The modern day range of Sequoia
sempervirens stretches from Big Sur in Monterey County , California
to just across the California-Oregon border. At the southern end of the range,
the trees tend to be shorter, tucked away inside steep valleys cut into the Big Sur coastline. They may survive courtesy of tongues
of fog that roll in from the cool Pacific into the coastal valleys, while
finding the dryer warm hillsides too inhospitable. Towards the northern end of
the range in Humboldt and Del Norte counties, the redwoods reach their most
favorable conditions, at least as evidenced by the size of the trees. In Tall
Trees Grove in Redwood National Park in northern California , for example, several contenders
for the world's tallest tree thrive near Redwood Creek.
Though I have spent much time among the redwoods throughout
much of their range, until this week I had never seen the northernmost trees in
the southwest corner of Oregon .
The occasion was the first leg of a Pacific Northwest vacation in northwestern California and southeast Oregon . After an early morning exploration
of rocky tidepools in Crescent City , I thought it would be an opportune time to make
a detour to find the redwoods before heading to Oregon Caves
National Monument
(hopefully more on these adventures in later posts).
After crossing into Oregon heading north on US101, one heads
east to follow the course of the Winchuck River for a few miles and then turns
off onto a narrow one-lane road that winds into the western reaches of the
Rogue River Siskiyou National Forest. About 2-2.5 miles into the road, the
distinctive clusters of redwoods begin to appear among other conifers and at 4
miles the road ends and the Oregon redwood trail begins.
Redwood sorrel and wild ginger. |
Maianthemum sp. |
Reference
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