Sinkyone Wilderness State Park
The
land we now call Sinkyone Wilderness State Park, located about 225 miles
north of San Francisco, has long been recognized as something special.
During the late 1960s, the great Catholic theologian, Thomas Merton, felt
that the Needle Rock area would be an ideal place for a life of prayer
and contemplation, and talked of establishing a monastic community there.
The state
park, along with the U.S. Bureau of Land Management's King Range National
Conservation
Area to the north, comprise California's Lost Coast,
60 miles of wild shoreline located in northern Mendocino and southern
Humboldt counties. One reason the coast is "lost" is because
no highways cross it. So rugged is this country, highway engineers
were
forced to route Highway 1 many miles inland from this coast--and the
region has remained sparsely settled and unspoiled. It's magnificent
vistas and
varied terrain--dense forests, prairies, coastal bluffs, beaches--reward
the hardy explorer.
Usal Road meanders along the
northern boundary of Sinkyone Wilderness State Park. The road, lined with
heavy brush and trees, has changed little since Jack London and his wife
drove it in a horse-drawn carriage on a trip from San Francisco to Eureka
in 1911. The sea is an overwhelming presence here, and its rhythmic sounds
provide a thunderous background for a walk along land's end. The sky is
filled with gulls and pelicans, sea lions and harbor seals gather at Little
Jackass Cove, and the California gray whale migration passes near shore
during winter and early spring.
A
herd of Roosevelt elk roams the park. These magnificent creatures were
once common here and in the King Range, but were exterminated in the
last
century. The Roosevelt elk that lucky visitors see today are "extras" relocated
from Prairie Creek State Park.
Lost Coast
Trail travels the length of Sinkyone State Park north through King
Range National Conservation
Area. The sixty-mile trail would make an ideal week-long backpacking
adventure. The portion of the Lost Coast Trail detailed here explores
the northernmost,
and most easily accessible, portion of the state park. It's a relatively
easy introduction to a challenging trail.Directions to trailhead: From
Highway 101, take either the Garberville or Redway exit and proceed
to "downtown" Redway, located 3 miles north of Garberville
on Business 101. Turn west on Briceland Road. After 12 miles of travel,
fork left
to Whitethorn. A mile or so past the hamlet of Whitethorn (don't blink
or you'll miss it), the pavement ends, and you continue on a potholed
dirt/mud road for 3.5 miles to a junction called Four Corners. Leftward
is Usal Road, rightward is a road climbing into the King Range National
Conservation Area. Proceed straight ahead 3.5 miles to the Sinkyone
Wilderness
State Park Visitors Center. The park road is steep, winding, and only
one lane wide. Maps and information are available at the visitor center.
The walk: Begin at the Needle
Rock Visitor Center. During the 1920s, a small settlement and shipping
point were established at Needle Rock. The Calvin Cooper Stewart family
were the main residents of Needle Rock, and today their ranch house serves
as the park visitor center.
Walk up the park road toward the old barn. Notice a trail leading to the
bluff edge, then down to the beach. Famed Needle Rock is a short distance
up the dark sand beach.
Join
Lost Coast Trail, which leads behind the barn and dips in and out of
a
gully. You'll pass Barn Camp, one of the state park's primitive, or walk-in,
campsites. A quarter-mile of travel brings you to Streamside Camp,
another
of the park's primitive, but superb, camps. You'll soon reach a junction
with a trail climbing to the east. This is Low Gap Trail, which ascends
the coastal bluffs and crosses the park road. The trail plunges into
the
forest, travels along Low Gap Creek, and, after a stiff climb, reaches
Usal Road. Lost Coast Trail, your route, continues along the lovely
bluffs
to Low Gap Creek, heads inland briefly, then crosses a bridge over the
creek. The path heads toward a stand of eucalyptus, which shelters
the
Jones Beach campsites. The trail forks. The left fork leads a quarter-mile
to Jones Beach. If it's low tide, you can walk back to the trailhead
via
the beach.
Lost Coast
Trail proceeds with the right fork and soon descends into a canyon.
You cross two creeks, which drain an area that can be very
marshy
during the rainy season. You walk near the edge of cattail-lined pond,
climb to higher ground, and pass a second pond.
Soon you are treated to a bird's-eye-view
of Whale Gulch. A rough, unmaintained path descends to the mouth of Whale
Gulch, where there's a small lagoon and piles of driftwood logs. A recently
constructed section of the Lost Coast Trail travels inland along the south
wall of Whale Gulch. Eventually, this trail crosses the gulch, and heads
up Chemise Mountain to join the trail system in King Range National Conservation
Area. After sitting on a driftwood log for a while and contemplating the
Lost Coast, return to the trailhead the way you came.
Photograph: Cabin,
Sinkyone Wilderness State Park Return
to California's Lost Coast
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