Garrapata State Park | |
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![]() The granite coast of Garrapata State Park | |
Location | Monterey County, California, United States |
Nearest city | Carmel, California |
Coordinates | 36°28′N121°54′W / 36.467°N 121.900°W /36.467; -121.900 |
Area | 2,939 acres (1,189 ha) |
Established | 1979 |
Governing body | California Department of Parks and Recreation |
Garrapata State Park is astate park ofCalifornia, United States, located onCalifornia State Route 1 6.7 miles (10.8 km) south ofCarmel-by-the-Sea and 18 miles (29 km) north ofBig Sur Village on theMonterey coast.[1] The 2,939-acre (1,189 ha) park was established in 1979.[2]California sea lions,harbor seals andsea otters frequent the coastal waters whilegray whales pass close by during their yearly migration.
Garrapata State Park has 2 miles (3.2 km) of beachfront, with coastal hiking and a 50-foot (15 m) climb to a view of the Pacific. The park offers diverse coastal vegetation with trails running from ocean beaches into densecoast redwood groves. The coastal bluffs to the west and east of theBig Sur Coast Highway are covered with coyote bush, California coffeeberry, California sagebrush, bush lupine, blue blossom, and other coastal scrub plants.[3] The park also features coastal headlands at Soberanes Point.[4]California sea lions,harbor seals andsea otters frequent the coastal waters whilegray whales pass close by during their yearly migration.[1]
There is no main entrance to the park. Visitors can park in several pullouts along Big Sur Coast Highway starting 5.4 miles (8.7 km) south of Rio Road in Carmel and extending along the coast for about 2.1 miles (3.4 km). It is marked only with one sign on the west side of the road. Numbered turnouts mark each parking area.[5]
Edward Weston, who lived nearby inCarmel, made a number of his best-known photos in or near what is now the State Park. The beaches in the park have been used fornude recreation.[6]
The area hosted theOhlone and Rumsien tribes in the past. In 1835, the portion of the park land generally to the west of a line along the Rocky Ridge Trail was part ofRancho San Jose y Sur Chiquito. It was given byAlta California GovernorJuan Alvarado to Teodoro Gonzalez and re-granted in the same year to Marcelino Escobar.[7][8] The grant stretched along the coast from the Carmel River to Palo Colorado Creek and was used for ranching.[3]
Jose Maria Soberanes served with theGaspar de Portola expedition in 1769. Seven years later, Soberanes served as a guide for De Anza, whose party pushed north to San Francisco Bay. He remained in California and grandson Jose Antonio Ezequiel Soberanes bought the land. Soberanes operated a prosperous cattle and sheep ranch for 24 years. The Soberanes family, locally famed for their musical talents, also offered their hospitality to other ranchers traveling along the coast to Monterey.[9]
Francis Doud, an early Monterey resident, purchased the Soberanes land and other parcels in 1891 to create the Doud Ranch, which ran cattle until the early 1950s. The family's wood-frame ranch house burned to the ground in the 1960s. The state acquired its first parcel of the property in 1980; Garrapata (Spanish for tick) was classified a state park in 1985.[10] Some features within the park still bear the names of these families.[5]
Most of the park was burned by the 2016 Soberanes Fire, which began in the park as the result of an illegal campfire. The fire burned for more than two months. It resulted in the death of a bulldozer operator and destroyed 57 residences. It was at the time the most expensive fire in United States history. The individual responsible was never identified.[11] As of May 2018[update], all of the trails on the west side of Highway 1 are open, but only a portion of one trail on the east side of Highway 1 is open to hikers.[12]
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