Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Heart's Desire to Shell Beach Hike Photos Now On-Line!

Pictures taken by Dick Jordan during the Heart's Desire to Shell Beach hike (June 30th) are now on-line.

You can view them in the mini-slideshow window in the "Meandering In Marin On Tuesdays" blog, or by clicking here to go directly to the Picasa Web album of photos from the latest hike. (Albums of photos from our hikes can be accessed by clicking on the links on the right-hand side of the blog).

Sunday, June 28, 2009

Coming Soon to A Computer Near You --- The Meandering in Marin On-Line Store!

Remember those "Mystery Boxes" that were opened at our May 12th Rock Spring "Final Exam" luncheon and contained a "Meandering in Marin" mug and T-shirt? Christina Oldenburg has created a "Meandering in Marin" logo to apply to mugs, shirts, and other items, while Dick Jordan has been busy setting up a "non-profit" on-line store where you can buy these products at cost.

Look for the store's "Grand Opening" in the near future after a few more products have been designed and the site has been "tweaked" a bit.

Made in The Shade - Bear Valley to Five Brooks (June 23)

Our first hike after the "official" start of summer last weekend was indeed a summery outing. Last week we hiked in Palomarin under cloudy skies that kept the temperatures cool enough for us to have an enjoyable trek up the coast and back. The National Weather Service had predicted a comfortable 69 degree high for our walk up the Olema Valley from Bear Valley to Five Brooks, but Mother Nature decided to heat things up by another ten degrees and we could tell when we left the Bear Valley parking lot that we were in for a warm day.

But before we started hiking, we made a rendezvous at Five Brooks to stroll around the little lake near the parking lot to look for dragonflies and damselflies. Wendy managed to snare a couple of these winged marvels in the morning (we'd see many more when we returned to the pond at the end of the hike). Some of us got a quick peek at a male Wood duck (we spotted him again when we got back to Five Brooks in the afternoon). (Click here to read about the flora and fauna we saw when he did this hike last year on May 27th).

About an hour after we met up at Five Brooks, we'd shuttled back to Bear Valley and were making our way across the grassy fields south of the parking lot and on our way down the valley. By then it was warm enough to shed shirts and jackets and turn our zip-off pants into shorts as the summer sun beat down on our heads. Luckily for us, there is a lot of shade along the trail and most of the wide-open areas are located along a 1.5 mile stretch between Bear Valley and the end of the Vedanta Society property which we transited between 10:45 and 11:45 am. An even that section has shady spots here and there.

Last year we did this hike about a month earlier and the grasses in this area were still quite green. But this year most had turned a golden brown. When we crossed the Vedanta Society land, a small herd of Black Angus cattle lolled under a large tree. We saw them in the same place last year. Since they didn't appear to have moved in over a year, maybe they were just specimens from a long-closed bovine wax museum that had been "put out to pasture."

Most of this trail is level or follows a gentle uphill grade so, true to our name, we just meandered along a leisurely pace most of the way. A little under two hours after we started out from Bear Valley we reached a fine open meadow and plopped done in the shade of several large trees to have lunch. (Last year it was cool enough for us to sit out in the full sun in this same spot). Water drains into a nearby low spot creating a damp place where cattails can grow and provide ideal habitat for the many Red-winged Blackbirds that we saw flitting among the reeds.

A little after 1 o'clock we reluctantly gave up lounging around and chatting, threw our packs back on our backs, and headed on to Five Brooks. About 45 minutes later we reached the Stewart Horse Camp. Last year we saw several pickups and horse trailers here, but this time there was just one lone truck and a single horse.

After another 10 minutes of walking we were back at the pond at Five Brooks. The drivers who had left their cars at Bear Valley headed back there to retrieve them while the rest of us went bug and bird watching before settling down at a shaded picnic table near the parking lot to wait for the caravan to return and carry us home.

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Heart's Desire to Shell Beach Hike (June 30) Preview

We continue our summer at the seaside hikes out in West Marin this week, but instead of going to Point Reyes National Seashore, we'll be wandering around Tomales Bay. Here's Wendy's hike description: "Something old and something new! We’ll hike from the parking lot on Pierce Point Road that’s just before the turn to Heart’s Desire to Shell Beach. Last year we enjoyed the ripe huckleberries! Lunch out after the hike in Olema or Point Reyes Station."

THIS IS A SHUTTLE HIKE (CALL OR E-MAIL WENDY IF YOU'RE COMING:
Home: 415 457-3949; E-mail: bdreskin@comcast.net).

Directions to the trailhead: Meet at the Shell Beach parking lot. After you pass Inverness, take a right on Camino del Mar (there’s an inn on your left; it’s just where the road starts going uphill.) Follow it to the parking lot. We’ll carpool from there. (Click here for a Google Map that shows this area; you may have to zoom in and re-center the map to see Camino del Mar).

No restrooms at trailhead; stop at the Bear Valley Visitors Center on the way if you need to powder your nose. Meet at 9:00 am to carpool from St. Rita.

Weather forecast: After a warm weekend in Marin, temperatures will begin to cool off on Monday. The National Weather Service forecast for Inverness on Tuesday, June 30th is patchy fog before 11am. Otherwise, mostly sunny, with a high near 56. (Click here for an updated forecast).

More on this hike: "G15 Pierce Point Road to Shell Beach" in the Martins' book, Hiking Marin, shows the area in which we'll be hiking. The trails are also shown on page 4 of the Tomales Bay State Park brochure. The Google Earth image below shows Heart's Desire and Shell Beaches as seen from the east side of Tomales Bay. (Click on the image to open a larger version in your Web browser).

Bear Valley to Five Brooks Photos Now On-Line!

Pictures taken by Dick Jordan during the Bear Valley to Five Brooks hike (June 23rd) are now on-line.

You can view them in the mini-slideshow window in the "Meandering In Marin On Tuesdays" blog, or by clicking here to go directly to the Picasa Web album of photos from the latest hike. (Albums of photos from our hikes can be accessed by clicking on the links on the right-hand side of the blog).

Monday, June 22, 2009

A Good News and Bad News Hike (Palomarin June 16)

We had good news and bad news on our June 16th hike from Palomarin Trailhead to Bass Lake and back.

The good news was that the sun was shining as we drove south through the Olema Valley to Bolinas. The bad news is that the sun quit shining when we pulled into the parking lot at the trailhead. The good news is that the sun quit shining and the clouds and sea breeze kept us from getting our brains cooked as we hiked along the mostly exposed section of the trail that runs for a mile or so through a brushy area descending downslope towards the coast.

The good news is that Wendy's husband, Bill, a professional nature photographer and artist, came along on the hike. The bad news is that about 2o minutes into the hike, Dick discovered that he had neglected to recharge both of his camera's batteries after our last outing at Abbott's Lagoon two weeks earlier. The good news is that Dick had tossed his cell phone in his pack instead of leaving it in his car, so he could use its camera to take pictures. The bad news is that his cell phone takes lousy photos.

The good news is that Bill brought a camera with him. The bad news is that Bill forgot to check the charge on his camera's batteries, too. The good news is that both Dick and Bill were able to take a few photos before their camera batteries gave up the ghost, and that Stan had his camera along and could shoot photos as well. The bad news is that we ended up with far fewer pictures than usual. The good news is that blog readers don't have to look at so many photos!

The bad news is that there were several cars in the trailhead parking lot when we arrived. The good news is that we saw no one else during the hike up to Bass Lake and during our lunch break in that area. The bad news is that it was like commute hour when we left the lake and head back to our cars, with hikers coming up on us from behind, and approaching us from the south. The good news is that there were only seven of us, so massive "head on" and "rear end" collisions with other groups of hikers didn't happen. The bad news is that there were so few of us along on the hike.

The good news is that this trail is fairly level. The bad news is that there is a fairly long, steep section between Abalone Point and the junction of the Coast Trail and Lake Ranch Trail. The good news is that the sun wasn't beating down on us so the uphill slog was pretty easy.

The good news is that we saw quite a few different birds, a good smattering of flowers and plants, some interesting bugs (which Wendy hasn't been able to definitively identify), and even some "late bloomer" mushrooms. The bad news is that Theresa Fisher wasn't along so we don't have as many plant photos as usual. (Click here to read Wendy's "What We Saw" list of flora and fauna seen on this hike).

The good news is that we had a good time on a relatively easy hike. The bad news is that, like all of our hikes, it ended too soon.

The following Google Earth Image shows the area where we hiked. The Palomarin trailhead parking lot is in the lower right-hand corner of the image just south of a large grove of eucalyptus trees, and Bass Lake is clearly marked in the left-hand side of the photo. The trail is visible as it snakes its way up the coast, crossing over or going along the edge of four small canyons along the 2.7 mile route to Bass Lake. (Click on the image to open a larger version in your Web browser).

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Palomarin Hike Photos Now On-Line!

Pictures taken by Bill Dreskin, Stan Walker and Dick Jordan during the Palomarin hike (June 16th) are now on-line.

You can view them in the mini-slideshow window in the "Meandering In Marin On Tuesdays" blog, or by clicking here to go directly to the Picasa Web album of photos from the latest hike. (Albums of photos from our hikes can be accessed by clicking on the links on the right-hand side of the blog).

Friday, June 19, 2009

Bear Valley to Five Brooks (June 23) Hike Preview

We continue our "Summer at the Seashore" series of hikes this week by starting at the Bear Valley Visitor Center in Point Reyes National Seashore and hiking south to Five Brooks. (We last did this hike on May 28, 2008). Here's Wendy's description of the outing: "We’ll start by checking out birds and dragonflies around the pond at Five Brooks, then carpool to Bear Valley. Past years we’ve seen satyr commas, Acmon blues, field crescents, California tortoiseshells, pale swallowtails, Western tiger swallowtails, and dragonflies including cardinal meadowhawks, Western pondhawks, and eight spotted skimmers." (Click here to read about the flora and fauna we saw last year).

Directions to Trailhead: THIS IS A SHUTTLE HIKE (CALL OR E-MAIL WENDY IF YOU'RE COMING: Home: 415 457-3949; E-mail: bdreskin@comcast.net).

We'll meet at Five Brooks at 9:30 am. Take Sir Francis Drake to Olema, turn left onto Highway 1, and continue south until you see the right hand turn off the highway to Five Brooks. We'll leave some cars at Five Brooks, so we'll need some drivers not in a hurry to head home after the hike to drive those who left their cars at the trailhead back to Five Brooks.

Restrooms (porta-potties) at Five Brooks and (real-deal flush toilets) at Bear Valley. Carpool from St. Rita at 8:55 am.

Weather forecast: As of Friday evening, June 19th, the National Weather Service forecast for Tuesday, June 23rd for Olema was mostly sunny with a high near 72. (Click here for an updated forecast).

More on this hike: Hike "F8 Five Brooks Trailhead to Bear Valley" in the Martins' book, Hiking Marin, does this 4.4 mile hike in the reverse direction from our trek. Our route will roughly parallel the San Andreas Fault which splits the Olema Valley down its middle.

After about a mile and a half we'll begin to cross the 2,000 acre parcel owned by the Vedanta Society of Northern California. Later we'll skirt the the historic Stewart Ranch. This trail is popular with equestrians, and we're likely to encounter horses and cattle along the way.

The elevation change is only 350' over the length of the trail, and many sections are quite flat or downhill. (Click here to view the Rift Zone Trail on the park's South District Trail Map).

The Google Earth image below gives you a bird's eye view of the route will follow; the Bear Valley parking lot is at the far right, and "Mill Pond" at the far left is at Five Brooks. The yellow line marked "Shoreline Highway" is Highway 1. (Click on the image to enlarge it in your Web browser).

Monday, June 15, 2009

Update on Budget Battle Over State Parks Funding

Here's is a message Dick received from the California State Parks Foundation on Monday, June 15th:

"This afternoon held some “good news, bad news” for California’s state park system.

The bad news first – the Legislature’s Budget Conference Committee voted to adopt the Governor’s proposal to eliminate core, state funding for our state parks. But the good news - and it’s good! - is that the committee also voted to enact the State Park Access Pass, CSPF’s proposal from last year to institute a surcharge on vehicle license fees of non-commercial vehicles, in order to provide Californians with free day-use access to state parks and generate much-needed revenues for the system. The version adopted by the Budget Conference Committee today differs from last year’s proposal in that today’s action adopted a $15 fee, in order to gain permanent General Fund savings of approximately $143 million annually. In exchange for paying the fee, residents driving into state parks with a California license plate would receive free day-use entrance into state parks.

This is good news, but it's only one step toward a final budget victory. Since the vote was divided, this proposal still has a high hurdle to overcome, in order to be enacted. Please TAKE ACTION and send a message to your legislator supporting the State Park Access Pass and urging the Legislature to Save Our State Parks!

Thank you for your support for CSPF and the Save Our State Parks campaign!"


Elizabeth Goldstein
President, CSPF

Friday, June 12, 2009

Water, Water Everwhere

In June each year the Water Education Foundation of Sacramento runs a three day Bay-Delta tour and spends the morning of the final day at the Bay Model in Sausalito. Dick Jordan always works at the Bay Model that day and attends the presentation on Delta water issues that precedes the participants' tour of the Model.

This year, Ellen Hanak of the Public Policy Institute of California spoke about the PPIC's July 2008 report "Comparing Futures for the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta". The report looks at alternatives, including some version of a "Peripheral Canal" (one proposal was nixed by California voters in 1982), for preserving fish and wildlife while ensuring reliable freshwater supplies for the millions of Californians who depend on the Delta for this life-giving liquid. (Click here to read either the summary of or the full report; additional papers published by the PPIC on water issues can be found by clicking here).

Palomarin Hike (June 16) Preview

We resume our summer hikes this coming week with another trip to Point Reyes National Seashore, this time beginning at the far southern end of the park at the Palomarin trailhead near Bolinas. Here's Wendy's description of this outing: "This hike is not a loop (and isn't a shuttle hike, either), but has incredible ocean views making it well worth the drive! We should see bee plant, seep-spring monkey flower, salmonberries as well as butterflies and dragonflies. Lunch at Bass Lake."

Directions to the trailhead: Take Sir Francis Drake Boulevard west to Olema. Turn left (south) on Route 1. Pass Five Brooks and Dogtown, and take the unmarked right turn towards the town of Bolinas. (If you find yourself going along the shore of Bolinas Lagoon, you've just missed the turn.) Turn right on Mesa Road and follow it to the Palomarin trailhead parking lot. If you're coming from southern Marin you may prefer to take Route 1 north, turning left just past the end of the lagoon onto the unmarked road into the town of Bolinas. Carpool leaves St. Rita at 8:40 am. Toilets at the trailhead (or Five Brooks, if you can't wait).

Weather forecast: Although gloomy skies are expected to persist over Marin this weekend, the National Weather Service forecast for the Bolinas area on Tuesday, June 16th is for mostly sunny skies with a high near 68. (Click here for an updated forecast).

More on this hike: The "F17 Coast Trail to Wildcat Camp" hike in the Martin's book, Hiking Marin, is 11 miles long, but shows the route that we'll take up to Bass Lake, 2.7 miles from the trailhead. (The 8.5 mile "Alamere Falls and Double Point Overlook" hike in Tracy Salcedo-Chourre's Exploring Point Reyes National Seashore and Golden Gate National Recreation Area says the distance to the north shore of the lake is 2.9 miles, while the park's South District Hiking Map pegs it at 2.8 miles).

A Bird Brain Question

"Click & Clack", the "Tappet Brothers", of NPR's "Car Talk" program, answered this question in their weekly column appearing in the San Francisco Chronicle:

Once, on a very long, boring trip, my passenger and I were reduced to asking each other dumb questions. We came upon one question that we couldn't settle.

Imagine that I'm driving along at highway speed with the air conditioner on and the windows closed. A hummingbird that was caged in the back seat gets loose, and with nowhere really to go, it ends up just hovering there in midcar.

Our question is this: If I hit the brakes hard, does the hummingbird crash into the windshield? My friend said of course it would, that its momentum would cause it to keep moving forward as the car slowed. But I, being the more educated of us (not necessarily a good thing, as my friend claimed), said that the hummingbird's position would depend on its air speed, not its ground speed, and as the car slowed down, the air inside the car would slow down at an equal rate, as would the hummingbird, thereby avoiding becoming windshield splatter. So guys, please settle this question so I can finally get some sleep. - Ross

RAY: As your friend says, Ross, over-education might not always be a good thing. But when you work around my brother, you come to the inescapable conclusion that a little bit more education can never hurt.

TOM: The answer is that the hummingbird is toast, Ross. He crashes into the windshield. As your friend correctly says, in summarizing Newton's first law, objects in motion will stay in motion.

RAY: The cabin air is part of the car. So if the hummingbird is hovering in that air while the car is in motion, the bird has the same horizontal speed as the car.

TOM: That means he's in motion. And when the car stops, the hummingbird does not, and splat.

RAY: Now, as we were discussing your question, Ross, my brother raised an interesting issue.

TOM: That's right. I said, "What about cigar smoke?" Let's say I'm motoring along in one of the new cars that we test-drive, smoking a huge cigar.

RAY: Of course, this is a hypothetical question, because you're not allowed to smoke in the test cars.

TOM: I'm not? Oh! I'm not! Right. But let's say, just for the sake of argument, that the smoke is hovering in the air all around me, and I stop short. Does the smoke crash into the windshield? I don't think so.

RAY: It's a good question. So, we called our Car Talk physicist, Professor Wolfgang Rueckner, who also moonlights at Harvard University.

TOM: Wolfgang says that the smoke, too, is subject to Newton's first law, and should crash into the windshield. The only reason it doesn't is because it doesn't have enough mass. So while it's heading toward the windshield, it bangs into nearby air molecules, and the effect is muted.

RAY: I'm wondering if Newton ever tried this physics experiment: Take a test car that my brother has been smoking a cigar in, and have the manufacturer who owns it stick his head inside and take a sniff. Then see if that guy slams my brother's head into the windshield.

So, when you're meandering about Marin, be sure to leave your car windows closed so these little guys don't fly inside and get smushed against your windshield.

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Birds Did It, Bees Did It, They All Did It at Abbott's Lagoon (June 2nd)

Cole Porter must have strolled along the Abbott's Lagoon trail in spring and been inspired to write the lyrics for "Let's Do It" because when we hiked the trail mating behavior between all kinds of critters (especially insects) was happening right and left. About the only denizen of the area not "doing it" was a garter snake temporarily corralled by a pair of photographers intent on taking its portrait.

That all of this faunal fornication went on was surprising since the clouds above us as we drove out to Point Reyes hardly heralded spring-like weather for the day. Some of us woke up to find raindrops wetting the ground around our homes and, as has been the case more often than not in recent weeks, we began the hike with wool hats pulled down over our ears and fleece tops and jackets keeping our body core temperatures high enough to sustain life.

But we found dragonflies, beetles, ladybugs, frolicking on our walk out to the ocean beach just beyond the lagoon. Thistles, poppies and lupine bloomed along the trail.

After 45 minutes we reached a shrubby area fronting the eastern part of the lagoon. This is always a good birding spot and we saw several species of songbirds. Park employees we passed told us to look for a Snowy Plover nesting in the sand about a quarter of mile south of where the remnants of the trail meet the beach.

About an hour and half into the hike the marine layer had dissipated and the sun was shining brightly. A barn swallow was sitting on a nest under the bridge that connect the upper and main parts of the lagoon.

We passed large pieces of driftwood as we hiked the last section of the trail to the ocean. One looked like the fossilized vertebrae of a large whale.

Just before noon we reached the sea and wandered down the beach looking for the Snowy Plover. The park had run a barrier between the water and uplands demarcating the area where the birds nest in order to keep people from wandering into the breeding area. Finally, we espied a circular enclosure and saw one adult bird inside. (Alas, the plover was too far away for Dick to get a photo with his camera).

By now our stomachs were growling, so we plopped down on the sand and ate lunch. The weather was so pleasant and the sound of the waves ending their journey on the beach was lulling us to sleep. But before we could nod off, we packed up our gear and began the trek back to the parking lot.

We had sunshine all of the way back and paused now and again to look for more critters and flowers. A herd of beef cattle had moved in while we were out at the ocean and some bumblebees flitted among the flowers. We found one last plover at the end of the hike --- its photo was posted on the bulletin board at the trailhead. (Click here to read Wendy's recap of all of the plants, bugs, and critters we spotted on this outing).

Abbott's Lagoon Hike Photos Now On-Line!

Pictures taken by Dick Jordan during the Abbott's Lagoon hike (June 2nd) are now on-line.

You can view them in the mini-slideshow window in the "Meandering In Marin On Tuesdays" blog, or by clicking here to go directly to the Picasa Web album of photos from the latest hike. (Albums of photos from our hikes can be accessed by clicking on the links on the right-hand side of the blog).

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Bay Model Visitor Center will Host National Get Outdoors Day June 13

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers - Bay Model Visitor Center will host a FREE waterfront event from 12-3pm on Saturday, June 13, 2009, as part of the second annual National Get Outdoors
Day (GO Day), campaign to encourage healthy, active outdoor fun. Prime goals of the day are reaching first time visitors to public lands and reconnecting our youth to the great outdoors. (Click here to view and print a larger version of the poster at the left).

This GO Day event will offer a mix of information centers and naturalist-guided activities – opportunities for participants to explore marine life, discover birds of the bay, learn about water safety, explore careers in the outdoors, and get connected with summertime adventures at local parks and nature centers. Special guests include rangers and naturalists from nearby national parks and recreation areas.

In addition to the GO Day event on June 13, participants will be invited to nearby follow-up activities called EChO events, which include specific opportunities to hike with rangers, sail on the bay, and participate in the Great American Backyard Campout.

GO Day is an outgrowth of the Get Outdoors USA! campaign, which encourages Americans, especially our youth, to seek out healthy, active outdoor lives and embrace our parks, forests, refuges and other public lands and waters.

Top 3 Reasons for National Get Outdoors Day:

1. A smaller and smaller portion of the nation is deriving physical, mental and spiritual benefits from recreation on public lands, and use is especially low for America’s poor, our urban dwellers, and minority Americans.

2. Today’s kids are less connected to the outdoors than any previous generation. 6.5 hours a day spent watching screens. Six times more likely to play a computer game than ride a bike. Four times more likely to be obese than previous generations.

3. The future of America's public lands will be determined by the extent to which Americans care about the Great Outdoors. If fewer people directly benefit from time outdoors, the prognosis is not good.

The pilot effort of National Get Outdoors Day was launched on June 14, 2008. Last year, over 50 official GO Day sites across the nation welcomed thousands of new faces to the joy and benefits of the great outdoors.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Silvia Dreams The Impossible Dream

Earlier this week, Dick posted a plea from the California State Parks Foundation to urge the Governor and Legislature not to close state parks. Silvia Lange made her thoughts known in the following "Letter to the Editor" appearing in the Wednesday, June 3rd edition of the Marin-IJ:

Dream the impossible dream

It is not impossible to keep the dream of state parks alive. Marin is blessed with seven; they play a vital role in our well-being.

Just Sunday on Mount Tamalpais State Park, I saw my 23rd Mountain Play - the inspiring "Man of la Mancha."

As a 26-year volunteer for Angel Island State Park I have met thousands of local and international visitors who from the top of Mount Livermore marvel at the most beautiful view in the Bay Area. The state parks have an important educational mission. Thousands of school children came to Angel Island last year to study American history, especially immigration and the Civil War. On June 13 there is a child-oriented Civil War Day.

You can help find a better solution to our fiscal problems other than closing the state parks - sign the petition at the Mountain Play, donate to the California State Parks Foundation, contact our governor and legislators.

Silvia Lange, Nicasio

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Free Plant Trek --- Wednesday, June 3rd.

On Wednesday (June 3) afternoon, meet with Wendy to hunt for the Tiburon Mariposa Lily. She says that "this flower is one of Marin's most 'charismatic' claims to botanical fame. I'm taking a few of my kid students to see it. If you want to join us, meet me at 1 PM at the top of Westward Drive. Take Highway101, exit at Paradise Drive. Go about 1 mile. Turn right on Westward and go to the top. We'll be about 1.5 - 2 hrs. Great views and some other late bloomers as well. My treat - no fee."

Monday, June 1, 2009

Summer Hike List Updated

This list of Summer Tuesday Hikes (through July) has been updated so Wendy's phone number and e-mail address appear next to each Shuttle Hike (notify her ahead of time if you're going). The Monday hike list has also been updated.