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101 Hikes in Southern California: Exploring Mountains, Seashore, and Desert

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Discover 101 of the best hikes in Southern California, from family outings to 50-mile treks.


The Southland is unparalleled for its beauty and diversity. A coastal trail, a desert hike, and a mountain trek are always just an hour or two away. Experience 101 of the region's best hiking trips with authors David Harris and Jerry Schad. See a spectacular geological showcase cradled between two faults at the Devil's Punchbowl. Find the ruins of a once grand Malibu mansion, now Solstice Canyon Park. Enjoy the natural hot springs alongside a mountain stream at Deep Creek.


Take the guesswork out of choosing a trail that's right for you. Each entry in this guidebook provides vital information like total distance, elevation gain or loss, hiking time, highlights, and difficulty--not to mention a full description of the route. You can take the entire family on a 1-mile stroll, or challenge yourself with a 52-mile backpacking trip.


Inside you'll find:

  • 101 spectacular hikes, ranging from 1 to 52 miles
  • Essential details such as distance, elevation change, and difficulty

  • Route descriptions and directions to the trailheads

  • Full-color maps and photographs


Leave the urban world behind and discover the natural splendor of Southern California--from the Santa Monica and San Gabriel Mountains to the Laguna Mountains and Anza-Borrego Desert, from the Torrey Pines beaches to the summit of San Jacinto Peak.



ISBN-13: 9781643590318

Media Type: Paperback

Publisher: Wilderness Press

Publication Date: 06-14-2022

Pages: 272

Product Dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.60(d)

Series: 101 Hikes

David Harris is a professor of engineering at Harvey Mudd College. He is the author or coauthor of seven hiking guidebooks and four engineering textbooks. David grew up rambling about the Desolation Wilderness as a toddler in his father’s pack and later roamed the High Sierra as a Boy Scout. As a Sierra Club trip leader, he organized mountaineering trips throughout the Sierra Nevada. Since 1999, he has been exploring the mountains and deserts of Southern California. He lives with his three children in Upland, California, and delights in sharing his love of the outdoors with them. Jerry Schad (1949–2011) was Southern California’s leading outdoors writer. His 16 guidebooks, along with his “Roam-O-Rama” column in the San Diego Reader, helped thousands of hikers discover the region’s diverse wild places. Jerry ran or hiked many thousands of miles of distinct trails throughout California, in the Southwest, and in Mexico. He was a sub-24-hour finisher of Northern California’s 100-mile Western States Endurance Run and served in a leadership capacity for outdoor excursions around the world. He taught astronomy and physical science at San Diego Mesa College and chaired its physical sciences department from 1999 until 2011. His sudden, untimely death from kidney cancer shocked and saddened the hiking community.

Read an Excerpt

Sandstone Peak

  • Location Circle X Ranch (Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area)
  • Highlights Most expansive view in the Santa Monicas, volcanic rock formations
  • Distance & Configuration 6-mile loop
  • Elevation Gain 1,400'
  • Hiking Time 3.5 hours
  • Optional Maps Tom Harrison Point Mugu State Park or Trails Illustrated Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area
  • Best Times October–June
  • Agency Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area
  • Difficulty Moderately strenuous
  • Trail Use Dogs allowed
  • Permit None required
  • Google Maps Sandstone Peak Trailhead

Sandstone Peak is the quintessential destination for peak baggers in the Santa Monica Mountains. The 3,111-foot summit can be efficiently climbed from the east via the Backbone Trail in a mere 1.5 miles, but the far more scenic way to go is the loop outlined below. Take a picnic lunch, and plan to make a half day of it. Try to come on a crystalline day in late fall or winter to get the best skyline views. Or, if it’s wildflowers you most enjoy, come in April or May, when the native vegetation blooms most profusely at these middle elevations. In addition to blue-flowering stands of ceanothus, the early- to mid-spring floral bloom includes monkey flower, nightshade, Chinese houses, wild peony, wild hyacinth, morning glory, and phacelia. Delicate, orangish Humboldt lilies unfold by June. The 2018 Woolsey fire scorched parts of this loop, but the native vegetation is adapted to fire and is returning quickly.

Sandstone Peak lies within Circle X Ranch, formerly owned by the Boy Scouts of America and now a federally managed unit of the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area. The National Park Service generously provides free trail maps at the trailhead.

To Reach the Trailhead: The Sandstone Peak Trailhead is located near the western end of the Santa Monica Mountains, a few miles (by crow’s flight) south of Thousand Oaks. From the Pacific Coast Highway near mile marker 1 VEN 1.00, turn north onto Yerba Buena Road and proceed 6.4 miles.

Or from the 101 Freeway in Thousand Oaks, take Highway 23 south for 7.2 miles. Turn right (west) on Mulholland Highway, then in 0.4 mile turn right again onto Little Sycamore Canyon, which soon becomes Yerba Buena Road and reaches the trailhead in 4.5 miles. On either approach, you face a white-knuckle drive on paved but narrow and curvy roads.

Description: Start hiking at the large parking lot on the north side of Yerba Buena Road, 1.1 miles east of the Circle X Ranch park office. Proceed on foot past a gate and up a fire road 0.3 mile, then veer right onto the marked Mishe Mokwa Trail. Shortly thereafter, pass a spur on the right descending to the Mishe Mokwa Trailhead, but stay left.

The hand-tooled route is delightfully primitive, but it requires frequent maintenance to keep the chaparral from knitting together across the path. One of the notable and attractive shrubs is red shanks (also known as ribbonwood), which is identified by its wispy foliage and perpetually peeling, rust-colored bark. It is found only around here in the Santa Monica Mountains and in the Peninsular Ranges south of San Jacinto. After about half an hour on the Mishe Mokwa Trail, keep an eye out for Balanced Rock, which rests precariously on the opposite wall of the canyon. You’ll likely see rock climbers on the Echo Cliffs of Carlisle Canyon below.

By 1.7 miles from the start, you will have worked your way around to the north flank of Sandstone Peak, where you suddenly come upon a picnic table shaded beneath glorious oaks beside Split Rock, a fractured volcanic boulder with a gap wide enough to walk through (please do so to maintain the Scouts’ tradition). A climbers’ trail on the right leads to Balanced Rock, but you continue on the vestiges of an old dirt road that crosses the canyon and turns west (upstream). You pass beneath some hefty volcanic outcrops, and at 3.1 miles come to a signed junction and turn left onto the Backbone Trail toward Sandstone Peak.

Pass some water tanks on the right and an unsigned service road up to the tanks. Shortly thereafter, a spur on the right takes you about 50 yards to the top of a rock outcrop called Inspiration Point. The direction-finder there indicates local features as well as very distant points such as Mount San Antonio (Old Baldy), Santa Catalina Island, and San Clemente Island.

Press on with your ascent. At a point just past two closely spaced hairpin turns in the wide Backbone Trail, make your way up a slippery path to Sandstone Peak’s windswept top. The plaque on the summit block honors W. Herbert Allen, a longtime benefactor of the Scouts and Circle X Ranch. To the Scouts this mountain is Mount Allen, although cartographers have, so far, not accepted that name. In any event, the peak’s real name is misleading. It, along with Boney Mountain and most of the western crest of the Santa Monicas, consists of beige- and rust-colored volcanic rock, not unlike sandstone when seen from a distance.

On a clear day the view is truly amazing from here, with distant mountain ranges, the hazy LA Basin, and the island-dimpled surface of the ocean occupying all 360 degrees of the horizon. To complete the loop, return to the Backbone Trail and resume your travel eastward. Descend a twisting 1.5 miles to return to the trailhead.

Table of Contents

Preface

Overview Map

Overview of Hikes

Map of Southern California’s Mountain Ranges

Southern California’s Wilderness Rim

Health, Safety, and Courtesy

Using This Book

Map Legend

The Hikes

  • Paradise Falls
  • La Jolla Valley Loop
  • Sandstone Peak
  • The Grotto
  • Zuma Canyon
  • Point Dume to Paradise Cove
  • Solstice Canyon Park
  • Malibu Creek State Park
  • Topanga Overlook
  • Temescal Canyon
  • Will Rogers Park
  • Malaga Cove to Bluff Cove
  • Cheeseboro and Palo Comado Canyons
  • Placerita Canyon
  • HOLLYWOOD Sign via Cahuenga Peak
  • Mount Hollywood Loop
  • Verdugo Mountains: South End Loop
  • Mount Lukens: Grizzly Flat Loop
  • Mount Wilson
  • Down the Arroyo Seco
  • Mount Lowe
  • Mount Lowe Railway
  • Eaton Canyon Falls
  • Santa Anita Canyon Loop
  • Strawberry Peak
  • Cooper Canyon Falls
  • Mount Waterman Trail
  • Devil’s Punchbowl
  • Mount Williamson
  • Mount Baden-Powell Traverse
  • Silver Moccasin Trail
  • Mount Islip
  • Down the East Fork
  • Old Baldy Loop
  • Baldy via Bear Ridge
  • Cucamonga Peak
  • The Three T’s
  • Deep Creek Hot Springs
  • Heart Rock
  • Cougar Crest Trail
  • Grand View Point
  • Forsee Creek Trail
  • Dollar Lake
  • San Gorgonio Mountain
  • Whitewater Canyon
  • Big Morongo Canyon
  • Pushwalla Palms
  • Black Rock Panorama Loop
  • Wonderland of Rocks Traverse
  • Ryan Mountain
  • Lost Horse Mine
  • Lost Palms Oasis
  • Ladder Canyon
  • Murray Hill
  • Murray Canyon
  • Pines to Palms
  • San Jacinto Peak: The Easy Way
  • San Jacinto Peak: The Hard Way
  • San Jacinto Peak: The Middle Way
  • Tahquitz Peak
  • Mount Rubidoux
  • Lone Tree Point on Catalina
  • Trans-Catalina Trail
  • Lower Aliso Canyon
  • Santiago Oaks Regional Park
  • Crystal Cove Beach Walk
  • Laurel Canyon Loop
  • Whiting Ranch
  • Santiago Peak
  • Bell Canyon Loop
  • San Juan Loop Trail
  • Sitton Peak
  • Tenaja Falls
  • Tenaja Canyon
  • Santa Rosa Plateau Ecological Reserve
  • Agua Tibia Mountain
  • La Jolla Shores to Torrey Pines Beach
  • Torrey Pines State Natural Reserve
  • Los Penasquitos Canyon
  • Bernardo Mountain
  • Cowles Mountain
  • Woodson Mountain
  • Iron Mountain
  • El Capitan County Preserve
  • Doane Valley
  • Eagle Rock
  • Cedar Creek Falls
  • Three Sisters Falls
  • Volcan Mountain
  • Cuyamaca Peak
  • Stonewall Peak
  • Horsethief Canyon
  • Garnet Peak Loop
  • Sunset Trail
  • Hellhole Canyon
  • Borrego Palm Canyon
  • Villager Peak
  • Calcite Mine
  • Moonlight Canyon Loop
  • Mountain Palm Springs
  • Mortero Palms to Goat Canyon

Agencies and Information Sources

Recommended Reading

Index

About the Authors