Big Basin in the Santa Cruz Mountains

Jul 02, 2017 17:35

A few days ago, our Arizona friends, from left to right --Jason, Joanna skip skip skip, Regina, Todd, and James-- came for their yearly bay area visit with us. Also pictured are our San Jose friends, Jimmy and Cindy, plus my son, Aaron in the middle. Jason, being from Utah, hadn't seen Redwoods so, instead of our usual trek over the Santa Cruz ( Read more... )

interesting places/ things, photography, california, friends, nature

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Comments 12

spikesgirl58 July 3 2017, 12:06:40 UTC
Mmmm, lovely shots! I love the texture of the bark! It sounds and looks like you had a good time

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gaeln July 3 2017, 17:39:50 UTC
Thank you and yes, we did have a lovely time. I hadn't been to Big Basin in years

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spikesgirl58 July 3 2017, 19:26:49 UTC
That's so great to hear! :D

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lisa_thecat July 3 2017, 18:28:06 UTC
Wow, these trees look amazing!!! Very cool patterns for the bark. It's the same species, right?

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gaeln July 4 2017, 00:47:05 UTC
All are Redwoods. They are very old, can actually live more than a thousand years, some even twice as long so, for the most part time has touched each one in different ways.

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davesmusictank July 3 2017, 23:02:11 UTC
Lovely pics esp the bark,so textured.

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gaeln July 4 2017, 00:35:41 UTC
Thank you :) Yes, the textures of the Redwoods are lovely.

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beauty_forashes July 6 2017, 21:01:04 UTC
Wow, I'm so far behind on LJ! That tree looks amazing, like something you'd expect to see in a fantasy film, but not real life.

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gaeln July 8 2017, 01:13:59 UTC
I know, right? Many of the trees actually have little park signs telling what went different during their growth which, given that they can live to 2,000 years old, gives them a lot of time for different things to happen to them :) One, still alive, has been hit by lightening THREE times!

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beauty_forashes July 8 2017, 01:28:32 UTC
Holy crap! The resilience of plants always astounds me. 2,000 years - the only other tree I know nearly that old (minus 600 or so years) is the Ankerwycke Yew. I wish trees could talk, because of the history they've witnessed. :)

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gaeln July 8 2017, 02:02:44 UTC
There's also this narley little tree, a Bristlecone Pine, found in Utah, Nevada, and south east California, that can live upto 5,000 years!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bristlecone_pine

Your Ankerwycke Yew certainly is a much nicer looking tree :)

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