The Carrizo Experience: Ten Hours on the Plain I

(First in a Series)

Ruminants on the Range

Toward the eastern end of the Carrizo Plain National Monument a wicked crack parts the flatland’s reddened earth. Looking across the plain from a distance the ditch is invisible, while within its vertical-sided void the rest of earth disappears and only the sky overhead can be seen.

For a region of scant rainfall it seems remarkably deep for an arroyo, but it looks like a dry wash and it leads toward Soda Lake. Yet at the same time it doesn’t look like water has flowed through it anytime recently despite last season’s heavy rainfall in San Luis Obispo County. It very well may not have anything to do with water. It may be tectonic not hydrological. It might be some sort of tear in the earth created by movement along the nearby San Andreas Fault.

Soda Lake Road passes across the head of the ditch and, through the years, every time I have driven by my eyes are magnetically drawn to it. It’s a striking feature of the landscape that has always caught my attention, but despite my curiosity I had never stopped to explore the area. Until this last venture out to the plain when something of particular note provided the impetus.

I had driven past the jagged slash in the earth with the usual glance over my shoulder but kept moving. Because of its sunken nature it fades from sight rapidly, but it runs somewhat parallel to the dirt road for about a mile and half. Rolling down the road at 25 miles per hour, and scanning the plain for signs of life, I spied something far off in its grassy midst. I pulled to the side of the road, grabbed my binoculars and slid from the cab for a peek. It was a 20-head strong herd of pronghorn antelope.

Pronghorn are the world’s second fastest land animal. They have been clocked at speeds up to 53 miles per hour and are slower only than the cheetah. Yet, due to their exceptionally large lung capacity, and the mechanics of their bodies which are built to outrun predators, they can maintain top speed for longer distances. They are the world’s fastest sustained runners.

I leaped into my truck and turned around heading back toward the arroyo, which, it occurred to me, would provide perfect cover. The furrow would serve as a natural blind that would allow me to approach unseen, unheard and unsmelled. With a pack strapped to my back I charged into the void hoping to sneak up closer to pronghorn than I had ever been.

Owls in a sandstone cave on the Carrizo Plain.

Birds are drawn to the ditch and white splotches of poop stain the vertical walls here and there all along its course where they roost. Its walls are also dotted with the burrows of raptors and piles of sun-bleached rodent skulls litter the ground beneath each hole. Thin animal trails run through the grasses and low bushes.

As I walked the channel I climbed its walls occasionally to get a bearing on the herd. I’d slowly raise my eyes above the soil line and low plant cover more stealthily the closer I got, just enough to see my target. They remained there cropping grass and chewing cud and completely unaware of their pursuer. I managed to close in on the herd just enough to make it worth taking a few photos with my puny little lens.

I watched the pronghorns for awhile before trying to creep closer. They have excellent eye sight. For each step I took they took a few, too, and it wasn’t long before the herd was drifting away from me and deeper into the prairie making my effort futile. I called off the hunt and headed back down the arroyo retracing my steps to my truck.

When I finally popped my head clear of the ditch after walking back, and the sweeping plain sprang into view once again, the sudden sight of such vast openness rippled through me. The instant transition from the narrow confines of the arroyo to the mile and half wide plain, from shortsighted tunnel vision to an infinite 360 degree view, seemed to strike me physically. Sort of like the unbalancing debilitation that the fear of heights can bring on, a physical reaction to a visual experience.

I don’t imagine I’ll ever get much closer to the pronghorn, they’re sharp eyed and skittish. Driving on down the desolate road toward Soda Lake, the herd was lost in the beige boundlessness of the Carrizo Plain. I was left pondering how a hunter might get close enough to take a pronghorn using a bow and arrow, as I headed toward the fading traces long ago left behind by a people that had known the answer.

Bibliograpy:

University of Michigan Museum of Zoology

Related Posts:

Cave’s Eye View on the Carrizo Summertime Soda Lake Selby Rocks Carrizo Plain Wildflowers Wallace Creek Offset, San Andreas Fault Soda Lake Winter Reflections Elkhorn Plain  Dragon’s Back Ridge, San Andreas Fault

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Riding the Queen. . .and She was Good

I love her voluptuous curves and curling lips. She’s always wet and tastes salty and she feels good to ride. The glide of my stick across her silky smoothness, a sensation that always keeps me coming back for more. And she was good today.

K. A. in front feeling the single fin soul, behind him ten time world surfing champion, Kelly Slater, looking to bury a rail and annihilate a lip.

Slater ejecting a share of the Pacific into the atmosphere above and making mince meat of some of the smaller waves below.

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Piedra Blanca

Piedra Blanca sandstone formation.

Pops came to visit for Thanksgiving. Last time he came to stay I dragged him along on a five mile hike through intermittent driving rain showers out in the hinterlands of San Luis Obispo County. This time we took it easy and spent an afternoon up at Piedra Blanca.

Clint Elliott monkeying around:

Related Posts:

Canoe Campin’ and Fishin’ in Minnesota

Clint Sliding Down Mono Dam

Clint Cliff Diving Montezuma Falls in Costa Rica

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The Waxing and Waning of Campus Point Beach

The view from the cliffs in June 1969 looking up the beach toward Campus/Goleta Point in the distance and showing a huge accumulation of sand. The red dot shows the location where the photos below were taken from.

March 1975. Note the abundant plant cover that spread over the beach and right up to the waterline. The red dot shows the approximate location where the previous photo was taken from.

January 26, 1983 at the height of an El Nino high tide.

February 1992 low tide showing exposed bedrock.

October 2003.

Low tide in February 2011.

Photos provided courtesy of Arthur Gibbs Sylvester. Visit his website for further information and additional photos: UCSB Beach: 41 Years of Waxing and Waning.

Related Post:

Tafoni Weathered Stone at Campus Point (UCSB)

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Rose Canyon and Rowe’s Gulch

Overlooking the upper Santa Ynez River drainage on a crisp, cool midweek morn.

As it happened, nearly a year ago, I was perusing satellite imagery of the local backcountry as I often do. Once again the slim canyon west of P-Bar Flats Campground on Camuesa Road caught my eye. It looked like it had a tiny potrero on its lower end and I wanted to check it out. I had passed by the area innumerable times over the last two decades, but never stopped to take a looksee around.

Not long after scanning the imagery, I was reading a post by Craig R. Carey one day and, funnily enough, he mentioned the very canyon I had been scoping out. Thanks to the Red-Bearded Romper, that raconteur of Los Padres wilderness reconnoitering and recreation, I learned that the watershed in question is named Rose Canyon and that it used to contain a backpacking camp called Rowe’s Gulch. Well shizaam, Andy. I knew that canyon looked good, I thought. Apparently the USFS abandoned Rowe’s Gulch Camp during the 1960s.

And so it was after almost a year I headed out to get boots on the ground and finally take a gander at Rose Canyon. Sufficient time, I hoped, so as not to appear to be intentionally hornin’ in on Mr. Carey’s raison d’être. I marched down Cold Springs Trail North from East Camino Cielo Road and within about a half mile I crossed paths with two younger fellas heading out. I stepped aside to let them pass. “Cold last night, huh?” I asked. There was still a light dusting of snow on the higher peaks in the distance. “And wet. It rained pretty good,” the first guy said flatly. “But it was fun,” his partner added with a bit more pep as he went by. “It’s always good to get out,” I said.

I passed by Forbush Camp and on past Cottam Camp, across the Santa Ynez Riverbed and into the oaky defile of Rose Canyon. A few weeks earlier I had spent a night at Cottam in glorious weather with the sycamore leaves coloring the trees an orangy-yellow, but now the trees were completely bare limbed from the recent cold snap. It was midweek and nobody was around. Divide Peak gate had recently been closed thus limiting access by car or motorcycle and it had just rained about half an inch. Tudo bem!

Rose Canyon creek cuts a tight cobblestone and boulder-studded drainage through short mountains along its lower reaches before dumping into the Santa Ynez River. The hills part and open into a small chaparral covered valley at its upper end, where Rowe’s Gulch Camp was once located, and the creek turns into an arroyo-like stony flat bottomed wash. A remarkable stand of old-growth chaparral is bunched along the foot of the mountain on the southern side of the valley. Thick trunks bend skyward towering 12 or maybe 15 feet overhead, while under the shadowy canopy it’s open and clear enough to walk through with ease. It reminds me of the chaparral on the saddle between La Cumbre Peak and Cathedral Peak. When so much of the forest around these parts has been turned to ash from numerous wildfires, this type of old growth flora seems quite striking to me whereas in years past I took it for granted and was likely to pay it no attention.

The mighty Santa Ynez River. . .bed. Hard to imagine this crusty dry rock field, prior to being dammed in multiple locations, was not long ago one of the greatest Southern Steelhead runs in California.

Interestingly, there is a faint trail leading alongside the creek for much of the way up the canyon. Somebody has walked it relatively recently, too. It is heavily overgrown in most places, but it has the square-bottomed look and width of a footpath even, curiously, in sections that run through areas of heavy brush overhang and sapling growth. That suggests the path has been well-walked over time and in existence for awhile. Despite Rowe’s Gulch Camp being abandoned for nearly a half century, could it be the remnants of the original trail?

It’s a route that, while nonexistent in many areas, is still much more of a path than anything the canyon currently seems to warrant. It actually resembles a well-beaten but unkempt trail to an infrequently used campsite, which seems odd to me in a dry canyon of relatively little attraction. In fact it looks just like the trail I described running through the defunct Pine Canyon Flats Camp. I know old Indian trails over stone still visibly exist, as on Hopper Mountain in Ventura County or Painted Rock in San Luis Obispo County, but perhaps routes through the woods and over soil linger far longer than I assumed.

If there remains any other vestiges of the old camp such as remnants of ice-can stoves or fire rings I didn’t see them, but I didn’t look for anything of the sort. I was there more to set eyes on the place and get the lay of the land in my mind rather than search for relics.

As the day wore on the cloud cover thickened. I hung around a bit and then kicked rocks down canyon back toward the trailhead. I didn’t want to leave the woods. And so having lingered around on the trail here and there on my way back finding any little excuse to loiter, I ended up hiking the last hour of my time in darkness. With dusk, fog filled the valleys and eventually the backcountry disappeared within its misty shroud before turning black. I had a headlamp, as I always carry on day hikes just in case, but didn’t bother to break it out. It’s been awhile since I really got out in the night and I was enjoying it. With the waning moon there was still plenty of light to guide my noctivagant return.

Rose Canyon runs along the lower left side of the frame in the distance just beyond the grassy hilltop in the foreground.

Looking upstream toward the upper reaches of Rose Canyon. As best I can tell, Rowe’s Gulch Camp was located somewhere in the vicinity of the oak tree in the distance.

Looking rightward from the previous photo or downstream. The creekbed winds along the grassy flats and against the mountain.

Update, January 11, 2011: Craig R. Carey, Diamond in the Rough: Rowe’s (Rose) Gulch

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