Muir Woods vs. Hetch Hetchy
After posting earlier this morning on the subject of the 100th anniversary of Muir Woods, an irony occurred to me. As the SFGate article in my earlier post reminded us, there had been a plan to construct a reservoir where the Muir Woods monument is today.
It was close to this same time early in the 1900’s that John Muir led – and ultimately lost – the fight of his life against the plan to damn Yosemite’s Hetch Hetchy Valley (the more northern twin of Yosemite Valley) to ensure cheap water for San Francisco.
A century later it seems obvious that the decision to not dam Muir Woods but instead protect if for future generations was far wiser and more admirable than the decision to flood a treasure like Hetch Hetchy. Something tells me that there won’t be any proud public celebrations of the 100th anniversary of the flooding of Hetch Hetchy.
Muir Woods 100th Anniversary
From an article in SFGate:
It is difficult to imagine a time when anyone would contemplate chopping down the magnificent redwoods in Muir Woods, let alone drowning the valley under hundreds of feet of water. Those scenarios were actually being contemplated 100 years ago, until one of the Bay Area’s first conservationists stepped forward.
U.S. Rep. William Kent, the heir to a Chicago meat-packing fortune, had purchased what was then the last stand of old-growth redwoods in the Bay Area. He donated it to the federal government just as a local water company was preparing to condemn it and build a dam.
This month marks the beginning of a yearlong celebration of the 100-year anniversary of the establishment of Muir Woods as a national monument.
Kent’s decision to thwart industrial progress is now considered one of the most courageous acts of land preservation in U.S. history, and it will play a major role in the events planned over the next year by the Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy and the National Park Service.
Follow the link for the whole story.
This is an example of something that should be obvious to anyone who thinks about questions of land conservation in the US and elsewhere – the value to future generations of places like Muir Woods far exceeds the short-term value of alternative uses. We don’t need to look into the future and imagine that this might be true; we can look into the past and follow forward to the present to see plenty of evidence for this.
Two From the Little Red Tent
I see that photographs of a couple of places with meaning to me have been posted at The Little Red Tent blog.
A photograph of a long-dead Bristlecone pine tree in the White Mountains and the accompanying commentary remind me of what a wonderful and mysterious place the White Mountain Bristlecone pine forest is. High (very high – 10,000′ and higher) above Owens Valley and facing westward towards the Sierra crest, this place is intimately linked to the full eastern Sierra and Owens Valley experience, yet in many ways is also an entirely separate world.
A photograph from a rise above Townsley Lake near Fletcher Lake and the Vogelsang High Sierra Camp evokes all sorts of memories and associations for me. In most years a walk past almost this exact spot has been part one of my end-of-season solo trips into the Yosemite backcountry, a hike that takes me by means of cross-country travel from Fletcher Lake to Ireland Lake and sometimes beyond.
We're All on the Same Plane… or Planet
Seen in an article in SF Gate:
“The United States in particular is behaving like passengers in first class in a jumbo jet, thinking a catastrophe in economy class won’t affect them,” said Tony Juniper, a spokesman for the environmentalist coalition [at the Bali climate talks]. “If we go down, we go down together, and the United States needs to realize that very quickly.”
Winter Thoughts… and Evidence?
Winter should be just around the corner – or at least what passes for winter here in coastal central California. It has recently gotten cold (I can hear the midwesterners laughing outloud, “You call that cold!?”) but we still haven’t seen much in the way of winter-type storms here. Oddly, we had a series of early Pacific storms in late September and October – they closed passes in the Sierra for a few days and caused my talusdancers and me to cancel our annual mid-October Final Sierra Pack Trip Before The Snow Falls because, well, the snow had already fallen. But since then we’ve only had maybe one real storm.
But there is some news suggesting that something resembling winter is coming to the Sierra. First, and not unexpectedly, Tioga Pass Road over the Sierra crest in Yosemite was finally closed for the season by the last storm. (Now the annual guessing game can begin – when will it open?) And I saw a report today at The Little Red Tent about the preparations going on at Yosemite’s historic Badger Pass ski area. Although it isn’t open yet, I’m quite certain that I saw people on skis in those photos…
Hello to Visitors from Two-Heel Drive
My friend Tom shared a post about trail photography this morning that included a link to this site. (Thanks for the link, Tom… :-) A few thoughts…
- Welcome to those of you are visiting by way of Tom’s link!
- I have to agree with Tom’s basic points about trail photography, especially as they relate to folks who may not be quite as nuts about the photography part of the outdoor experience as I am.
- If you would like to see more of my photography – and I hope you do! – take a look at G Dan Mitchell | Photography and my Gallery site. I also have a portfolio at photo.net and a presence at Flickr.
I may try to post something else about my approach to hiking, backpacking, and other forms of outdoor photography later. In the meantime, you can read about my current backpacking photography equipment list.
A Castle Rock Hike
After that last post, I’ll start this one with a bit of a more pleasant photograph:

Monterey Bay and the Santa Cruz Range – Castle Rock Park. December 2, 2007. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell.
In most ways (more on that in a moment) this was a really great hike. I started out at about 10:00 a.m. and it was quite cold and very windy. In fact, it was the sort of wind that causes a sound almost like jet engines – very impressive! Leaves and twigs were flying everywhere, and I didn’t get warmed up until I finally did some uphill hiking. For the first time it actually felt like winter is perhaps beginning around here.
Although it was cloudy on the ridge – due, I imagine, to the clouds lifting as they blew in from the coast – it was apparently sunny out over the ocean. As the photograph shows, not only was it clear enough to see all the way across the bay to the Monterey Peninsula, but the sun was reflecting brightly off of the surface of the water.
About that “most ways” comment above… As I headed back up the trail to the car a bug – a fly, I thought – started buzzing around my head. Annoying. I tried to brush it away, but it was persistent – actually landing on my head and in my hair a couple times. The last time I took a moment too long to swat it away, and discovered the hard way that it was a bee! Ouch! It has been years since I’ve been stung by a bee, and this is the first time I’ve ever had one actually pursue me. Double ouch!
An Almaden Quicksilver Hike…
… or, Who Has Been Plowing Up The Park?
After not going there for some time, yesterday I made it back to Almaden Quicksilver County Park for a hike up the Deep Gulch Trail to the ridge near the old mine buildings. I like this trail because it is a very direct route, heading pretty much straight up to the old English Camp site. I was surprised by light rain – not in the forecast – but it cleared as I neared the ridge.
On the way up I noticed a few areas that looked like they had been worked over by some heavy equipment. I wasn’t quite sure what this meant, but it did look like the non-native and quite invasive (Spanish? Scotch?) Broom plants had been cut way back. About time!
I didn’t think much more about this until near the high point of my hike. At English Camp, instead of ascending to the main ridge on the Castillero trail I took the foot trail that cuts off to the left and arrives on the ridge a bit lower. Arriving here I briefly looked around before starting back down – I was running a bit late. As I started back down the trail I looked to my right and saw two large road cuts through a grove of trees on a nearby ridge – and I decided to investigate. After hiking up one of them, it looks like whoever maintains the high tension power transmission lines that cross that park has seen fit to bulldoze what amounts to a two-lane dirt road straight through the brush to their towers. Pretty ugly stuff.
The following photo is what I think of as an “ironic landscape,” since it is the view one currently sees from the ridgeline trail of this park.

Newly Gouged Dirt Road and Tower of Power. Almaden Quicksilver County Park. December 1, 2007. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell.
Lovely view, huh?
Prescribed Burns in SF Bay Area
Yesterday I was surprised to see a large smoke cloud over the Diablo Range east of Santa Clara Valley, in the area of Mount Hamilton and Lick Observatory. It is unusual to see fires this late in the season, but I assumed that perhaps our less-than-typical rainfall might be playing a part.
Today the California Fire News blog reports that this fire, a fire in Big Basin, and others not too far away are actually prescribed burns. I’m used to seeing this in the Sierra in the fall, but it is a new development – as far as I know – in the Bay Area. It is also probably a very good idea given that wildfires in areas where fires have been long suppressed have the potential to do very serious damage.
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Something Tells Me It Is Snowing At Tioga Pass…
From the current Tioga web cam image:
Could someone please ski up there and wipe the lens? :-)
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December 18, 2007 Posted by gdanmitchell | Commentary, Yosemite | 1 Comment