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A path in the Redwood National Park
Erik Pawassar

Northern California

Spotlight: Redwood National & State Parks

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Hugging California’s north-western edge, a spectacular network of parks protecting nearly half of the world’s coast redwoods, the world’s tallest living things, which grow over 350 feet high. But there’s more than giant trees in this lush land. Here, majestic (and big) Roosevelt elk graze in grassy prairies. Wild beaches are dotted with weathered driftwood, not a footprint in site, and rivers tumble into the sea. Three state parks—Jedediah Smith, Del Norte (pronounced ‘del nort’) Coast, and Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park—work in partnership with Redwood National Park to protect the region, and all offer a remarkable number of ways to explore, learn and discover.

"Wild beaches are dotted with weathered driftwood, not a footprint in sight, and rivers tumble into the sea."

Remember that all that green is here for a reason: annual rainfall, which normally falls from October through April, averages 60 to 80 inches, so bring rain gear and sturdy, non-slip shoes.

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Erik Pawassar

Redwood National Park

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Redwood National Park
A wealth of hiking, camping, and tree-ogling options

Even if you’re a pro basketball player, you can’t help feeling downright puny in this stunning preserve, where soaring redwoods line up like living skyscrapers. Start your trip at the excellent Thomas H. Kuchel Visitor Center, one mile south of Orick. Of the five visitor centres in Redwood National and State Parks, this one is the largest, with numerous exhibits and a video on redwood ecology, a great bookshop and access to a sandy beach. Next, do a little driving. Start 5 miles north of the small hamlet of Klamath at the Klamath River Overlook, where the freshwater river meets the Pacific Ocean at a huge estuary. Perched 650 feet above the sea, this overlook point is a prime spot for watching migrating grey whales (best time is December to April). Be sure to walk the short and easy path to the lower overlook for dramatic views of crashing surf. Then head south to cruise the Coastal Drive (great for mountain biking too). This 9-mile-long road follows the coastline, passing a radar station that was camouflaged to look like a farmhouse and barn during World War II. 

Stop at the picnic area at High Bluff Overlook, then scan the sea for whales, sea lions, brown pelicans and, in spring and summer, thousands of seabirds nesting on offshore rocks. If you want to put some miles on your hiking boots, the Klamath area features a lovely coastal walk, the Yurok Loop, which visits pristine Hidden Beach (1 mile round-trip). Or, for an easy stroll beneath towering redwoods, walk the 1-mile Lady Bird Johnson Grove loop. 

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Tai Power Seeff

Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park

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Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park
Explore a supersize world, with big trees, big elk, and big wows

Visiting this 14,000-acre park is like walking through a portal into a world where everything is giant and green—a rainforest where ferns arc over mossy trails in a dappled world of light and shadow. Start with a hike among the ancient redwoods on the 3.2-mile Prairie Creek and Cathedral Tree loop, which begins at Prairie Creek Redwoods’ visitor centre. From your first steps, ‘lush’ is the operative word. 

"Visiting this park is like walking through a portal into a world where everything is giant and green."

Moss covers rocks, lichens hang from branches, clover-like redwood sorrel carpets the ground and trees grow to gargantuan size. Be suitably awed and humbled, then step out of the bowers and head over to Elk Prairie, a grassy, golden meadow where you have a great chance of seeing Roosevelt elk. These regal beasts are California’s largest land animals, weighing up to 1,100 pounds. Although they seem docile as they languidly munch on grass, it’s wise to give them some space, especially big males during the autumn rut. While at Elk Prairie, consider a walk on Trillium Falls Trail, a 2.5-mile/ loop through ancient redwoods. 

Next, go for a drive. The paved, 10-mile Newton B. Drury Scenic Parkway, the scenic alternative to Highway 101, winds past silent groves that reach for the sky. Pull over for a quick walk to the aptly named Big Tree, and watch for more wild elk herds. 

For the more adventurous driver, the unpaved Davison Road travels to Gold Bluffs Beach, a 10-mile stretch of waterfront where 1850s prospectors mined for gold dust in the sand. You can camp on the beach, but don’t forget to stake your tent—the wind can be fierce. Continue past Gold Bluffs to the end of the road and Fern Canyon trailhead. Here you have two options: a one-mile loop through spectacular Fern Canyon, or a longer walk on the Coastal Trail past three mini-waterfalls. 

Fern Canyon
Windell Oskay/Flickr

Fern Canyon

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Fern Canyon
A gorge bounded by fern-covered walls

Located in Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park, it takes a bit of work to get to the North Coast gem known as Fern Canyon, but it’s worth it. From Highway 10 at Orick, drive 10 miles along unpaved Davison Road to this spectacular canyon, a hidden paradise of ferns lining a narrow gorge carved out by Home Creek. Some of the seven different types of ferns clinging to the steep cliffs are ancient species, with ancestry tracing back 325 million years. Living underneath their leafy shade are some eye-catching amphibians, including Pacific giant salamanders, which can measure nearly a foot in length, and northern red-legged frogs.

The trail follows a series of small footbridges (installed in summer) deep into the canyon. Lush, drooping ferns create hanging gardens, miniature waterfalls pour down rock faces and moss wallpapers every surface. The walls grow taller and squeeze tighter as you travel.

Are you experiencing déjà vu? Steven Spielberg filmed a Jurassic Park II scene in this canyon. Every curve and turn leads to another Instagram-it-now (if there were reception) view. Far too soon, the trail curves left and ascends out of the canyon, then loops back to the car park. More than a few Fern Canyon hikers opt to retrace their steps instead of continuing on the loop—it’s just too hard to leave this special place.

Insider tips: it’s wet here. River sandals or waterproof boots come in handy. The fee to enter the park is $8 per car, and it’s best to have it in cash, because it’s not always possible to use a credit card.

 

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Tai Power Seeff

Enderts Beach

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Enderts Beach
An easy hike to rocky tide pools and driftwood-studded sands

Leave the shady redwood forests behind on this mellow hike to one of Redwood National Park’s most scenic beaches. Enderts Beach is a rock-studded, driftwood-laden shoreline perfect for sunset walks or sunny afternoons with a kite and a book. Getting there requires a walk of just under 1 mile on a now-abandoned stretch of the old Coast Highway (it’s downhill going in, uphill on the return). About halfway in, you’ll pass rustic Nickel Creek Campground, which offers an overnight option for backpackers. A few hundred yards farther, you’ll descend to crescent-shape Enderts Beach, perfect for strolling, sand-castling or just watching the wild waves. But the biggest attraction is at low or minus tides which reveal vibrant tide pools on the beach’s south end. The pools are rich with sea stars, urchins and giant green anemones. 

Insider's Tips: Rangers occasionally lead tidepool walks here; check at park any of the park visitor’s centers for details.

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Kayaking, Riding & More

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Kayaking, Riding & More
Guided treks in the home of the world's tallest trees

While there’s plenty of do-it-yourself ways to explore the redwoods, experiencing it with a guide can be a real treat. Redwood Adventures, based in Orick, offers guided hikes, mountain bike rides, river-fishing excursions, kayak trips, horseback rides and more—all exploring well-known treasures and secret stands of big trees, plus other worthwhile destinations along the Humboldt Coast. 

"The company also offers more exotic trips, like its zipline adventure through the redwood canopy."

Choose from group or private half- or full-day tours to a variety of national and state park sites, including Fern Canyon and the Tall Trees Grove. Ocean kayaking tours explore the region’s rocky shores. Mountain biking tours take beginners on wide dirt roads, while more advanced riders venture out on single-track trails. The company also offers more exotic trips, like its zip line adventure through the redwood canopy, a beginning rock climbing and abseiling class and year-round birding tours. It also has a handful of well-appointed housekeeping cabins available for rent at Elk Meadow; don’t be surprised if you wake up to Roosevelt elk grazing outside your front door.

In summer, time your visit to join a park guide to paddle down the Smith River, a designated Wild & Scenic river and the state’s largest free-flowing river system. The easy, 3.5-mile paddle is free (including kayak, paddles and other gear) and doesn’t require any experience, though a few foamy bits of gentle (Class I and II) rapids should elicit a “woo-hoo!” or two. Along the way your guide will explain the region’s unique geology, and how it contributes to the immense size of the region’s coast redwoods. 

The trip ends at the Jedediah Smith River Day-Use area, and from there you simply walk back to your car in Hiouchi, about half a mile away. It’s an adventure you’ll never forget. 

Insider's Tip: Sign up in person at the Hiouchi Information Center up to two days beforehand. Tours are usually held on Fridays and Saturdays starting at 11:30 a.m. All participants must be at least 10 years old and able to swim in moving water.

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Erik Pawassar

Camping in the Redwoods

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Camping in the Redwoods
Spend the night under the canopy of giants

Pitch your tent in the shadows of towering redwoods at Jedediah Smith Redwoods State Park, north-east of Crescent City. Its 86-site developed campground sits beside the emerald Smith River in a glade lush with ferns and old-growth trees. You can walk from your tent to the 340-foot-tall Stout Tree and its mammoth brethren, or go for a drive on spectacular Howland Hill Road, a 10-mile winding dirt road through old-growth redwoods. Further south at Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park near Orick, choose a site along windswept Gold Bluffs Beach or in the more developed (and wind-sheltered) Elk Prairie area. Don’t be surprised if a huge Roosevelt elk walks right past your tent. Gold Bluffs Beach has 26 first-come, first-serve sites; Elk Prairie’s 75 sites can be reserved in advance. And a few miles south of Crescent City at Del Norte Coast Redwoods State Park, 145 sites are found amid a second-growth forest of redwoods and alders near Mill Creek. There are also private campgrounds in the region.

If you’re a camper who craves amenities like showers and flush toilets, your best bets are any of these state park campgrounds. If you prefer seclusion to amenities, Redwood National Park provides a handful of backpacking campgrounds, most requiring relatively short hikes of less than three miles. 

Insider's Tip: These camps are much more rustic; you’ll need to supply your own water and pack out your rubbish.

Spotlight: Redwood National & State Parks EurekaCarsonMansion.CourtesyRedwoods.info_
Courtesy of Humboldt County CVB

Eureka

Eureka
Nature and culture merge in an art fuelled Victorian seaport

This lively seaport town, the largest coastal city between San Francisco and Portland, Oregon, has a split personality charm: a sense of history in the handsomely restored, Victorian era Old Town district, a still working seaport where crusty fishing boats chug in and out of a protected harbour, logging trucks rumbling through town, and an eco conscious college vibe thanks to Humboldt State, in the nearby town of Arcata. Hundreds of ornate 19th century homes, like the Carson Mansion, a paragon of Queen Anne architecture now housing a private club at the end of Second Street, reflect the prosperity of Eureka’s formative years, when lumber was king. The entire city is a state historic landmark, a captivating mix of nature and culture with a small town feel.

Start your visit on the waterfront, where a pretty esplanade provides nice views of the harbour and adjacent Humboldt Bay. Visit the small maritime museum, then board the MV Madaket, a snug ferryboat plying the bay since 1910, for 75 minute guided cruise. In adjacent Old Town, make a beeline for the outstanding Eureka Visitors Center, where you can sample local wines, beers and oysters, ask for tips on nearby galleries, gift shops and restaurants, and book guided tours and adventures.

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Visit Eureka
This is Eureka. 'You Found Her'. A Hidden Gem Surrounded By Ancient Redwood Forests, Cradled By Humboldt Bay, California’s Most Pristine Bay. Home To Artists And Makers, Sea Captains And Storytellers, Adventurers And Ghosts From The Past.
Humboldt Made
Humboldt Made: Overview
Meet the entrepreneurs of Humboldt County in this video from Humboldt Made, featuring the artisans, craftspeople, and food and drinks makers on the Redwood Coast of California.
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Courtesy of Humboldt County CVB

Tall Trees Grove

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Tall Trees Grove
Meander among the world’s tallest trees

This redwood grove’s name is a gross understatement. The trees here are not just tall but mind-bogglingly immense, towering as high as 379 feet—taller than a 35-storey building. To visit this special place, you must obtain a free permit at the Kuchel Visitor Center and then drive about 45 minutes to the Tall Trees trailhead, but it’s worth the trouble. The Park Service limits the number of cars because the access road is narrow, but that just means more solitude for you. From the trailhead, it’s a 1.3-mile hike downhill to the grove, which is set on a moist floodplain alongside Redwood Creek. All the trees are behemoths, but the 368-foot Libby Tree commands attention because it was long considered the tallest tree in the world. It lost its title when a 379-foot-tall tree was found in 2006. The location of the ‘new’ tallest tree has been kept secret, but it’s somewhere in this watershed. Several side trails lead out of the big trees to the gravel banks of Redwood Creek, a fine place to relax with a book in the summer months. Be sure to save energy for the uphill hike back to your car. 

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Battery Point Lighthouse/Crescent City by Bill Young/Flickr

Crescent City

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Crescent City
Two lighthouses shine in a sea-faring city

Only 20 miles south of Oregon, sea-faring Crescent City is home to the northernmost of California’s lighthouse stations. Overlooking the town’s harbour, the 1856 Battery Point Lighthouse, built with 22-inch-thick slabs of granite, sits on a tiny island that can only be reached on foot at low tide. When the water recedes, visitors walk across the causeway, climb the narrow spiral staircase to the lamp room, then crawl up a ladder and through a trap door for a spectacular 360-degree view. A few miles away is Crescent City’s other lighthouse at St. George Reef, 6 miles offshore. It was built after the 1865 shipwreck of the Brother Jonathan, which carried passengers and rumoured to hold 1.5 tons of gold coins and bullion, much of which has never been recovered. See the lighthouse from the public walking trails along the bluffs at Point St. George. Its original first-order Fresnel lens can be viewed at the Del Norte County Main Museum.

 After getting your fill of lighthouses, wander the Crescent City waterfront and marvel at how this city was entirely rebuilt after a devastating tsunami in 1964 (you’ll see tsunami warning signs all over town). At Ocean World aquarium, the sea lions balance balls and play catch with visitors, while at the Northcoast Marine Mammal Center, injured elephant seals and sea lions get some TLC and healing time before being released back to the wild. Call ahead to find out the pinnipeds’ feeding time, the most interesting time to visit. On the town’s west end is ocean front Pebble Beach Drive with easy access to Pebble Beach, a great place to search for agates and other semi-precious gemstones. 

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Trinidad Fishing Pier by Tai Power Seeff

Trinidad

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Trinidad
Seaside charm and an ancient Indian village

The hamlet of Trinidad with its picture-perfect headlands sits on a bluff overlooking the harbour at Trinidad Bay. It’s all about the sea here: Hike to the top of Trinidad Head to watch for whales, go tide-pooling at Indian Beach or touch the starfish at Humboldt State University’s Marine Lab. Trinidad State Beach is a well-known surfing spot while broad and sandy Moonstone Beach is favoured by beachcombers. The seafood market at Katy’s Smokehouse sells whatever fresh catch the fishermen have hauled in, plus a variety of smoked fish. Trinidad was the site of the first human settlement on California’s north coast, the Yurok Indian village of Tsurai. This community was ‘discovered’ by Spanish explorers in 1775, but it had probably existed for at least 1,000 years before. 

Insider's Tip:Check out the reconstructed Yurok Village at Patrick’s Point State Park, which is also a great spot for camping and hiking. 

Wild North Coast

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Vacationland

Things to Do in Redwood National Park

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Things to Do in Redwood National Park
Behold massive sequoias, ancient forests, peaceful beaches, and tasty brews in this northern California wonderland

Experience awe with a trip to Redwood National Park. The expansive area—which is actually a clustered network of national and state sites—is home to stunning giants that grow over 350 feet tall. Go beyond the obligatory tree-hug photo with these bright ideas for exploring nature’s majesty.

Drive the Newton B. Drury Scenic Parkway

This 10-mile road cuts through the heart of an old-growth forest in Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park. Herds of Roosevelt elk roam the woods and are easy to spot right from your car’s windows. If you want a more immersive experience, hop out and go for a hike at one of the many trailheads, including Big Tree Wayside and Ah-Pah.

Hike to Fern Canyon on James Irvine Trail

Enter prehistoric wilderness on this 9-mile roundtrip hike. The densely verdant forest served as the backdrop for a number of scenes in Jurassic Park 2, including the untimely demise of dino-hunter Dieter Stark. Don’t worry, you won’t encounter any velociraptors as you make your way along redwood growths and through the 50-foot-deep canyon dripping with ferns.

Ride Trees of Mystery

“Hi there, friend! Welcome to the Trees of Mystery!” bellows a 50-foot-tall Paul Bunyan statue as you arrive at this unique attraction. The Trees of Mystery features a 0.8-mile interpretive trail, more than 50 wooden chainsaw-carved sculptures, and the main attraction, the SkyTrail gondola ride, which provides a Bunyan-esque perspective of the forest from 130 feet above the ground.

Stay at Gold Bluffs Beach Campground

Where else can you spend all day in a lush, towering forest and turn in at night on a beach’s soft sand? The Gold Bluffs Beach Campground is nestled among sand dunes and offers 25 campsites with fire pits and picnic tables. If you prefer a more luxe experience, book a room at Garberville’s Benbow Historic Inn, or choose among seven Victorian properties that together make up Eureka’s Carter House Inns

Sip a flight of hoppy brews

Lost Coast Brewery has been Humboldt County’s hops mecca since it opened its doors in 1990 pouring the malty Downtown Brown. The brewery now serves more than half a dozen styles, and it ships the good stuff all around the world. Stop in for a flight and stay for dinner at the adjoining restaurant.