Friday, August 8, 2014

The Great California Outdoors: Henry Cowell Redwoods State Park--Part 1: Main Unit + Roaring Camp

Henry Cowell Redwoods State Park/ Roaring Camp****
Steam trains running by towering redwoods in the Santa Cruz Mountains

Top Locations:
1. Roaring Camp Railroad
2. Redwood Grove
3. Swimming holes
4. Backcountry

Time for Visiting: 1-4 hrs
Cost: $10
Best Season: Spring, Summer
Bring: Camera, hiking boots, water
Difficulty:  Moderate - : Flat trails for Roaring Camp and Redwood Grove,  steep hilly climbs for backcountry

Introduction
Along with Big Basin, Henry Cowell is one of the largest strands of old-growth redwoods left in the Santa Cruz Mountains. It is less known than its famous brother park, but is also quite popular, especially with the students from Santa Cruz.

In 1867 Joseph Welch purchased this redwood grove near Felton for his Big Trees resort. As news of California's "big trees" spread throughout the world, thousands of visitors arrived to visit, including Presidents Benjamin Harrison and Theodore Roosevelt. In the 1930s, the grove became a county park. In 1954, Samuel Cowell donated some land nearby to the state, in memory of his father, Henry Cowell. After some debate, the new property was fused with the Big Trees Resort, while the railroad section was spun off as Roaring Camp.


Began in 1963 by F. Norman Clark, the Roaring Camp Railway is the oldest and one of the few narrow gauge railroads still active in the country. Three of the historic trains have been designated National Mechanical Engineering Historical Landmarks. The park is set like an 1880s mining town, and the train runs through giant redwoods at neighboring Big Trees Ranch, purchased by Joseph Welch in 1867 to protect the redwoods from logging, the first property acquired by the State of California for protection.

To visit Henry Cowell Redwoods from San Jose, take HWY17 South towards Santa Cruz. Exit at Mt Hermon Rd West until you reach Graham Hill Rd.  Almost immediately take a left onto HWY9 South in Felton. Follow HWY9 about 1km until the path goes off to the left at N Big Trees Park Rd at a big sign designated Henry Cowell Redwoods. Pay the $10 parking fee and continue to the Visitor's Center parking lot (You can save the $10 by parking in Felton and walking about 1km over like many locals do). At the parking lot, the Redwoods are to the South, while Roaring Camp is across a small treeline and rail line to the East.  

A. Roaring Camp ****
The Roaring Camp Covered Bridge claims to be the shortest covered bridge in the United States.
 
Restored buildings at Roaring Camp are used as conference rooms, restaurants, and shops. Train rides through the Redwood forest cost $26 for adults and $19 for children (2-12) and take 1.25 hrs.


The star of Roaring Camp are the locomotives, some 13-odd rotate depending on the date. Three are designated National Mechanical Engineering Historical Landmarks by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, the Dixiana Shay #1, the Bloomsburg Climax #5, and the Tuolumne Heisler #2. 

The Shay Locomotives were the most popular geared steam locomotives. Developed by Ephriam Shay, it innovative design including a flatcar body, pivoting trucks (the driving wheel units), and a belt drive, as well as a left-offset boiler for motors on the right to power the drive shafts. All of this allowed the trains to work their way up narrow gauge railroads and tight turns common in the mountain regions. Of some 3500 Shays produced between 1878 and 1945, only 117 remain. 



The 1912 Dixiana Shay No. 1 was the first train acquired by Roaring Camp. It served the Alaculsy Lumber Company on the Smokey Mountain Railroad. Clark found the abandoned locomotive at a coal mine in 1958, brought it to California, and restored it.

 



Built in 1911, the Sonora is a geared Shay steam locomotive, which allowed it to work on narrow gauge mountain railroads. The Sonora was built by the Lima Locomotive Corp, and worked on the West Side Lumber Company Butte and Plumas Railway No 4 until 1962. It was acquired by Roaring Camp in 1986 and restored in 2009.

Behind the



B. Henry Cowell Redwoods*** 
Henry Cowell Redwoods is another park protecting the California Coastal Redwoods, the tallest living things on earth. Like its better known cousin parks, Muir Woods National Monument and Big Basin State Park, Henry Cowell is quite popular with visitors.  Unlike those parks however, Henry Cowell is easier to reach, being only a short distance from busy HWY 17, and is not as crowded as those other two locations.




The Redwood Grove is a flat trail that loops around 1.3km with hundreds of redwoods. It is a nice,  impressive grove.  While none of the trees here are record-holders, there are some impressive specimens here.



Around 86m tall, the Fremont Tree is the most famous of the redwoods in Henry Cowell. According to legend in 1846 Lt John Fremont, on his third expedition surveying California (and nearly provoking a war), camped in the burnt-out hollow of this tree, which is large enough to house two people. When he visited in 1888 for the dedication of this tree in his honor and heard the legend, his reply was "It makes a great story, let it stand."   The large hole is still there, and kids love running inside.  Bring a flashlight, or borrow one from the Visitor's Center.


 Named in honor of Gov William Jeter, who protected this grove when he was governor. 


Yet another redwood tree ring.

The Henry Cowell Redwood backcountry leads from Pipeline Road or River Trail, which are roughly parallel to each other. The area is heavily wooded, though there are few redwood trees.  The paths begin paved and fairly flat, but quickly become dirt roads, steeply clinging to the hillsides.  
Baby Blue Eyes along the trail

(Illegally) following the railroad tracks leads to a few swimming holes along HWY9 popular with locals during hot summer days: Cable Car Beach, Garden of Eden, and Frisbee Beach. 
Cable Car Beach
To get to Henry Cowell Redwoods from San Jose, take HWY 280N to HWY880S. Follow it as it turns to HWY 17. About 42km away, take the Mt. Hermon Exit in Scott's Valley and follow it to Felton.  After 5.6km, take a right at Graham Hill Road, then immediately go to the left lane to take a left turn at HWY9.  Follow HWY9 to the Henry Cowell Redwoods about a kilometer away.  If you continue South on HWY9, there are periodic parking lots for the swimming holes on the left.
 

Saturday, June 28, 2014

The Great California Outdoors: Alum Rock Park

Alum Rock Park***


Top Locations:  
1. Hot Springs Ruins
2. Eagle Rock
3. Penitencia Creek
4. Alum Rock Backcountry

Time for Visiting: 1-4 hrs
Distance: ~13km
Cost: $0 (Parking Residential), $10 (For Parking)
Best Season: Spring, Fall
Bring: Camera, hiking boots, water
Difficulty:  Moderate- : Paved or dirt roads, flat trails running along Penitencia Creek, elevated trails going into the hills.

Introduction
When farmers first visited the area what is now the park, they encountered rocks glistening in the sun.  Thinking that it was alum, the area was called Alum Rock. The shiny rock was actually thenardite, and no alum is present in Alum Rock Park.  


Alum Rock Park is one of the oldest city parks in California, and for decades has been a popular picnic spot for the Santa Clara Valley locals. The park was established 1866 as "the Reservation", courtesy of the state, and the City of San Jose devoted great expense to build a narrow 11km brick road to the park.   This turned out to be beneficial, as people soon got interested in a geothermically active spot in the Creek.  In the 1870s Alum Rock Park became a popular hot springs resort, with some 21 springs that were linked to bath houses and a large swimming pool popularized by the people of Victorian San Jose. A flood in 1911 destroyed most of the buildings, but popularity continued through WWI and WWII by troops posted in nearby military bases. The 1950s was the peak of the park, with thousands of visitors partaking in the rides, zoos, dance pavilion and the baths.  As the park grew seedy, visitation declined, and eventually most of the amusement park attractions were torn down in the 1970s. Alum Rock has been partially restored to its natural state.  The El Nino floods of 2000 destroyed the main road to Alum Rock Park, leaving only the roundabout Penitencia Entrance open, which had the benefit of leaving the park much less visited than would be expected.


To Visit 
From Downtown San Jose,take HWY 280E.  HWY 280 becomes HWY 680. Exit East at McKee Road. Make a left at Capitol Expressway. Turn right at Penitencia Creek Rd and drive to the end. The Penitencia Entrance has a pay booth, but if you turn right at the Rock Canyon Circle you can usually find a sidewalk parking spot for free.  Be careful walking the 320m to the park entrance.  An alternative (the original) route is to take Alum Rock Avenue until the very end, find a location to park, and then take the Service Road 0.6km to the Railroad Bridge and Alum Rock.


From the Penitencia Entrance, take the Penitencia Creek Trail on the right, which winds along the namesake creek. As you work your way through the rocky area of the trail, note the bridge near which Penitencia Road curves around the canyon.

This was once the site of what was known as the Alum Rock Meteor, a massive rock that may or may not have actually been a meteor. For decades, the "meteor" was a popular tourist attraction for the park.  Then WWI broke out, and the meteor was found to contain manganese, important in some forms of steel production.  Seeing a profit-making opportunity, the City of San Jose sold the 2000-ton rock to a miner for $22,000.  Only when the miner had destroyed the rock, he only managed to extract out 39 tons and went bankrupt, leaving the city with nothing.

So it goes.


Though the trail starts out in an exposed, rocky area, it quickly descends into the riparian forest. Penitencia Creek was originally quite swampy and mosquito-laden, but after the creek was dammed upstream in the 1900s, it now runs year-round.


After about 1.3km, the trail comes out at a parking lot/picnic area. 

From the picnic area, the path diverges to the North across the road.  If you continue North uphill, there is the route to Eagle Rock, while to the East the trail continues towards the hot springs. If you decide to continue East, you will cross back over the road, but on top of an old 1913 concrete railroad bridge. This bridge was one of a second set of railroads that took San Jose visitors to the park.  The first, the narrow-gauge Alum Rock Railroad, which connected from Downtown San Jose to the area in front of the gazebo.  Its short life was marred by an accident where a train flipped, killing two people, and another where a kid stuck his head out of a window right before the train entered a tunnel... In 1911 a massive flood destroyed the railroad and tunnels. The new railroad was financially unsuccessful due to the increasing prevalence of cars, but limped along until 1931. Two years later, the Peninsula Railway rebuilt the rails, including this bridge. One of the two potential "death" tunnels was located near where the bridge rejoins the Southern face of the canyon, where a rocky outcropping appears.


 
Immediately East of where the bridge crosses over the road and rejoins the creek trail is a prominent rocky outcropping juts into the canyon, narrowing the trail.  The rock is the eponymous Alum Rock of Alum Rock Park. It was the glistening minerals in the rock that gave Alum Rock its name.  Ironically it is not actually composed of Alum, a source of aluminum, but mica, the early visitors evidently having been as confused with this rock as with the "meteor" earlier.


The creek trail continues onwards alongside the creek. After another kilometer of so, the canyon widens again, and another parking/picnic area appears.  To the right is a small log cabin.This cabin was built in 1915 by the Native Daughters of the Golden West to honor California pioneers. This is the center of  the park: on a typical weekend this area would be overrun with picnickers and families and kids.

The old 1915 Natatorum (indoor swimming pool) was located where the volleyball court is now placed.  Two indoor swimming pools were built, an early 1890s version fed directly by the hot springs (as well as the reeking sulfur fumes).  This was destroyed by the 1911 floods and replaced by the 1915 Natatorium, known to locals as "the Plunge". This was torn down in 1973.


The Visitor's Center is located here, and if it is open (apparently its schedule is Tues-Fri 12-4:00, Sat 12-4:30) it is a good source of info about the park. 


After a short distance, you come to the final parking/picnic area of Alum Rock Park.  In the 1890s-1910s, this was the location of the train stations. The Youth and Science Institute is here in a 1930s era building, though I never went inside ($3 adults, $1 children).  The nature center has a few animals including birds of prey.

Continuing along the picnic area is this ornate gazebo covering for a closed spring.


After continuing past this last parking lot, Penitencia Creek Road ends with a gate.  As you go through the gate, you reach the hot springs area. This area is still a geothermically active area of hot springs, smelling of sulfur and leaching minerals into Peritencia Creek


The largest remnants of the original Victorian period resorts is located here.  There are at least four covered springs, some of the many springs converted into baths in Alum Rock Park, as well as two wading pools.

 
Three formal bridges cris-cross across the Creek.  All are designed in an ornate Victorian stone.


 
Due to misuse and fault shifting, many of the springs had stopped running.  The ones that do are now undrinkable due to agricultural contamination. Going on, the paved road gives way to a dirt path, leading first to a picnic area.  Eventually after about 1.8km, you reach the intersection of the two branches of Penitencia Creek. You can then backtrack or take a steep, exposed 4km Rim Trail as it climbs the canyon wall and then descends back into the canyon. Backtrack all the way back to the second parking lot and Eagle Rock.


From the Eagle Rock Parking lot take Eagle Rock Trail uphill.  The trail is a 1.2km, somewhat steep hike from the bottom to the top of Eagle Rock.


As you ascend, the views get better and better, until there is nowhere left to climb.


Eagle Rock is climbable and as well as an overlook a little further on, presents great views of East San Jose.

From Eagle Rock, backtrack down the Eagle Rock Trail and Penitencia Creek Trail to your parking.