Marin Segment 10
May 6, 2014
Rodeo Beach GGNRA to Golden Gate Bridge North Vista Point
Instead of my usual backwoods route, this segment required the direct approach. I followed Hwy. 101 to the last Marin exit and followed the tunnel route to the Marin Headlands. For those who haven't been there, two roads lead into the Headlands. The Coast Route goes up over the steep hillsides, the tunnel route goes straight through them. It's a one way tunnel controlled by a stop light and a timer. One lane for cars, two for bicycles. The tunnel was originally built, as I recall from an earlier (much earlier) visit, in order to facilitate the Army's construction of a pair of 16" gun emplacements in the late 1930s. There was no way to move anything 68 feet long and weighing 120 tons over those steep hills and twisting roads.
I soon arrived at Rodeo Beach and after using the public facilities (ahem) levered on my new REI daypack. Crossed the bridge over Rodeo Lagoon and set off toward the Coastal Trail. As I was nearing the end of the beach and the beginning of the trail, a large 4 masted sailing vessel appeared in the distance headed out to sea. Judging from the flag flying at the stern, I supposed that it was a naval cadet ship for the Japanese Navy. A little research shows that guess was close. The Kaiwo Maru is operated by the Japanese National Institute for Sea Training. She is 360 feet long and displaces roughly 2,600 tons. Normal crew of 199. That's one big sailboat!
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| Rodeo Lagoon -- a bridge over untroubled waters. |
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| View across Rodeo Lagoon -- the Golden Gate is somewhere behind those rocks. |
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| Kaiwo Maru. One big sailboat headed out to sea. |
The trail follows the hillside along the opposite side of the lagoon. After a mile or so one arrives at the Park Headquarters, the former base chapel. I made a brief stop to pick up a map and continued to follow the Coastal Trail.
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| Upper end of Rodeo Lagoon. |
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| Rodeo Valley headed back toward Hwy. 101 on the other side of those hills. |
The trail drops down to road level for a while and passes the stables and the old rifle range. Then it climbs back up hill to the right of the rifle range, loops back across the top and continues up the opposite side into the hills. Wildflowers covered large sections of the hills beside the rifle range. Poppies so you can tell this is California. Near the stable three young bucks scrambled past up the slope, then turned round to keep an eye on the intruder into their turf.
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| Stables and old rifle range. |
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| Poppies et al. waiting to lull Dorothy and her companions. Not in Kansas. |
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| Local residents keeping a close eye on the strange intruder. |
Eventually the trail rises high enough that one can see all the way back to Rodeo Beach. Around a corner, up hill for a few more minutes and the Golden Gate comes into view -- together with that one bridge that's all iconic. I followed the road down from there.
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| View of the ascending trail in mid-distance and Rodeo Beach afar off. |
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| Not seriously in need of a caption. That one bridge. |
After descending along the roadside trail and then the uphill bike lane when the trail got a little too close to the edge of the world, I reached a set of switchbacks that led to a parking lot on the West side of 101. From there I was able to take the pedestrian catwalk under the bridge to the North Vista Point. So despite my acrophobia I have now crossed the Golden Gate Bridge -- the short way -- underneath, actually. The catwalk is fully enclosed with chain-link, only a few stories off the ground, and the view is mostly blocked by retro-fit scaffolding. Thank goodness! Stopped for lunch at the Vista Point. I called Rosanna to report my progress: this was the first place that had cell coverage.
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| Trail down to the West of 101 parking lot. |
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| View toward the pedestrian catwalk. Not planning that last walk anytime soon. |
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| Proof that I actually made it 'across' the bridge. |
After lunch I recrossed the underpass and headed back up the hill. Fine view of a large container ship headed into the Golden Gate. I made a brief detour to a scenic overlook which includes the remains of an old earthwork coast defense battery. Apparently in the late 19th century a set of four 15 inch Rodman guns of Civil War vintage were emplaced here and remained as part of San Francisco's defenses till just before World War One -- by which time they had been totally obsolete for three or four decades. One gun actually pointed East into the Bay just in case an enemy vessel managed to get through the Golden Gate. On up the hill to the traffic roundabout where I had left the Coastal Trail. Comfortable downhill hiking from there on.
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Coastal -- or rather Bay -- defense battery.
These days that bridge would get in the way. |
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| A lot bigger than the Kaiwo Maru but not nearly as pretty. |
My routine stroll back was interrupted about a mile and a half from Rodeo Beach by a very large, very territorial tom turkey. First this saurian head peers over the brush like Godzilla appearing over the top of the hill, followed by the entire turkey. Biggest wild turkey I've ever seen. I proceeded cautiously forward assuming that any moment now the bird would back off. Wrong. As I walked toward him, he walked toward me. I stopped to reconsider. To assist my cogitation, he fluffed up into full display/intimidation mode. On mature consideration, I decided that I had no interest in getting scratched up and needing a tetanus booster. So we were agreed: it was his damn trail after all! I backtracked to the road and finished my hike at that level, leaving the triumphant archosaur in possession of the trail.
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| The lone survivor of the missing vessel kept babbling, 'Gojira!!!' |
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| My mistake, It definitely is your trail. Sir. |
This excitement past, I reached Rodeo Beach in about a half hour. A very pleasant day on the trail: great views of ocean, bay and hills; encounters with wildlife; a magnificent sailing ship; 12 miles of walking with about 800-900 feet of altitude change each way. On the way back to Benicia, I detoured through Sonoma to pick up some items at the Sonoma Market for snacks at Thursday's vestry meeting. Icing on the cake as it were.
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| Marin Headlands GGNRA: Rodeo Lagoon, Headquarters (former chapel), and Hostel. |