Tags
Big Sur, Carmel, Elephant Seals, Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park, McWay Falls, Nature, Photography. Redwood trees, Waterfall
One of my favorite places to visit is the Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park in Big Sur, a two-hour drive from our home. There you can find not only 300-foot (90 m) redwoods which are over 2,500 years old, but an 80-foot waterfall that drops into a protected cove, one of the few waterfalls that empty directly into the ocean. The masthead photo on this blog is of the McWay Falls.
Recently I had the pleasure of taking some out-of-state guests there. Following are photos from our trip.
The drive to the park on Highway 1, winding along the coastline high above the Pacific Ocean, is one most spectacular that you will find anywhere in the world.
Here you can see the highway hugging the coastline. Often it is washed out by rains and mudslides in the winter.
Along the way are glimpses of beautiful coves and beaches and wild flowers..
Julia Pfeiffer Park is located 27 miles south of Carmel. It spans the highway with redwoods groves and picnic areas on one side, skirting the McFall River.
My cousin shows off one of the largest, and perhaps oldest, of the redwoods found in the park.
Visitors can walk through a tunnel under the highway to find trails leading past the falls up to where a home once stood with fantastic views of the ocean to the north and south.
This home had been build by the former U.S. House Representative Lathrop Brown and his wife Helen who acquired the property in 1924. In 1961 they bequeathed the property to the State of California and dedicated it to their friend and neighbor Julia Pfeiffer Burns. They requested their home to be demolished, so only a stone foundation remains.
This is the view from their home to the north. The water colors are some of the most beautiful I’ve seen since traveling in the South Pacific.
A closer view of the northern shoreline.
Here is the view of the McWay Falls through the trees from where the house once stood. Closer views of the falls along the trail follow.
The drive home is no less spectacular, passing along homes built along the hillsides, then dropping down to sea level where we find Elephant Seal Beach, and a peek of Hearst Castle.
Elephant Seal Beach is a protected sanctuary with docents available to answer questions. It’s a few miles north of Cambria along Highway 1, before the climb up to Big Sur.
A chummy clan.
Here you see a bull, its mates, and a baby.
A peak of Hearst Castle high on the mountain top. Soon after this view we turn away from the coast, passing through these mountains to our own hillside home on the other side.
Related articles
- Park and Point: The Big Sur Coast (pamphotography.wordpress.com)
- Photo of the day: Where the redwoods rule (quirkydirt.wordpress.com)
Discover more from Deborah J. Brasket, Author
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So gorgeous, Deborah. Thank you for posting those pictures and reminding me of that glorious coast.
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So glad you enjoyed them. I feel so blessed living so close to so many beautiful sites.
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Hello! I am getting married at this park in July, and was wondering if you had photos of the just the picnic area? They told us that it’s the “Redwood Picnic Area” but they don’t have photos posted anywhere. Can you help?
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Hi Brenda, congratulations! Sorry I didn’t see this earlier. Unfortunately I don’t think I have any photos of this area, but I’ll check and see. What a lovely place to have a wedding though. Wishing you tons of happiness.
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Deborah, thank you for these magnificent pictures. I’m heading out to Oregon for a family reunion this summer and can’t wait to get back out to the West Coast. (I’ve only been there a handful of times but love it.) I do want to make it to Big Sur one of these days.
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I do hope you make it to Big Sur. There’s nothing quite like it anywhere.
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Thanks for this beautiful tour, Deborah. The vast ocean meeting the shoreline and silent old forests in the mountains can do a lot for a person’s soul! Reminds me of the time I spent in the rainforests north of Vancouver, and Cathedral Grove, an old growth forest on Vancouver Island, in British Columbia. Years later, when I visited my son who was living in the Bay Area at the time, he’d take me across the Golden Gate Bridge to visit the old growth redwood trees. Same feeling of being among ancient giants. Together they hold a lot of silence!
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I’m so glad you enjoyed it. As you said, that feeling of being among the ancient giants, and the silence–there’s noting like it.
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Gorgeous pictures! hope to get there someday!
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Thank you! Hope you get there too.
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Sigh…. Just heavenly. I miss this area terribly — thanks so much for the beautiful tour!!!
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You are so welcome.
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Hi Deborah…I just nominated you for The Inspiring Blogger Award. Check it out on my blog.
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Wow! You are so sweet. Thank you.
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Great pics! Thanks for sharing. I’ve only been to California a few times, and when I have, I’m struck by how the differences from my native Midwest lands — the lack of mosquitoes, for one. As amazing and breath-takinginly beautiful as California can be, I’m not sure if I could ever feel quite as at-home there as here. After a few days, I find myself wanting to see excessive greenery (though not so much during the winter) again. Did you grow up there, or in a similar climate? I wonder what it is about those areas where we live that speaks to us.
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Yes, I did grow up on the Central Coast, so it does speak to me in a special way. Not long ago we had thought about retiring in New Mexico, and while I love the desert too, I just didn’t have the heart to move away from a place “that speaks to me” as you say. I like the lack of mosquitos too 😉
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These photographs are fantastic: thank you for sharing them.
I have wanted to come out to Big Sur for years. My mother has often commented that San Francisco and Big Sur are the two places she feels most at home in the United States. There is something about Big Sur especially (and Esalen) that keeps bringing her back. She brought me out there when I was infant and I have wanted to see it againwith my adult eyes.
Since I can’t get out there just yet I find myself reading the poetry of Robinson Jeffers who makes the northern coast of California come alive for me.
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I’m happy to share these with you. It’s been awhile since I read Jeffers. I’ll have to get him out again.
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I haven’t been there in ages. Like the others, thanks for posting. I am but a couple hours north of Big Sur. I’m feeling a weekend road trip bubbling up inside of me. I appreciate there is still so my beauty around us, especially if you live in Ca. A person doesn’t have to go far to find it.
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You are right about that. So many beautiful places in California to visit!
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I will definitely stop by Big Sur if I visit California. Love, love, love the shot of the big tree from beneath its umbrella of leaves. And those of the elephant seals.
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Thank you. Those are some of my favorite shots too.
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Stunning pictures! Thanks for sharing & thanks for your visit on my blog!
Have a nice one!
Yours
Apu
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Thank you. My pleasure.
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I HAVE to go there! Thank you for the beautiful pictures and prose.
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You DO have to go! It’s amazing.
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I grew up in sights like these. Thanks for the lovely reminders!
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Thank you for stopping by and leaving a comment!
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