Saturday, January 18, 2014

Close Encounters of the Spiral Kind

Now this hike is great. Awesome in fact. Memorable and rewarding, too. Hey, can you tell I liked this hike?!? We combined the wooded Piuma Ridge Trail at the base of Malibu Canyon with the Mesa Peak Motorway which gains 1600 feet in elevation to reveal great views of Malibu Canyon and then spectacular views of the Pacific Ocean. After gaining most all of that elevation, the trail follows a ridge along Corral Canyon for miles and leads to some amazing sandstone rock formations. Then out of the blue we came upon what appeared to be an old SciFi movie set. Look at this.



Ok. I might have touched up the photo a bit. But I was feeling it. It was otherworldly. At least a little bit.


Piuma Ridge Trail




We left one car at Corral Canyon Road in a nearly deserted stretch of dirt road and then drove to Piuma Road and the start of the Piuma Ridge Trail. 



It was a cool morning with perfect temps for hiking.



The mountains in the distance is where we are headed.



There were lots of runners on the trail. I asked one of them what their route was for the day and it was about twice the distance that Matt and I were going to hike. Yow!



There were many moods to the Piuma Trail including switchback trail...



wooded trail...



brush trail...



and leafy trail.



What!?!?! At least one river in LA is not dry yet. Way to go Malibu Creek! 



We made it to the point we had tried to park on the last hike. It all turned out fine. The last hike was a good distance and the combo of Piuma And Mesa Motorway worked out great for this hike.



We had to walk along Piuma Road to Malibu Canyon Road (pictured) to then start on Mesa Peak Motorway.


Mesa Peak Motorway




You may be relieved to find out that there is an Andy Gump near the beginning of the trail. We were.



And the uphill hike begins.




Looking back.



The mountains that had been in the distance are now much closer.



And Malibu Canyon Road is looking pretty distant.



Up we go.



And up we go.



Malibu Canyon Road is way in the distance.



We get our first glimpse of the ocean way off in the distance looking south down Malibu Canyon.



The trail continues up.



and up



and up.



Looking back again we can see the radio towers on top of Saddle Peak West



and quite a view of Malibu Canyon.



The trail gradually evens out.



We saw a picnic table up in the distance.



Wow! What a view from the picnic table!



Time for photos of us with the great vista. First me.



Then Matt.

And now the trail followed the ridge.



This pic shows the ridge trail a bit better.



There were ocean views to our left...



and inland views to our right.



It went on quite a ways like this.



We saw some sandstone formations in the distance.



Very nice. Getting closer...



What in the world?! A large rock spiral. And big rocks to climb on.



Rock spiral close-up.



There is Matt on the rocks.



And that is me on another rock formation.



From up top we could behold the majesty of the rock spiral



as well as the majesty of more rock formations in the distance.



We got back on to the trail and soon we could see Corral Canyon Road in the distance.



Just a little bit more trail...



The nearly deserted parking area was now full of cars.



Excuse me while I GPS




The hike began where the red line starts on the lower left side. Mesa Peak Motorway begins near the base of the mountain. The Pacific Ocean is shown in the top left corner.



This is the GPS of all five hikes thus far. The hikes began where the red line begins on the far right side. Thanks to Matt for taking care of recording the GPS information for each hike. The only section that is not shown in its entirety is the last part of the first hike which would have continued all the way to where the green line (second hike) begins.


Looking Ahead

We have made it approximately halfway along the Backbone Trail. We have planned out the remaining 5 hikes and all of them should be reasonable until the last one. The last hike will probably be an all-day hike. So far it has been a highly rewarding experience and has opened our eyes to natural treasures not far from home.

Cheers,
Bruce

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