| Hiding
within the concrete and stucco of our great megalopolis is a
parallel universe — a place where transit arteries are
not clogged, passersby don't avert their eyes, billboards are
ocean vistas and the hovering aircraft are hawks, not helicopters.
You can find this refuge on the vast network
of trails that crisscrosses the mountains and canyons of Southern
California. Stride into the Santa Monica Mountains above Leo
Carrillo State Park or high into the Santa Anas, and you're
a thousand miles from the nearest SigAlert. Here life is in
full flower, particularly after the deluges of winter. There's
a trail for every taste and topographical interest, but some
stand out. So lace up for a spin through 10 of the region's
most essential trails.
1. Top Ocean Vista
Paseo Miramar, Pacific Palisades
Ridgelines along the Pacific give hikers some
of the better payoffs on the trail circuit: a front-row seat
to the world's largest swimming hole. Though there are more
rugged trails with ocean overlooks, few can rival Paseo Miramar
for instant wide-screen grandeur.
Step off a mansion-lined street to the trail
head and you're in deep blue horizons within minutes.
The trail winds uphill most of the way to
the viewing stand of Parker Mesa Overlook, a five-mile round
trip with 1,200 feet of gain on the roomy Santa Ynez fire
road, leaving plenty of space for sidekicks. Part of the 36-mile
coastal trail system in Topanga State Park, Paseo Miramar
is no secret. One muddy spot on the trail last month offered
a snapshot of the passersby: a boot print, a mountain bike
tire track and a cougar's paw print. Nearby were hoof marks
wandering from mustard to lavender lupine. Everyone likes
a view.
From Parker Mesa Overlook you can, depending
on the particulate level, gaze from Palos Verdes to the Channel
Islands. Mix it up by walking the fire road one way and ridgeline
trails back.
Though bikers whiz by and meditators stake
out their spots, the pain of sharing is far outweighed by
ease of access and sudden spectacle.
— Emmett Berg
How to get there: Take Pacific Coast Highway
to Sunset Boulevard, turn left at Paseo Miramar and take it
to the dead-end. Park on the street.
2. Top Waterfall
Rose Valley Falls Hike, Los Padres National Forest
The natural world comes alive with the free
fall of water diving off precipices — and this year
more than most after the nonstop drenchings. Rose Valley Falls
is one of Southern California's best waterfalls, yet few hikers
take advantage of it. Not just another small SoCal cataract,
Rose Valley rivals any waterfall south of Yosemite during
rainy years.
A series of three drops totaling more than
300 feet of hurtling foam, Rose Valley Falls is the highest
waterfall in the Los Padres National Forest. The first drop
— a mere 20-foot cascade — is often overlooked.
The second is an impressive 90-foot plunge as Rose Valley
Creek spills over a near-vertical face. At almost 200 feet,
the upper falls is a replica of Bridalveil Falls.
The hike is a treat, easy enough for children
yet rewarding for experienced hikers. Begin the trek at Rose
Valley Campground, where a wooden sign leads you to the path
skirting Rose Valley Creek. It's a mere 10 minutes to the
base of Lower Rose Valley Falls. For the upper falls, backtrack
about 25 yards to a trail spur that heads up the hillside
to a view of the falls you'll never forget.
— Chris Shaffer
How to get there: Highway 33 is closed near
Wheeler Springs; call (805) 646-4348 for updates. From the
101 Freeway, take Highway 33 north, turn left for Wheeler
Springs and continue for 8 miles. From the Wheeler Gorge Campground,
continue 6 1/2 miles to Rose Valley Road. Turn right to Rose
Valley Campground.
3. Top City Lights
Mt. Hollywood Hike, Griffith Park
Is that a skunk? Oh , no, it's a rock with
a white stripe. And there — up in the tree — is
that a cat? But wait, cats don't hoot. That's an owl.
It's another night hike in Griffith Park,
where I've been a regular on a 4 1/2 -mile round-trip route
between Crystal Springs Drive and Mt. Hollywood for a little
over 20 years. I don't use a flashlight. Full moons help,
of course, but so do overcast nights when the city lights
reflect off the cloud cover. Is it dangerous? For the most
part, no, although I wound up breaking my ankle once when
I slipped into a ditch while talking to a friend.
The route to Mt. Hollywood's panoramic nightscape
starts just north of the Old Zoo Picnic Area. Follow the trail
to the water tank at Vista Del Valle Drive, make a right and
take a paved road about 200 yards, turn left onto a steep
uphill section that most Griffith Park hikers refer to as
Cardiac. Another left at the top of Cardiac, and it's three-quarters
of a mile to Mt. Hollywood — altogether a gain of about
1,100 feet.
I never tire of the view from the top. The
glowing grid spills out in all directions, broken only by
mountains and the ocean. From Mt. Hollywood, three runways
of lights stretch out to the south — Vermont, Normandie
and Western avenues.
To the west there's Hollywood and the Westside,
where the towers of Century City are usually visible. Downtown
skyscrapers dominate the horizon, with the deep bluish spaceship
of the Staples Center also distinctive. And the entire twinkling
tableau is topped off by a steady stream of dots descending
over the basin toward LAX.
In the summer, you can tell at a glance if
the Dodgers are at home or on the road. More people are on
the trails then, and the rattlesnakes are out. I accidentally
stepped on one once in the dark but emerged without a bite.
On damp winter nights you have the whole park
pretty much to yourself. Frogs and toads make the most glorious
sounds. When there's low cloud cover, the city below can disappear.
The top of Mt. Lee — where the Hollywood sign has stood
since the 1920s — can appear like an island floating
on the clouds.
Any time of year, there is the possibility
of running into a TV, movie or ad shoot. About a year ago,
I started out on a hike and noticed there were two moons in
the sky — the real moon and a lit-up balloon being used
for a movie scene.
You can learn this route and others in the
park by going on free Sierra Club hikes that leave at 7 p.m.
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday from the upper merry-go-round
parking lot. Once you've got the hike down and feel nocturnally
footloose, go on your own or with friends.
— Mike Eberts
How to get there: From the intersection of
Los Feliz Boulevard and Riverside Drive, take Crystal Springs
Drive into the park about a mile and a quarter and then the
first left (the visitor center is on the right). Continue
through the first parking lot, keeping to the left, to the
second parking lot near the merry-go-round. The trailhead
is just north of the entrance to the Old Zoo Picnic Area.
4. Top Grasslands
La Jolla Valley Hike, Point Mugu State Park
For those who have mowed one too many lawns
over the years, this La Jolla Valley route offers sweet vengeance,
a vision of a Black & Decker-free world you may have only
dared to dream. The epiphany occurs a couple of miles up the
6 1/2 -mile route, the last major trail in the Santa Monica
Mountains before Oxnard — and one of the best, packing
in everything from ocean vistas to waterfalls, mountain summits
and a floral fiesta.
From the parking lot, take the trail straight
up the canyon. It gets vertical quickly as you wind above
the creek bed on steep, lush hillsides out of Kauai. Wear
shades to take in the blinding yellow coreopsis blanketing
the scene from February to April. Hop boulders to the trail's
two waterfalls, splashing overtime this year, and then hang
a left at a fork in the trail.
Before long you're stumbling onto a fire road
(make a left here) and a scene out of some long-lost "Bonanza"
episode, a vast plateau covered in head-high grasses. Little
Joe, Adam or Hoss could come galloping across the plain at
any moment. It's a sight for sore lawn trimmers — the
largest stand of native grassland in Southern California rippling
wild and free in the breeze, unscalped by human hands. It
can get emotional seeing those wild blades reaching for the
sky like cornstalks. Be sure to pack some Kleenex.
For another double take, instead of following
La Jolla Valley Loop back to the canyon, run in slo-mo through
the rippling grasses like some Bollywood leading man or lady,
and in minutes you're face to face with the Pacific Ocean,
dropping several hundred feet below you — and your stomach
along with it.
It's one big scenic pullover as you straddle
slope and ocean on the cliffside Mugu Peak Trail. You'll wind
down back to the canyon trail — a changed hiker, content
that this time, at least, the grass won.
— Joe Robinson
How to get there: Take Pacific Coast Highway
north past Leo Carrillo State Beach and Sycamore Canyon to
La Jolla Canyon at Point Mugu State Park.
5. Top Overlooked Hike
Harding Truck Trail, Cleveland National Fores
The Harding Truck Trail isn't on everyone's
list of hikes, but it's a springtime beauty, delivering clear
sky views all the way to Catalina on one side and miles of
mostly solitary hiking through lush, rugged sage scrub on
the other.
Blue lupine, scarlet Indian paint brush, wild
cucumber, and delicate, lavender-colored sweet pea are already
in bloom in spots, as is the persistent but nonnative yellow
mustard.
The dirt-road trail begins at the metal gate
behind the Tucker Wildlife Sanctuary in picturesque Modjeska
Canyon in the Cleveland National Forest. New caretaker Birkin
Newell has spruced up the area, including adding a hand-painted
sign pointing the way. Drop off a donation in thanks.
There is no summit to be bagged on the long
hike to Laurel Spring, but there are several "aha"
vistas. Keep your eyes on the white rocks high on the far
peaks — you're headed to just below those. Prepare for
heat and cold. There's no shade, and temperatures plunge as
you climb.
The trail climbs quickly past Flores' Peak
and makes a bend at a lovely view of interior Harding Canyon.
It's a perfect vista of the Santa Ana Mountains as they looked
100 years ago.
From the "goat shed" — a few
wooden beams set against the open sky about a mile and a half
into the hike — you follow a series of long, sloping
switchbacks along ridges crowded with manzanita and scrub
oak. The occasional mountain biker tumbles past, and if you're
lucky, you may catch the gaze of a shy bobcat crouched in
the brush.
A large cairn precedes the spring by a quarter
mile. It dries up by summer, so go now. While not safe to
drink, the burble of cool water is welcome before beginning
the long climb down to reality.
— Janet Wilson
How to get there: Take Santiago Canyon Road
(S18) to Modjeska Canyon Road. Follow Modjeska to the end.
On your right, you will see the Tucker Wildlife Sanctuary.
Park on the gravel pad on that side. The trail head is on
the left, behind the sanctuary office, up a 50-foot driveway.
6. Top River Hike
San Gabriel's West Fork, Angeles National Forest
I'm not that fussy about my wilderness, so
hiking along the West Fork of the San Gabriel River on an
asphalt road is hardly a deal breaker, especially when it
connects you to one of the better riverside jaunts in the
area.
The route is hardly pure; all you have to
do is stop at a sandbar below the road and gaze down at the
frothy, rain-swelled river as it cuts through the wooded canyon.
All that's visible are high rock walls that
hug the stream, springtime waterfalls flowing in silvery strands
and patchy blue sky.
Stand closer to the churning river and notice
the drop in temperature. It feels as if you are intruding
on wildness. Just hold onto that thought and hike with it.
Pretty soon you won't want to leave this place. To be sure,
amenities dot the route, which climbs only 500 feet over 6
1/2 miles, 13 miles round trip. There are four wheelchair-accessible
fishing platforms, several bathrooms and Glen Campground at
the turnaround point.
So, no, it isn't the John Muir Trail. But
on an overcast Monday, just a few miles from the metropolis,
the rushing river brings refreshing solitude — and unwound
muscles.
— Bill Sharpsteen
How to get there: From the 210 Freeway, exit
Azusa Avenue (Highway 39), drive north 13 miles. Trail head
and parking lot are on the left just before a bridge that
crosses the river.
7. Top Desert Hike
Murray Canyon Trail, Palm Springs
Sometimes nature tosses humans a bone. How
else can you explain oases that serve up bodily pleasure in
the otherwise thorny desert?
The bone, in this case, comes courtesy of
California's native palm colonies, which are concentrated
in the Indian Canyons just south of Palm Springs. The Murray
Canyon Trail is the best way to immerse yourself in that lost-in-paradise
feeling.
As you approach across a plain, watch for
the crowns of palms hidden in a ravine ahead of you. The stream
can be dry in the hottest months, but if you pass drenched
teenagers, it's a good sign the stone pools are brimming.
Drop down into the canyon into a forest of
Washingtonia filifera palms, known for their plump frond skirts
and their comforting grandmotherly aura. Strings of black
dates dangle overhead. The combination of water and shade
attracts all sorts of life, from bats and orioles to coyotes.
You can continue up the canyon about two miles
to a 12-foot waterfall and the Seven Sisters pools.
But just this once, put ambition aside. Bring
a bandanna, soak it in the stream and squeeze oasis water
over your steaming bod. Crisscross your chest with crushed
desert lavender and paint your ankles with black creek mud.
— Ann Japenga
How to get there: In Palm Springs, exit Highway
111 at South Palm Canyon Drive. Head for the Andreas Canyon
parking area and look for signs to the Murray Canyon Trail.
There's a $6-per-person fee at the gate.
8. Top Woods
Chantry Flat Loop, Angeles National Forest
While damage has repeatedly closed the road
to Chantry Flat over the past few years, that's no reason
not to put this route on a futures list. There are so many
distractions on this loop — thundering waterfalls, old
stone-and-wood cottages, a detour to a hidden overlook —
that it's easy to miss the trees for the forest. That would
be a mistake in this arboreal haven.
Grab a guidebook — the loop can be tricky
— and detailed map before taking the Gabrielino Trail
to the heart of Santa Anita Canyon and its fast-flowing creek
and looping around to the Upper Winter Creek Trail. A sign
at the start of this woodsy canyon begins with a cosmic reminder
that says something like: "Be kind to the earth, one
day you'll be part of it."
Fortified with wisdom, you are soon amid a
canopy of trees along the creek that seems endless. Stately
alders, at least three kinds of oaks, big-leaf maples and
sycamores with their mottled trunks form a lush overhang as
you repeatedly boulder-hop across the creek.
About two miles up the canyon, past a series
of Hansel-and-Gretel-like cottages whose residents are supplied
by the last mule train in L.A. County, you'll be tempted to
make Sturtevant Falls your destination.
Continue uphill on a narrow track that leads
to a series of little rock-scoured pools. (In what passes
for winter in Southern California, the trees here shed enormous
yellow leaves that will transport you to a fall day in New
England.)
Stop to crush a few leaves of a California
bay — during any season — between your fingers
to get a whiff of the dreamy aroma, but beware of touching
the eternally healthy stands of poison oak that abound along
the trail.
About six miles in, a short access trail shoots
up to the diminutive Mt. Zion and panoramic views of the San
Gabriel Mountains.
Again, resist. Revel, instead, in the dense
cover of oaks, with whom you will be, at some distant time,
sharing common ground.
— Mary Forgione
How to get there: Exit the 210 Freeway at
Santa Anita Avenue. Drive north six miles to the top and the
trail head. A word of warning: The last few miles of the road
are closed indefinitely; call (626) 574-1613 for updates.
Hardy souls can hoof or bike up the steep paved route, adding
about four miles round trip.
9. Top Sweat Hike
Mt. Baldy Ski Hut Trail, San Gabriel Mountains
If you like your hikes vertical, Mt. Baldy's
Ski Hut Trail will get you upwardly mobile in a hurry. It
gains a lung-busting 3,904 feet of altitude over just 4.6
miles. Mt. Baldy, formally Mt. San Antonio, is the highest
peak in the San Gabriel Mountains, at 10,064 feet. Though
not as high as nearby Mt. San Gorgonio, the view is better
and the route is definitely more cardio-worthy.
There are four approaches to the top, but
my favorite is the steep trip from Manker Flats. The hike
begins at the start of a gravel road that leads to Baldy Notch.
Soon an unmarked trail veers off to the left and seriously
skyward.
As you come around a bend, the Sierra Club
ski hut comes into view a few miles up the trail, but it's
still a long, hard climb away. You should be soaked by the
time you reach the hut, but you're only halfway there. Soon
you cross an ancient rockfall that shot truck-size boulders
miles down the canyon. As you gain more altitude, you'll ascend
through lodgepole pines and pass a saddle below the final
leg to the summit.
Only from the summit can you grasp the vast
scale of this familiar yet faraway range — not to mention
the effort it takes to get here.
— Ralph Vartabedian
How to get there: Snowed in now. Wait till
spring thaw. Take the 10 Freeway to Mountain Avenue in Claremont.
Follow Mountain Avenue north to the end. Begin the hike at
the road to Baldy Notch.
10. Top Birding
Arroyo Seco Hike, Altadena
An ideal birding hike has a variety of habitats,
which means a variety of birds, and the Gabrielino Trail —
a 6-mile route in Arroyo Seco, through a wooded canyon above
Altadena — has just that.
The first section, along a marked paved trail
that skirts a chaparral-covered hillside, isn't particularly
scenic but here's where you can tick off the chaparral birds
— California quail, spotted towhees, wrentits and the
like. Look for a variety of hawks in the sky and on the telephone
poles.
At the bottom of the hill, keep going north
into the canyon, and any time you have a choice of trails
from this point on, keep to the one closest to the stream.
The farther you go, the more beautiful — and birdy —
the hike gets.
In the spring, especially April and May, the
alders and oaks along the streambed play host to mixed flocks
of migrating warblers, and at dawn and dusk, you're guaranteed
owls.
At the second bridge past Gould Mesa campground,
look up. This is a great place to see the spectacular yellow
and orange Western tanager. Also look down into the water.
There you may see the best bird on the hike:
an American dipper, the only North American songbird that
can swim. Scan carefully from the bridge for a dark gray,
7 1/2 -inch bird swimming in the stream.
If you don't see one, this is still a lovely,
shady spot to just relax and enjoy the scenery — and
keep your eyes open.
— Sue Horton How to get there: Take the Windsor Avenue
exit north from the 210 Freeway. Park in a lot at Windsor
and Ventura. |