Travel Guide to California

NORTH COAST

Victorian villages, picturesqu­e fishing harbors and the world’s tallest trees

- BY JOHN FLINN

TOP CITIES

Mendocino, Eureka, Crescent City, Fort Bragg, Garbervill­e, Arcata, Ukiah, Cloverdale, Ferndale

GATEWAY

The Arcata-eureka Airport (EKA), 16 miles (26 km) from downtown Eureka, has service from San Francisco and other hubs, but no internatio­nal flights

TOURISM WEBSITES delnorte.org exploredel­norte.com northcoast­ca.com visitredwo­ods.com visitmendo­cino.com

POPULATION 782,000

This should put things in perspectiv­e: The North Coast’s tallest building is only 77 feet tall, but its tallest tree stands 379 feet tall. Until you’ve seen one up close, it’s hard to grasp just how neck-craningly high a coastal redwood tree can grow. These 3,000-year-old arboreal titans—nature’s loftiest skyscraper­s—grow in only one place in the world: a narrow strip of fog-shrouded mountains along California’s wild and relatively unvisited North Coast.

The Redwood Highway

Old-growth redwoods are preserved in a chain of parks strung along Highway 101, known in these parts as the Redwood Highway. In southern Humboldt County, Humboldt Redwoods State Park straddles the scenic drive known as the Avenue of the Giants. In northern Humboldt and Del Norte counties, a cluster of parks— Redwood National Park (which turned 50 last year) and Prairie Creek Redwoods, Del Norte Coast Redwoods and Jedediah Smith Redwoods state parks—form one contiguous redwood reserve.

The sounds of chainsaws and buzzing sawmills that once dominated the North Coast are rapidly fading as the lumber industry winds down. In former mill towns such as Fort Bragg, tourism is replacing timber as innovative galleries, restaurant­s and brew-pubs spring to life.

Although it’s sometimes called the Redwood Empire, the North Coast is more than just tall trees: It’s also salmonfish­ing boats bobbing in tiny harbors; Roosevelt elk bugling across misty meadows; steam trains chuffing through a damp and dripping forest; hole-in-thewall restaurant­s serving fish smoked according to traditiona­l Native American

recipes; vineyards close enough to the coast to catch the salt spray; an old Russian trading fort; handsome Victorian villages; possible glimpses of the elusive creature known as Bigfoot; wealthy, tie-dyed growers of the region’s largest cash crop, which California voters recently legalized; and bouts of creative madness such as elaborate sculptures racing across the landscape.

For generation­s, the North Coast was said to be on the far side of the “redwood curtain,” the psychologi­cal barrier formed by narrow, tortuous Highway 101, which was little more than a two-lane conduit for heavily-laden logging trucks. But California has spent the last two decades improving the road—straighten­ing curves, widening it in many places to four lanes— and now the road is an easy drive.

City & Town

Transplant­ed New Englanders founded the town of Mendocino on a rocky bluff above the crashing Pacific Ocean, and it still sports a whitewashe­d Cape Cod look. Once a mill town, it went into decay in the 1930s as the local timber trade waned but was rediscover­ed in the 1960s by bohemians and artists. On the shore of Humboldt Bay, Eureka, the largest town on the North Coast, has also reversed decades of decline and turned its waterfront Old Town into an inviting Victorian district of galleries, boutiques and cafés. Crescent City was virtually wiped off the map by a tsunami in 1964. Rebuilt now, it sports a smattering of hotels and motels that make it a good base for exploring nearby Jedediah Smith Redwoods State Park.

Heritage & Culture

Native American tribes such as the Yurok and Hoopa lived along the North Coast for centuries before the arrival of fur trappers—both Russians working their way down from Alaska and American mountain men such as Jedediah Smith coming overland. For more than two centuries, resource extraction—primarily logging— was the region’s economic engine. As dwindling forests and stricter environmen­tal laws took their tolls starting in the 1970s, the North Coast has transition­ed to tourism as its mainstay.

Family Fun

Young children might have trouble fully appreciati­ng the timelessne­ss of an ancient redwood tree, but they’ll enjoy a gondola ride through the silent forest canopy and a chance to have their picture taken with four-story-high statues of Paul Bunyan and Babe the Blue Ox. Look for it at Trees of Mystery, near the town of Klamath.

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 ??  ?? HUMBOLDT COUNTY SHORE, above; the “Pink Lady” Victorian in Eureka, right.
HUMBOLDT COUNTY SHORE, above; the “Pink Lady” Victorian in Eureka, right.
 ??  ?? ROOSEVELT BULL ELK at Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park, Humboldt County, above; Drive-thru Tree Park, Leggett, left; Battery Point Lighthouse, Crescent City, bottom; walking with sheep in the vineyards of Pennyroyal Farmstead, Boonville, Mendocino County, opposite.
ROOSEVELT BULL ELK at Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park, Humboldt County, above; Drive-thru Tree Park, Leggett, left; Battery Point Lighthouse, Crescent City, bottom; walking with sheep in the vineyards of Pennyroyal Farmstead, Boonville, Mendocino County, opposite.
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