Wednesday, July 23, 2014

Monday: We found it! (California adventure: Day 3)

Monday, July 21, 2014

Monday is our first day in Eureka, whose name is derived from the ancient Greek word meaning “I found it!”.  And find it we did! 

After a long, late-night drive from Clearlake to Eureka, it was a relatively sleepless night at the Red Lion Inn due to our room location right below what was clearly a circus troop in the room upstairs, complete with tumblers, trampolines, and elephants.  Thus, Pierce’s first job on Monday morning was to get us moved to the top floor, which he accomplished with ease (and his southern charm, no doubt).

Then, it was off in search of a hearty breakfast, which we found at The Chalet Diner just across the street from the hotel.  After all, adventuring requires energy!  As we dined on delicious though pricey omelets and pancakes, Heather planned the rest of the day. 

Afterwards, we started by walking about in downtown Eureka.  Though smaller than we first imagined, it was a cute little downtown area that offered shops and eateries and “organic espresso”, and a cool ocean breeze that keep us in long sleeves for the better part of the morning. 

One thing we couldn’t help but notice was the number of hippies (or, perhaps more accurately, unkempt, tattooed, odiferous vagrants) all of whom had a pet dog.  Largely harmless, they struck us as post-college west coast dreamer-travelers who never quite remembered that jobs and income and responsibility were in any way important to life.  Thus they seemed to have slipped into a sort of a time warp of wandering, hygiene-free living.

Knowing that we needed more information on the coming days in the woods, we popped into a local bookstore to seek good advice for the trip.  We found the perfect book for our needs… “Conifer Country:  A Natural History and Hiking Guide to Northern California”.  Therein, we found excellent descriptions of trails, the trees we’d see (critical to the total experience, of course!), and, for Heather’s sake, a difficulty scale for each hike.  This would serve us well in the coming days.

Since the enormous breakfast wasn’t quite enough, we soon found ourselves in a bagel shop having organic whole wheat bagels and organically grown coffee (we are not sure the letters G, M, and O are allowed to be used together in northern California).  Having once again sated our appetites, and having blown through all the shops in downtown, it seemed to be time to see what we came to see…the Redwood forests!

Of course, we needed to make sure that we had access to food for the trip (yes there seems to be a theme), so as we left Eureka on the 101 Northbound, Heather searched and quickly spotted the “Hole in Wall” sandwich shop in Arcata, CA.  Great place, enormous sandwiches, and, yes, more hippies.  Having yet again sated our appetites (with leftovers for later, of course) we headed off in search of “gret big o’ trees”. 

We started in the Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park, wherein Heather had spotted a good “moderate difficulty” trail with a good variety of trees in old growth forests. 
Neither of us, of course, had ever been here before.  Needless to say, we were both excited.  But neither of us was even close to prepared for what we saw.  If you’ve never been to see these forests, suffice it to say that no one can possibly describe what you would see.  No camera can capture the magnificence, no artist can paint the splendor, no poet can pen an adequate metaphor.  Within the first minutes of the hike, we stopped and stood, silent and upward looking, awestruck, for what seemed like an eternity.  Every step of the next three hours, every glance left or right, up or behind, yielded another view of what I can only describe as one of God’s true masterworks. 

Of course, I tried in vain to capture what I could with my minimal camera skills.  It is almost laughable to try to cram 2500 years of natural history into the space of a camera lens.   There’s just too much there.

In truth, the camera kept us moving slowly ahead rather than rushing through such an incredible and irreplaceable experience.  While I tried to get just the right shot, Heather would patiently take in all that God had placed before us.   We took hours in the woods.  Stunningly, even at what should have been the height of tourist season, we encountered only three pairs of people during a three hour hike.  It was as if we had the entire forest to ourselves.  Not even the birds disturbed the perfect peace of this eternal place.

After this, we finally returned to the car where we inhaled the remainder of our Hole In The Wall sandwiches.  We then decided to leave the Redwoods for the day, given the time and the mental sapping that the previous hike had inflicted.   But we weren’t done sightseeing, it seemed.  On our way out of the park, we encountered a small herd of elk grazing by the side of the road.  After Heather restrained me from trying to pet one of the large bulls (something about rutting season and being trampled to death, blah blah blah), we sat in the car as the posed for us.

We headed south, wanting to see the little town of Arcata where we’d bought the day’s sandwiches.  Alas, the businesses shut down at 6p, so everything was closed.  We were both hungry from the day’s exertion, and settled on a meal of take-out sushi and some of our own wine in the room.

Sleep was much easier without the clowns upstairs, and we rested well in preparation for the next day’s adventure. 

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