we began to encounter a few tourists, then more, and then many as we reached Redwood Creek at the bottom of the trail. We covered the four miles of this route in about 3 and half hours, arriving back at our cars a little earlier than expected. While the parking lot had been nearly empty (except for our vehicles) at the beginning of the hike, it we nearly overflowing with visitors hunting for a place to park by the time we pulled out and headed for home (or for two of us, to the "Bella Ciao" gelateria in the Corte Madera Town Center).
Pictures from the hike can be viewed on the "Meandering" blog or by clicking here.
Next week: Our "summer quarter" ends with the "Final Exam" hike from Dogtown to Five Brooks on the Olema Valley trail.
What We Saw on The Muir Woods Walk (August 19)
TREES
Bay with nuts, buckeye with small buckeyes, hazel, redwood, Douglas fir
FERNS
Sword, bracken, wood, lady, chain
GALLS
Coyote brush bud gall midge, Baccharis stem gall moth (Baccharis is the genus of coyote bush)
OTHER PLANTS
Elk clover (getting berries, not edible for people), thimbleberry (no berries), huckleberry, elderberry, redwood sorrel (drooping when in the sun), ocean spray (blossoms dried up), bearberry (aka native blackberry, no berries), CA manroot.. Leaves of: Clinonia, Pacific star flower, fairy bells, trillium.
FLOWERS
Sticky monkeyflower, tarweed, Clematis (at entrance)
SPIDER
Araneus (orb weaver that stays in retreat at attachment point of web), labyrinth spider (orb and tangle), spider in retreat in center of tangle.
FUNGI
FIRST OYSTER MUSHROOMS!
LICHEN
Usnea arizonica (old man’s beard with apothecea like a child’s drawing of the sun), Parmotrema (with black “eyelashes” on the margins)
(Click here if you want to view and print a copy of this list. If you have Adobe Acrobat Reader on your computer you can print the document. Once you see the document on the "Scribd" Web site, click on the "Download" icon and then on the "PDF" icon to open the document on your computer).
Monday, August 18, 2008
Muir Woods "Scouting" Hike (August 19) Preview
To get to Muir Woods, exit Highway 101 at the Mill Valley/Stinson Beach exit. Turn left (west) onto Shoreline Highway, then right on Panoramic Highway and left onto Muir Woods Road.
The National Weather Service forecast for Mill Valley on Tuesday is patchy fog before 11 am. Otherwise, cloudy, then gradually becoming mostly sunny, with a high near 72. West wind between 9 and 13 mph. (Click here for an updated forecast).
Tracy Salcedo-Chourre's book, Exploring Point Reyes National Seashore and Golden Gate National Recreation Area proposes hiking this route in the reverse direction (up the Ben Johnson, down the Dipsea) from our plan, but will at least give you an idea of what our hike will be like. Here's the trail map:
(Click here to view and print out a complete description of the hike and map from Tracy's book. If you have Adobe Acrobat Reader on your computer you can print the document. Once you see the document on the "Scribd" Web site, click on the "Download" icon and then on the "PDF" icon to open the document on your computer).
Here's a bit of local history from our "It's A Small World" department to go along with the flora (and maybe fauna) that we might see on this hike:
Muir Woods National Monument was created by President Theodore Roosevelt in 1908 after Congressman William Kent and his wife, Elizabeth Thacher Kent, donated 295 to the federal government and requested that the land be named for conservationist John Muir. Muir, of course, founded the Sierra Club.
Nearly 70 years later, other Sierra Club members and local conservationists Ed Wayburn and Amy Meyer (a long-time friend of Tuesday Meanderer Dick Jordan) formed People for a Golden Gate National Recreation Area (PFGGNRA) to promote the creation of a large, urban federal parkland running north and south of the Golden Gate. The Sierra Club sent a young college student, Mia Monroe, off to work as Amy's secretary at the PFGGNRA "office" (a corner of the kitchen in Amy's San Francisco home).
Today, Muir Woods National Monument is part of the GGNRA and is celebrating its 100th anniversary. And 30 years after she worked for the establishment and expansion of the park as a secretary at PFGGNRA, Mia Monroe is the park supervisor for Muir Woods. (To learn more about the creation of the GGNRA, read Amy Meyer's recent book, New Guardians for the Golden Gate: How America Got a Great National Park, available through Book Passage in Corte Madera. You'll even find Dick Jordan mentioned at page 227!).
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
12th Annual Black Mountain Hike (October 25th)
MALT's Fall 2008 newsletter describes the hike as "Difficult" (steep terrain and/or over five miles) with a 1200' elevation gain, but with spectacular views that will make it worth the effort. Carpooling is required. Meet at the West Marin School, 11550 Highway One (1/4 mile north of Point Reyes Station) by 10 a.m., and bring lunch, water, and wear your hiking boots. The hike is scheduled to end around 2 p.m.
A Walk In the Woods --- Bolinas Ridge to Randall (August 12th)
Fog hung over the southern half of the Olema Valley as we all piled into Wendy's car for the drive to the Bolinas Ridge trailhead, but we were soon above the marine layer and back into the sun. For most of the first couple of hours of the hike we merely strolled on a level fire road through shady groves of second growth redwoods, occasionally finding ourselves huffing and puffing uphill on a hot, exposed chaparral-lined trail before re-entering the forest. We paused now and and then to stuff our faces with huckleberries growing along the fire road.
By 12:30 we had hiked 3.4 miles to the intersection with the McCurdy trail leading down the ridge into the Olema Valley, and decided to take our lunch break in the shade. National Park Service fire crews engaged in "fuel clearing" along Bolinas Ridge had thoughtfully ground limbs and bark into a nice bed of soft chips for us to rest on bones on while partaking of our midday meal. (About an hour later we passed this crew hard at work).
After meandering along the ridge for a little more than five miles, we passed around the stock gate marking the Randall trail and turned west, slowing snaking our way down the 1.5 miles back to where we'd left the cars parked on Highway 1. Near the end of the trek we encountered a few cattle "hiking" upwards in search of tasty eats.
Except for the fire crew, we saw no other people, one little rodent (spotted by Wendy), a few butterflies, some birds, but no flowers to speak off (although lots of green plants, ferns, and trees).
What We Saw on The Bolinas Ridge/Randall Trail Hike (August 12)
GALLS
Chinquapin Flower Gall, Dryocosmus castanopsidis – red gall on chinquapin flowers, made by a wasp.
FLOWERS
Chapparral pea flower still blooming, sticky monkeyflower, Crocosmia (non-native orange flower in Iris family)
LEAVES OF FLOWERS THAT FINISHED BLOOMING
Clintonia (some with a few blue berries), salal, rattlesnake plantain (an orchid, not a plantain – go figure!), Trillium, thimbleberry, salal, coralroot, trail plant, ground iris, pitcher sage, fairy bells, Pacific star flower, fetid adder’s tongue, California blackberry, redwood evergreen violet
BERRIES
LOTS of huckleberries, coffee berries (some ripe, some red), manzanita berries, unripe (green) honeysuckle, poison oak berries, ripe blue elderberries
FERNS
Lady fern, bracken, sword fern
SHRUBS
SHATTERBERRY (manzanita with hairs on stem), and two species of Ceanothus - INDIGO BUSH, Blue Blosson
TREES
Madrone, tan oak (very light new leaves), redwood, Douglas fir, interior live oak (both toothed and smooth margined leaves on the same tree, acorn shaped like coast live oak, but with cap coming down further on nut)
BUTTERFLIES
California ringlet, American lady (larval food cudweeds)
BIRDS
Saw: Dark-eyed juncos, osprey, brown creeper, glimpse of a Swainson’s thrush (Wendy and Susan), glimpse of a winter wren
Heard: Red-breasted nuthatch, wrentit
POOP
Raccoon tracks and scat.
(Click here if you want to view and print a copy of this list. If you have Adobe Acrobat Reader on your computer you can print the document. Once you see the document on the "Scribd" Web site, click on the "Download" icon and then on the "PDF" icon to open the document on your computer).
Monday, August 11, 2008
Bolinas Ridge To Randall Trail Shuttle Hike (August 12) Preview
Directions: We’ll meet on Route One at the bottom of Randall Trail which is about 3 miles north of Dogtown and about 3 miles south of Five Brooks. (The Point Reyes National Seashore says to allow 15 minutes for the drive from the Bear Valley Visitor Center, and that it is just under 6 miles from the intersection of Highway 1 and Sir Francis Drake at Olema south to the Randall trailhead. Park in one of the large dirt pullouts on either side of the road. The Park Service notes that the sign for the Randall Trail is aligned parallel to Highway 1 on the east side of the road and can easily be missed). From the Randall trailhead we’ll carpool up the Bolinas-Fairfax Road to Ridgecrest Boulevard and hike along Bolinas Ridge Fire Road and then down the Randall Trail to Highway 1.
The National Weather Service forecast for Tuesday at Olema is patchy fog before 11 am. Otherwise, cloudy through mid morning, then gradual clearing, with a high near 69. West northwest wind between 5 and 13 mph. Weather higher up on the ridge could be warmer. (Click here for an updated forecast).
None of Dick Jordan's hiking books describe this hike, but you can find the Fairfax-Bolinas Road, Bolinas Ridge Fireroad, and the Randall Trail in the bottom right-hand section of the park map shown below in this post on the "Meandering" blog. (Use the plus-sign button under the drop-down arrow button to enlarge the map for easier reading):
(Click here to view and print a copy of the map. If you have Adobe Acrobat Reader on your computer you can print the document. Once you see the document on the "Scribd" Web site, click on the "Download" icon and then on the "PDF" icon to open the document on your computer).
Monday, August 4, 2008
Sign Up Now For Fall 2008 Tuesday "Meandering"!
- September 2nd - Samuel P. Taylor St. Park (hike to the Pioneer Tree)
- September 9 - Tomales Point, Point Reyes National Seashore
- September 16 - Eat Peak, Mount Tamalpais State Park
- September 23 - Mount Barnabe, Samuel P. Taylor State Park
- September 30 - Mountain Home, Mt. Tamalpais State Park
- October 7 - Bootjack, Mount Tamalpais State Park
- October 14 - "Final Exam" Hike/Lunch, Tennessee Valley, GGNRA