Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/06/28
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]In a message dated 6/28/06 12:23:18 PM, richard-lists@imagecraft.com writes: << North of Napa/SF, you want to just pick up I-5, all the way up to Seattle. The northern costal drive is definitely not as pretty as the Big Sur area. >> Maybe not as intense as Big Sur, but I'd say don't miss the trip through the redwood country on Highway 101 - several gorgeous state parks and the multi-unit Redwood National Park. There is a short stretch of Old Highway 1 called the Avenue of the Giants that's worth getting off the much faster Highway 101 for. One spectacular place is Prarie Creek Redwoods State Park, and particularly Gold Bluffs Beach. Quoting from Foghorn Press's "California Beaches" (which I highly recommend): "One of the most beautiful beaches on the North Coast (and therefore, anywhere), Gold Bluffs Beach lies inside the boundaries of Prarie Creek Redwoods State Park, which itself is surrounded by Redwood National Park. ... The beach is a vast, desertlike expanse virtually devoid of humanity, unchoked by seaweed or litter. It extends farther than the eye can see in either direction." The park also has a Fern Canyon - a narrow river canyon whose steep walls rise high above a beautiful little stream, and are covered in lush green ferns that create a magical cool, green microworld when sunlight filters down through the ferns! The park is also home to a herd of Roosevelt Elk, which are quite amenable to being photographed, from a respectful distance of course. I'm jealous - the only vacation our family ever enjoyed enough to do two years in a row waa the drive up the California, Oregon, and (the first year) Washington coasts, with forays into the Cascades in Ore and Wash. If you do instead head up I-5 after leaving Napa/Sonoma, take the detour into Lassen Volcanic National Park. The U-shaped park road, leaving I-5 at Red Bluff and returning to it at Redding, provides breathtaking views and fascinating, Yellowstone-like (though smaller) thermal features, and a view from the top of Lassen Peak (a moderately strenuous hike with a 2000 ft elevation gain and some loose red lava) that encompasses hundred of square miles of the Cascades and the Central Valley of Calif. Also, on the volcano theme, consider side trips to the spectacularly beautiful Mount Rainier, and the grim (at least when we were there some 10 years after the eruption) spectacle of destruction that is Mount Saint Helens. Enjoy! You'll wish you had a lot more time to explore! Bart Smith