Date Hiked: November 23, 2021
General Condition: Wilderness Freeway (Heavily used and well maintained)
Section covered: Pine Ridge Camp Trail junction to Terrace Creek Camp.
The Forest Service sponsored a professional trail crew working on the Pine Ridge Trail above Redwood Camp, and volunteer trail crew members supplemented this effort.
The trail between Terrace Creek Camp and the junction with the Pine Ridge Camp Trail is a wilderness freeway. Work has proceeded from Terrace Creek Camp 2 years ago, to Barlow and Sykes, then to Redwood Camp. This October and November the crew continued above Redwood Camp, and finished work at the junction with the Pine Ridge Camp Trail.
The crews restored slumping tread that has made the section between the Big Sur Trail junction and Pine Ridge a miserable hike for about the last 30 years. This section is a pleasure to hike - and with the clear trail, you can enjoy the wonderful views all the way to the ocean. The crew ran out of time and was not able to finish grubbing out manzanita, chamise, and scrub oak in the last half mile. However, the entire trail up to Pine Ridge has been cleared of brush, and there is a wide trail corridor for hikers.
Pine Ridge Camp had water at the spring - barely. The camp was quite overgrown and doesn't have much of a view even though it is at the top of the ridge. A camper reported a mouse living under the abandoned metal job box that rests next to the fire ring in the center of the camp. If you camp here, be sure to secure your food.
Note to hikers: if you carry a hand saw and loppers, you can really help keep the trails open. But please take the time to consider the effects of your work. Trail crews devote vast efforts to carefully pruning back the trees so they will not grow into the trail. All of this can be ruined in a moment by someone sawing off the main trunks of these trees. It was difficult to decide what to do with the numerous healthy oak trees that someone had sawed off 3 feet above the ground - apparently in the past year. This kind of thoughtless brushing results in the trees growing sideways, into the trail, rather than upwards where they would shade the trail. If you cut the oak trees all the way to the ground, they will re-sprout in all directions. If you leave a main trunk, and prune the side branches, that main trunk will eventually shade the trail and will stop re-sprouting. Please help us keep the trails passable by leaving these main trunks.
Morning fog in the South Fork drainage - it was pouring over the Coast Ridge down by Marble Peak, but there wasn't any fog farther north
Volunteers assisting the professional crew
Flyin Brian with manzanita - before
Flyin Brian taking a break before finishing grubbing out a manzanita root
Professional crew lead bumping up to the next section
Professional crew brushing
Professional crew before the start of work - heading up to Pine Ridge
Professional crew at work