Outdoors Magazine

California's Central Coast, Through a Lens

Posted on the 02 June 2023 by Hollis
California's Central Coast, through a lens"I gazing at the boundaries of granite and spray, the established sea-marks, felt behind meMountain and plain, the immense breadth of the continent,before me the mass and doubled stretch of water."

Those are not my words. Robinson Jeffers wrote them a century ago. But that's very much how I felt after driving across the Rocky Mountains, Colorado Plateau, Great Basin, Mojave Desert, Central Valley, and Coast Range to reach the "Continent's End" as Jeffers called it. He loved this rugged coast with off and on fog—a place where we can "unhumanize our views a little, and become confident, as the rock and ocean ... "

California's Central Coast, through a lens

Estero Beach State Park north of Cayucos, in intermittent fog.

California's Central Coast, through a lens

California's Central Coast, through a lens

Herring Gulls probably (note pink leg).

Cormorants were cooperative, hardly moving while I played with my new camera and lens.
California's Central Coast, through a lens
California's Central Coast, through a lens

California's Central Coast, through a lens

Seabirds as sculpture.

My friend showed me a curious erosion-resistant white deposit near the base of the bluffs. Geotripper Garry Hayes says it's calcite, perhaps from a spring. What do you think?
California's Central Coast, through a lens
California's Central Coast, through a lens

California's Central Coast, through a lens

This one is harder to explain ;)


The next day, I hiked up the Point Sal road south of Guadalupe. It climbs steeply, and then winds down down down to Point Sal State Beach. The road is closed to motorized vehicles, is dirt much of the way, and is quite rough in places. Hard to imagine going to Point Sal in the family station wagon! But that's what we did.

California's Central Coast, through a lens

Looking down from the Point Sal road; trailhead is white spot in lower left quarter.

The hills were still green (normally brown by now) and plants were flourishing, thanks to torrential rains earlier in the year.

California's Central Coast, through a lens

The beloved and the despised: orange California Poppy and yellow Black Mustard (actually, some people like the yellow patches the mustard adds to our grasslands).

I spotted several giant thistles along the road—about six feet tall! This is the non-native Blessed Milkthistle. It's listed Noxious in some parts of the country, but the California Invasive Plants Council considers it of limited concern, with low rates of invasion and minor ecological impact. I was taken by its dramatic features, especially the boldly mottled leaves.

California's Central Coast, through a lens

Silybum marianum.

California's Central Coast, through a lens
California's Central Coast, through a lens
I turned around at the crest, far above Point Sal beach. Views down can be spectacular, but that day they were mostly hidden by fog—the ocean's breath (channeling Jeffers again).

California's Central Coast, through a lens

Looking south with a bit of ocean and strand visible below the fog bank.

California's Central Coast, through a lens

The rugged north end of Point Sal beach ... a view I will never tire of!



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