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| The Trails of Mt Tam III | |
| By sahewitt | ||
| 21 May 2008 | ||
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Part 3 of my Mt Tam series Old Stage Fire Road and Old Mine Trail
The road continues on past Bootjack Picnic Area, traversing the wood just above Matt Davis Trail. Continuing on through Pantoll Ranger Station, the road converges with the narrow Old Mine Trail just as it approaches its namesake: an abandoned mine claim whose remains consist of a slight hollow where a sign (noting that no gold was ever found there) marks the mine’s former location. After this mildly anti-climatic, somewhat unpretentious posting, the path leads out to a vast clearing where several trails converge. These include Lone Tree Trail and Dipsea Trail. The former, now defunct, leads down to the coast while the latter comes up from Muir Woods and once it leaves the open space, descends through a light wood and eventually comes out to Stinson Beach. From the clearing, the coastline is clearly visible, notwithstanding fogbound days (but enough has been said on that account). The vistas afforded are those of the coast and beaches to the south all the way down to Ocean Beach (at San Francisco) and beyond. Lone Tree Trail
Steep Ravine Trail
Rock Springs Trail
Not far west from Mountain Theater, the trail emerges on Rock Springs itself. Rock Springs is a popular destination for those seeking an open space that affords dramatic vistas of sea and coastal bluffs as well as the rolling hills of the area. Atop one of these rises, sits an old stone bench erected and dedicated by the family of some prior habitué. This bench is inscribed with a dedication that expounds on the natural beauty of the spot, asserting that the dedicatee had found a small slice of paradise upon this very hill, which, given the locale and its attendant view, would render any argument moot.
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