Archive for January 8, 2007

Hulda Crooks Park, Loma Linda

The first “true” hike of the new year was at Hulda Crooks park in Loma Linda. An easy one to get started with for the year, this marked one year to the day that we hiked the same trail. The park is named for a woman who climbed Mt. Whitney every year into her 90s, so it seems an auspicious name to begin 2007.

  • 5.36 miles.
  • 690′ elevation gain.

The park lies at the very end of Mountain View Ave (exit off I-10 and head south).

  • 34° 2′18.75″N
  • 117°14′38.78″W

KMZ file: Hulda Crooks Park.kmz

The parking lot is to the left just after the entrance. There are a ton of trails in the hills, and you’ll usually find a number of hikers and mountain bikers. Now, we’ve hiked this area a bunch over the past couple of years, but it wasn’t until yesterday that we met up with packs of dirtbikes and ATVs, forcing us to scurry off the trail a few times as they crisscrossed the landscape. Other than that, though, a beautiful day.

With all the trail options, you have sort of a hiking buffet to choose from. A route we enjoy, and the one we went on yesterday, takes a couple of hours and has a nice look at Reche Canyon in the middle, as well as good views of the San Gabriels and San Bernardinos to the north, along with the whole valley.

Otis, and Alex
Otis and Alex on the trail heading up and out of the canyon during the first part of the trip.

Otis and Alex on the trail
Otis and Alex on the trail.

Standard poodle with a smile on his face.
Pharaoh happy to be out and about.

Otis and Alex taking a break.
Taking a break. Alex channeling Will Rogers. ;)

Reche Canyon
Looking over Reche Canyon. This is at the middle of the route, after which we turn to walk the ridges back.

Hills
An offshoot of the trails heads off into these hills.

Alex on the trail.
Alex taking point, listening for motorcycle engines.

Trail
Making our way back to the beginning with Yucaipa in the distance. Pisgah Peak, our next planned hiking destination, is over there.

Otis and Alex descending
Otis and Alex descending one of the steeper bits.

Robert, Otis, and Alex
Looking back over my shoulder at Otis and Alex on the trail.

A black standard poodle and silver miniature poodle meeting
After the hike, Pharaoh the standard poodle met a cousin — a silver miniature poodle named Bentley (great name). There were a ton of other dogs around in the parking lot, and it was rather tricky getting these two settled. So funny that they both struck the exact same pose. :)

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eTreking.com on San Gorgonio

More info on Mt. San Gorgonio:

The San Gorgonio Wilderness is the climax region of the San Bernardino Mountains in Southern California. Located on the San Bernardino National Forest approximately 75 miles east of Los Angeles, the Wilderness receives approximately 200,000 visitors per year. Its 58,969 acres contain two small lakes, meadows, streams, 100 miles of trail, densely forested northern slopes, and rugged terrain. Elevations range from 4,400 feet to 11,499. Eleven of twelve peaks in the Wilderness recognized by U.S. Geological Survey maps are over 10,000 feet in height, with Mt. San Gorgonio being the highest. Mt. San Gorgonio (Old Grayback) at 11,499′ is the highest peak between the Sierra Nevada mountain range and the Mexican border. The summit offers unparalleled views of metropolitan Los Angeles and the Mojave Desert.

http://www.etreking.com/eTreking/Pages/SanBernadino.html

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The 7.9 earthquake nobody remembers

It was January 8th, 1857 — 150 years ago tomorrow.

It’s the California earthquake hardly anyone has heard of - strong enough to rip 225 miles of the San Andreas Fault and make rivers run backward, but leaving nothing like the cultural scar inflicted by the San Francisco Quake of 1906.

The AP has a story on the quake’s anniversary that serves as a scary reminder of the potential we always live with out here: “Giant California earthquake of 150 years ago is little remembered”. Amazing to think that a magnitude 7.9 quake would fade from consciousness, but in a way it hasn’t — this is the Big One that everyone knows, and there’s a “30 percent to 70 percent chance a magnitude 7.5 to 7.8 quake would rupture the southern San Andreas within the next 30 years.”

The reporter takes a trip to Fort Tejon State Historical Park, which is thought to be near where the epicenter was — looks like a cool trip for the historical exhibits alone.

The effects of the quake were felt throughout California. This is from a USGS page on the Fort Tejon quake:

This earthquake occurred on the San Andreas fault, which ruptured from near Parkfield (in the Cholame Valley) almost to Wrightwood (a distance of about 300 kilometers); horizontal displacement of as much as 9 meters was observed on the Carrizo Plain….A comparison of this shock to the San Francisco earthquake, which occurred on the San Andreas fault on April 18, 1906, shows that the fault break in 1906 was longer but that the maximum and average displacements in 1857 were larger.

And this from the Southern California Earthquake Data Center:

The Fort Tejon earthquake of 1857 was one of the greatest earthquakes ever recorded in the U.S., and left an amazing surface rupture scar over 350 kilometers in length along the San Andreas fault….

As a result of the shaking, the current of the Kern River was turned upstream, and water ran four feet deep over its banks. The waters of Tulare Lake were thrown upon its shores, stranding fish miles from the original lake bed. The waters of the Mokelumne River were thrown upon its banks, reportedly leaving the bed dry in places. The Los Angeles River was reportedly flung out of its bed, too. Cracks appeared in the ground near San Bernadino [sic] and in the San Gabriel Valley. Some of the artesian wells in Santa Clara Valley ceased to flow, and others increased in output. New springs were formed near Santa Barbara and San Fernando. Ridges (moletracks) several meters wide and over a meter high were formed in several places….

As it says in the original AP story:

…a repeat of Fort Tejon in the now-populous Inland Empire region east of Los Angeles - one of the fastest-growing areas in Southern California - could kill thousands of people and cause of [sic] tens of billions of dollars in damage.

While scientists cannot predict when the next quake will strike on the San Andreas, they say the southern segment that runs from the city of San Bernardino, 60 miles east of Los Angeles, to near the Mexican border is the most likely to break, since it has been building up stress for the longest time. It hasn’t popped in three centuries.

Spare a glance over your shoulder tomorrow at the beautiful mountains visible now thanks to the winter’s cleaner air. (Gorgeous day outside. Temps in the upper 70s, low 80s. Blue skies.) And make sure your earthquake kits are up to date.

“Past offers lessons on future Big One”

The Times picks up the story today.

Scientists hope to use the anniversary of the Jan. 9, 1857, quake in a yearlong series of preparedness campaigns aimed at shoring up residences and infrastructure.

Experts also will spend the year developing detailed scenarios about what would really happen if a magnitude 7.9 temblor — the size of the Ft. Tejon quake — were to occur along a length of the San Andreas in Southern California that scientists believe is overdue for a major quake: from the Salton Sea to Lake Hughes.

To kick off that effort, seismologists, engineers and emergency preparedness experts participated in a two-day scientific meeting Monday and Tuesday at USC, which houses the Southern California Earthquake Center.

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