Title: January 15, 2025 - Montana de Oro
Type: Walking
Trail head: Campsite #16
Trail: Oats Peak, Valencia, Road
Destination: Short Morning Hike 1
Type: Hiking
Trail head: Campsite #16
Trail: Oats Peak, Valencia, Rattlesnake Flat, Deer, Bluffs Trail
Destination: Loop
Distance: 3.36 mile 2
Type: Hiking
Trail head: Campsite #16
Trail: Oats Peak, Valencia, Rattlesnake Flat, Deer, Bluffs Trail
Destination: Loop
Distance: 3.36 miles 2
Elevation Rise: 516'
Descent: 515‘
Maximum Elevation: 342'
1No GPS on walk. Walk was to keep warm.2GPS turned off after a third of a mile. Used route plotted on Google Earth
Sunrise |
It turned out that it was a cold night last night. There is a natural downhill slope to the tent and when I wiggled close to the bottom side of the tent, my feet got cold. So I went back up to the top. Then repeated this throughout the night. I should have gotten up when Sherri went to the bathroom. When I got up at 7:30, I really needed to go.
To get myself warmed up, I did
a short ¾ mile walk up the Oats
Peak
trail to the Valencia
Peak
trail and then down to the road. I was warmer after that. When I got
back, Sherri was just getting up. So I got set up for
breakfast-french toast. By this time it is 9:30. While eating
breakfast, I noticed that my hand is turning a bright pink.
Apparently an insect bit me. It is not bothersome, just a bit
concerning.View from Environmental Camp #3
Steven said he was leaving about 10. We see a school group going up towards Oats Peak. Turns out that they are with the Kern County Schools. We do not get our hike started until 11:15.
Some of the delay in getting started was that Sherri’s pack was soaking wet. When she tried to figure out why, she did not have a resolution. So her pack gets left behind. A bit later as we are walking along, I start to feel something hit on my back. While I wait for Sherri at a junction, I look and see why. The lid on my bladder was loose. When I tighten it up. The water stops spilling out of the bladder, but there is enough water in the pack that I feel it for awhile
Surf from Bluffs Trail |
We started off retracing my steps from this morning. The first part of our trek is going up the Oats Peak Trail for a short way until we branch off onto the Valencia Peak Trail. This shortly brings us to the “real” Valencia Peak Trail. Now we have a choice to make. Sherri thinks she is up to the climb, but I reflect on that this is a thousand foot plus climb and can we do that by the time Steven comes?
So we take the other way which
would lead us down to the road. But we turn off at the junction with
the Rattlesnake
Flats
Trail. This trail roughly parallels the road to the east side of it.
Also because it is higher, we get some views of the coast. Sherri
hears a fog horn, but does not see where it is coming from. I suspect
it is someplace on Point
Buchon.Grotto Rock
We came to a road to an environmental camp. These camps are campsites where people need to walk in a short ways, carrying all of their stuff, including water. In the case of the campsite we came to, #3, it is a pretty steep uphill. I am glad we do not need to carry our camping equipment up that hill.
But after examining the topo
map, I concluded that is where the Rattlesnake Flat trail goes, so up
we went. A little beyond the campsite is the trail junction and we
continue on our way. The trail continues above for a little ways,
until it dips into a ravine and comes to the Deer Flats Trail
Junction. Sherri is willing to go on to where our trail picks up the
Bluffs Trail, but we are starting to move a bit slow. So we just
follow the Deer Flats Trail down to the Bluffs.Sure footed hawk
Once we get to the Bluffs, it is almost 1 and I said that I need to take a break. So Sherri says lets eat lunch. The place where we stop gives a good view of Grotto Rock and a shelf which periodically gets a wave which gives it a wash. It is a good place to stop.
After I get my rest stop, we head north along the Bluffs Trail. There are a lot more people than the one person we met on the Rattlesnake Flat Trail. It is an accessibility trail, gently graded and very scenic. The ocean in these parts must be close to high tide, so we get to enjoy lots of waves with their white caps.
Sherri spots some sort of raptor on a trail sign and we pause to take pictures of it. Then onward we go. We meet up with more of the Kern County kids, which are a good combination of exuberance and courtesy.
A short time later we came to
our campsite. Korra and Steven are already there and Steven is
putting the finishing touches on his portable hammock stand. The
discussion is now what to do this afternoon? Sherri raises up the
possibility of climbing Bishop Peak. I shot that down as during the
last hour we have been traveling slowly on level ground. Also I need
to rest for half an hour before we do anything. I fell asleep while
Sherri and Steven discussed this.
When I woke up, it was because of a noise. One of the stakes holding Steven’s hammock had come out, collapsing the hammock. While he had the stake deep in the ground, the ground, as we discovered last night, is very uneven. Part of that is because some of the ground is solid and other parts are pretty loose. Evidently below the surface, the stake was in loose ground. Nobody was hurt.
The half an hour which it took to break down the hammock and mount his old, stable one decided what we were going to do. After everything was settled, Steven drove us to Avila Beach where there is a dog friendly beach. There, Korra can run around without a leash to her heart's content, and she does. It is nice there for about 30-45 minutes until the sun goes down and a chill enters the air.
Moon about to rise |
When we leave, we go to one of the highlights of the trip-Sylvester's. When we come to this area, we try to make it here. The hamburgers are really good. I have the Desperado; Sherri has a California burger and Steven a Hanna-sort of a Hawaiian style burger. I do not hear any complaints and I for one is very filled and satisfied. Hint: The basic burger is a third of a pound and moves on up from there.
By this time, it is dark when we get to camp. We do a few things to get set up for the time when we eventually go to bed. We then reenter the car. I was the last because I tried to get a shot of the three planets lined up before the moon rose And then looking over, I saw Orion and his belt. At the lower end of the constellation, there looks like a dirty smudge-not on my glasses, but under the constellation. When I consulted my star app, it says this is the Orion Nebula. It is good seeing that.
By the way, the insect bite I talked about earlier did not get any worse.
Then into the car I go to do
some reading and writing. It is much warmer tonight in the car with
four bodies-I will take it. By about 9:30, I was ready for bed. I did
go on a short walk around the campground loop before turning in.
Sherri finished up her movie she had downloaded and came to bed about
the time I was nodding off
Background
Sylvester's. When we go to the Los Osos area, we always try to hit Sylvester's. Why? Their burgers are just sooo good. To start with, their basic burger is a third of a pound. Size goes up to a pound. Then there are the types of burgers. My wife has a California-needs no explanation; my son has a Hana-Hawaiian type of toppings; and I have a Desperado. This is similar to a Western Bacon Cheeseburger, only more subtle in taste and much better cooked than most. If you are looking for a local place, this is it. In Los Osos, it can be hard to find, but well worth the search.
Breakfast | Lunch | Dinner | Snacks |
French Toast |
Peanut Butter and Nutella Sandwich | Burgers at Sylvester's | Energy bars, Jelly Belly |
Extra Photo's
Panorama View from Rattlesnake Flat Trail |
Shadows at rest |
View from the Environmental Camp #3 |
Ocean and Land Meet |
Avila Beach, Korra and the setting sun |
View of Morro Rock in the morning |
Valencia Peak |
Cormorants |
Morro Bay in the afternoon |
Planets lined up: Jupiter, Mars, and Venus? |
Moon rise |
California Scrub Jay |
California Quail |
Cormorants |
Cormorants |
Red-Tailed Hawk |
Red-Tailed Hawk |
Flowers and Plants
Climbing Penstomen |
California Golden Poppy |
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