Part Three of the Birds, Blooms, and Winding
Roads Tour. Part one is here, part two is here. Click on photo to make it bigger.
One of our winding roads led us to Point Arena Lighthouse.
Originally erected in 1870, it was destroyed by the 1906 San Francisco
earthquake and rebuilt two years later. It’s the tallest lighthouse on the West
Coast (115 feet), and you can climb to the top. (One other lighthouse, Pigeon
Point, is the same height, but it’s not open to the public to climb.)
The area around Point Arena Lighthouse was spectacularly
photogenic. We glanced at the lighthouse itself, snapped its photo, and spent
the rest of our time there stalking birds and taking pictures of wildflowers,
seals, and tossing waves.
Indian Paintbrush |
After lunch and a wander through Mendocino:
We found ourselves at Point Cabrillo Light Station. Construction began in 1908, and the light was
turned on for the first time on June 10, 1909.
The lightstation |
We didn’t see any
whales or sea lions off the point, but we did see some wildlife:
White-crowned sparrow |
California ground squirrel |
Looking back toward the lightkeepers' houses from the lightstation |
You can stay in the lightkeepers’ houses—I would love to do
that. The views would be spectacular.
Looking toward the lightstation from near the keepers' houses |
Ocean near your front door |
I was going to lump the Mendocino Coast Botanical Gardens
into this post, but I think I’ll save it for later. You’re not tired of
vacation photos yet, are you? (Don’t answer that!)