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REMEMBERING, book three in the steamy PESCADERO CREEK SERIES, picks up where we left the McAllisters in UNDERCOVER. The family.
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Second, there are differing opinions about the quality of the road surface on Tunitas Creek Rd. I asked a rider doing the route how the surface was for riding and he said it was superb. So I stand by the original route, but if either issue worries you, you can try the Short Version laid out at the end of this post, which avoids both while retaining most of the good stuff. This ride is one of the harder rides in Bestrides—50 miles, none of them flat, and ft.

County of San Mateo

Ride south, paralleling Hwy 1, on Stage Road. This road is a lovely up and down canter on a charming, quiet road through grassy coastal hills. Watch for a nice view of an ocean beach midway. Stage Road, looking back toward San Gregorio.

Turn L onto Pescadero Creek Rd. At the bottom of an unexpected, short, and wonderful 2-mile descent, you come to an intersection and you have a choice. La Honda Rd. Not awful, just not nearly as nice as staying right at the intersection and ascending on Alpine Rd. Which is a good thing, because you are going to do some serious work here and will need something to take your mind off the pain. Remember this turn if you decide to ride from Pescadero to Skyline as an out and back.

These last 3.


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Upper Alpine Road, looking at the Pacific Ocean. Skyline is a series of mostly straight, moderately steep rollers along the ridge spine, sometimes through dark, pretty woods and sometimes through open fields with huge vistas of the coast to your L and the south Bay to your R. Now you will pay for all that downhill.

Get this in your head or the unexpected work will kill you. Watch your mileage, because Tunitas Creek Rd. Turn L on Tunitas Creek Rd. I usually have to stop midway just because I need a break from the non-stop giddiness. At the bottom of Tunitas Creek Rd. You are not done climbing. You will immediately have to slog up one final pitch, a typical Hwy 1 mega-roller that goes on far too long.

Airbnb® | Pescadero - Vacation Rentals & Places to Stay - California, United States

Stare at the ocean and it will pass. Right after, get off the highway onto Stage Rd. This cuts out the 2 miles of climbing entirely and allows you to ride Stage Road, which is worth working in. The only drawback to this route is that La Honda Rd. This stretch of Hwy 1 to Santa Cruz is mostly ruler straight with some enormous rollers—not great riding, but lots of interesting places to stop.

See the Purissima Creek ride for details. If at all possible, do this ride in dry conditions. I ride a similar route a couple of times a week and strongly suggest avoiding Skyline altogether. A friend of mine is a fireman on Kings Mountain and tells me that there have been numerous accidents and deaths on Skyline. My route is: start in Woodside. Cross skyline stay on Old La Hinda down till Left on 84 to the town of La Honda. Then turn left on Pescadero Road to the town of Pescadero suggest eating at Duartes — an institution for years.

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The largest of the Pescadero Creek Complex Parks, it has over 25 miles of hiking trails, a variety of habitats, and a myriad of streams and tributaries. Hosting everything from Steelhead Trout to Santa Cruz Cypress, it is likely to reveal more gems and secrets if we make a long-range plan to collectively visit and document the place. I have made a personal commitment to do this, in anticipation of this park being on the schedule for a future BioBlitz or two or three or twenty as part of the coalition between Sequoia Audubon, San Mateo County Parks, California Academy of Sciences, and the California Lichen Society.

It is my personal goal to walk every mile of trail within the park. This will call for some VERY long walks, careful reading of topographic maps, two-car set-ups, and companionship for safety, for friendship, for fun, and for discovery of a wider range of organisms. I will eventually transform it into an automatic project, but for now I am retaining it as a traditional opt-in project, so remember to document anything you see in PCCP and add it to the project manually.

I know it is something of a pain, but it is only temporary, until I can clarify the borders of the park specifically the northern border with Sam McDonald to my satisfaction right now, iNat is defaulting some observations made in Sam McDonald to PCCP.

Hiking Pescadero Creek County Park, May 2019

This is the easiest access point from Pescadero and the coastside. Fascinating history of the park, and why it is so undeveloped - that's how the people wanted it! This article also contains a full list of all the creeks and tributaries in PCCP. Look for more announcements soon, but keep this one on file, due to the links and explanations herein contained. Please read the above, join this group, and, at some point in the next two years or so, visit or revisit this amazing park! Once you join the project, search for suitable observations from previous visits you may have made to PCCP, and add them to the project.

Thank you for the invitation gyrrlfalcon! I look forward to exploring this park. I'm on it, gyrrlfalcon! I lived next door to this park for 6 years and have hiked every trail in it more than once! It's truly an amazing place. If ever needed, I could very likely get a small group access to the park from either of the YMCA camps nearby.

Yes, locations for access, especially to remote sections of this already remote park, are high on my desiderata list! Precisely catchang! Creative placement of numerous cars, remembering to bring lunch, mapping out of cool hikes, massive data upload - the whole works! I'd also be excited to stay at one of the trail camps if there's ever a desire to do an overnight foray. Oh, rats. Looks like I now have to share one of my favorite escape destinations.

But wait, they're all cool naturalist types - I'm good with that!