"If your dog is fat," the old saying goes, "you aren't getting enough exercise." But walking the dog need not be just about a little exercise. Here are 15 cool things you can see around northern California and southern Oregon while out walking the dog.
ENGINEERING MARVELS.
Between the town of Dairy and Sprague
River, On the OC & E Trailyou will pass an odd-looking section
over a hill. This is a
railroad double switchback, which enabled trains to be split for
navigating the hill. The original plans called for a tunnel through
Bly Mountain, but as funds were low it was decided the cheaper
double switchback-solution was good enough. Prior to the 1990
closing of the railroad, this unique engineering landmark was
last of its kind in the United States.
FASCINATING BIRDS.
Shasta Lake is a popular nesting spot for bald eagles, offering
an opportunity to see them hunting and nesting in the wild. At
McCloud Falls,be on the lookout for the little American Dipper
birds that patrol the tumbling waters. These tiny birds, also
known as water ouzels, zoom around over the surface and plunge
in and out of the cascading water in search of food. They use
their wings to "fly" underwater and can even be seen
walking on the stream bottom pecking for larval insects, fish
eggs and even slow fish just as if they were walking on the trail.
FRESH TASTING WATER.
Tub Springs was a popular stopping point for travelers on the
Applegate Trail to refresh with a cool drink of fresh mountain
water from tub springs. You can still do so today. A stone water
fountain at Hedge Creek Falls dispenses "the best water on
earth," according to townsfolk in Dunsmuir. You can have
a taste and judge for yourself at the gazebo on the top of the
trail.
GOLD.
People have come to the Shasta/Rogue River Valley for 150 years
to search for gold and it is probably not all gone. You can rent
a pan for $1 and chase gold in the creeks in Whiskeytown Recreation
Area. Prior to 1900, the City of Redding operated a gold mine
in Blue Gravel Canyon, the only town in California to do so. The
mine is long gone of course, but the trail remains and has relics
from the gold era along the path. Did they get all the gold here?
GREAT DAMS.
Shasta Dam opened in 1945 and flooded 35 miles of the Sacramento
River valley. One of the biggest dams ever conceived when construction
began in 1938, the building of Shasta Dam established several
"world records." Among them was the Southern Pacific
Railroad's double decker bridge that was the highest ever built
and the construction of the world's longest conveyor belt system
- 10.5 miles - to bring sand and aggregate to the building site
from Redding. The water spilling over Shasta Dam created the largest
artificial waterfall ever seen - three times as high as the drop
at Niagara Falls. The Trinity Dam, rising 466 feet from bedrock,
is one of the highest earth-filled dams in the world.
HISTORIC BUILDINGS.
Fire has claimed many an old building in the West but there are
still some significant wooden buildigns left standing in the wilderness.
In Trinity Recreation Area stands the Bowerman Barn, painstakingly
constructed with hardwood pegs and one of the most representative
19th century hand-crafted structures in California. Also in the
park is the oriignal log house from the Stoddard homestead, just
off the Stoddard Trail. In Ah-Di-Na Campground in Siskiyou County,
cnaine hikers can study an historic cabin that was restored by
volunteers in 1990 using only traditional tools such as long axes
and chisels.
INTERESTING TREES.
In TouVelle State Recreation Site is one of the largest granary
trees in southern Oregon. A granary tree is a special tree targeted
by acorn woodpeckers to store food. This ponderosa pine is estimated
to have as many as 50,000 holes! On the Blue Canyon Trail you
can see a tree where Judge John Waldo from Salem, Oregon and his
party traced the route that is now the Pacific Crest Trail, becoming
the first to cross the crest of the southern Cascades in 1888.
LOFTY LOOKOUTS.
Mountain trails often climax at Forest Service lookouts with dramatic
views. At Medicine Lake, Hoffman Lookout was built for fire surveillance
in 1924 and started out as a tiny 8 sq.ft. cabin. The cabin is
available for rent ((530) 964-2184) and is quite popular. Herd
Peak Lookout sits eastward of the main Cascade fault line, overlooking
a magnificent valley of hills created from pyroclastic lava flows
off Mount Shasta. During fire season, the lookout is manned from
9:30AM to 9PM, and the person in charge will be sitting in the
tower watching over the valley, ready to report any sign of a
fire to firefighters by radio. The rustic Marble Valley Guard
Station, completed in 1928 , is an early example of simple stations
built by the Forest Service as fire lookouts. Trail crews and
wilderness rangers still work from Marble Valley today - still
with little concession to modern comforts. The guard station is
reached by a difficult climb at the juncion of trails PC 2000
and 11W014, about 2.5 miles southwest of Lover's Camp Trailhead.
LOGGING HERITAGE.
You can't come away from a canine hike at Collier Memorial State
park without a greater appreciation for the logging industry.
The paths through the outdoor museum wind from the days of oxen
and hand axes through the age of steam and up to today's diesel
machines. You'll find railroad heritage here as well. Look for
an old Baldwin steam locomotive known, more or less affectionately,
as GOP - "Get Out And Push." The engine strained so
much hauling redwood logs in and out of the mountains that it
was constantly derailing.
MYTHICAL CREATURES.
On the hike to the summit of Collings Mountain you will find the
world's only known Bigfoot trap. Constructed of wood with a heavy
metal door reinforced by metal bolts by the North American Wildlife
team in 1974, the idea was the lure an unsuspecting Sasquatch
into the 10-foot by 10-foot pit from which it could not escape.
As you hike along the trails of Mount Shasta keep an eye out for
tall, graceful folks with long flowing hair dressed in white robes
- and a walnut-sized organ protruding from the center of their
foreheads. These would be Lemurians, most probably from the massive
lost continent of Mu that once lay under the Pacific Ocean and
helped explain how lemurs ended up on the island of Madagascar.
One of the more well travelled folktales associated with Mount
Shasta, some believed the Lemurians came to live in a city called
Telos inside of the volcano.
OLD ORCHARDS.
Joseph H. Stewart State Park
is built on an old homestead from the 1940s. Fruit grew here in
grand orchards, in the beginnings of Oregon's commercial pear
industry. You can still see some old pear trees and apple trees
and walnut trees scattered around the park. You will find historic
fruit trees along the trail at Wolf Creek Inn State Heritage Site
as well.
UNUSUAL BRIDGES.
The Sacramento River Trail is and ideal hike for studying bridge
architecture. Classical arch bridges transport vehicular traffic
across the Sacramento and theDiestlehorst Bridge is a prototypical
19th century pier and girder iron bridge. The Ribbon Bridge is
the first of its kind in the nation - a 13-foot wide, 420-foot
long concrete stess-ribbon structure. The Sundial Bridge at Turtle
Bay is the first American project for the celebrated Spanish bridge
architect, Santiago Calatrava. The focal point of his design is
a 218-foot curved tower on the north bank of the river that doubles
as support for the bridge's suspension cables and as the world's
largest sundial. The bridge sports a glass decking that enhances
the natural light and enables unobstructed views of the mountains
at the horizon and the salmon at play below.
VOLCANIC SOUVENIRS.
This landscape was formed in many places by volcanic eruptions.
The trail around Brown Mountain provides dramatic glimpses of
lava flow. At Black Butte, a small group of inactive "plug
dome" volcano craters dot the landscape. Plug domes have
a type of lava flow that too thick and stiff to flow normally,
but instead is squeezed out the top like crusty icing. All that
remains of the mighty 12,000-foot volcano that once dominated
the southern Cascades are eight protruding peaks in the Mountain
Lakes Wilderness. And there is the odd Oregon Desert, a pumice-covered
landscape in the Sky Lakes Wilderness. Ash from Mount McLouhlin's
last eruption sits fifty feet deepa across the area.
WATERFALLS.
This trail at McCloud Falls reveals three waterfalls in little
more than a mile: the Lower Falls (a powerful, ten-foot drop into
a wide pool), the Middle Falls (a classically wide, 50-foot waterfall),
and the Upper Falls (a water spout squeezing through granite cliffs).
Two hikes in the town of Dunsmuir also find different types of
falls: Hedge Creek Falls cutting through basalt rock and Mossbrae
Falls dripping through moss and ferns.
WRITER INSPIRATIONS.
The best-selling Western writer of all time, Zane Grey, used the
Rogue River as the centerpiece of many of his stories. His cabin
can still be seen on the Rogue. Jack London wrote Valley of the
Moon while a guest at Wolf Creek Inn.