Well Worn Trail: Part V, Among the Redwoods [pp. 496-501]

Overland monthly and Out West magazine. / Volume 26, Issue 155

WELL WORN TRAILS. and turns along the shelving banks of Russian River over trestles and down sylvan glades, preparing one by easy stages for the full beauty of what is to come. The term forest, as known to all the world outside of California, gives but a faint idea of the home of the redwoods. The trees are so vast, the distance between them so great, the bark-strewn ground so open, that the almost absolute lack of underbrush, and the absence of branches within two hundred or more feet from the earth, suggest rather a chapter from Baron Munchausen. A mastodon walking demurely down a village street could not call forth more ejaculations of surprise. You begin to doubt your eyes, for you look twice before you reach their tops. On a sunny day, when streamers of light fresco and enamel the redwoods' leafy roof, or when the fog creeps in from the Pacific and fills all the higher arches with a clinging fleecy mist like clouds of incense, hiding everything save the gigantic architecture of the boles, then all that is lacking is the Sistine choir and the processional to convince the beholder that he is on sacred ground within some Brobdigna,gian cathedral. As a mere sight for the tourist and the globe-trotter a redwood grove is as much one of the " lions" of California as the Yosemite, Mount Shasta, the Geysers, or the higher Sierra. Nowhere else in the world are there trees to compare in size and height with either the " big tree," the Sequoia gigantea, or the redwood, the Sequoia sempervireits, not even in the jungles of the tropics. I have cut my way day after day through the most impenetrable Asiatic jungles where the light of the sun is never seen and have felt neither enthusiasm nor wonder, for I knew that they were remarkable only for their denseness, which was due to the network of vines and parasites and A REDWOOD BURL. not to the height of the trees. There is nothing inspiring in such a living wall, and the impression is one of irritation rather than of wonder. Across the Bay,- past the frowning portals of Alcatraz, to Tiburon, three hours ride through tule marshes, past typical ranches, by picturesque towns, in the midst of vineyards and orchards of peach, fig, and prune, brings one, almost before he is aware, out of the smiling California lowlands into the heart of the finest grove of redwoods in the State. It is a bit of Nature's wonderland that stands almost within sight ot the Golden Gate and yet is missed by thousands of sight-seers, who think that there is nothing to do but go out to the 496

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Well Worn Trail: Part V, Among the Redwoods [pp. 496-501]
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Overland monthly and Out West magazine. / Volume 26, Issue 155

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"Well Worn Trail: Part V, Among the Redwoods [pp. 496-501]." In the digital collection Making of America Journal Articles. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/ahj1472.2-26.155. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 23, 2025.
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