Redwood Trees And Ferns

Redwood Trees And Ferns
Ferns and other vegetation grows among coast redwood trees, Del Norte State Park

Redwood Trees And Ferns. © Copyright 2018 G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

Ferns and other vegetation grows among coast redwood trees, Del Norte State Park

Having spent decades hiking all over California and elsewhere, I have been in a lot of different types of forest — the (usually) open forests of the Sierra Nevada, the scrubbier forest of conifers and oaks in the foothills, the oak/grassland of California valleys and coastal areas, aspen groves, the barely-a-forest Joshua trees, and redwoods in the Sierra and along the California coast. All are wonderful and each has its attractions, but there is nothing that can compare to an old-growth coast redwood forest.

Yes, the trees are immense, and the foliage is so thick that it often can feel almost like twilight even at midday. But the immensity is not only physical — there is a sense of immense time in these forests. These trees have been standing here for centuries and even millennia. And before the 20th-century depredations of out-of-control logging operations, there were perhaps twenty times as many old-growth trees as there are today. Walk deep enough into one of the remaining groves and ponder that thought.


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G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist. His book, “California’s Fall Color: A Photographer’s Guide to Autumn in the Sierra” is available from Heyday Books and Amazon.
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