Saturday, October 21, 2017

Giant trees and stunning scenery

From Awesome David

Saturday, 14th October - Monday, 16th October
Kings Canyon and Sequoia National Park is a relatively small location nestled behind the Sierra-Nevada mountain range. It provides a unique environment that is perfect for the giant Sequoia trees - neither too hot, nor too cold, with regular forest fires that help them grow.
They are the largest trees on earth, by volume and mass; though they aren't the tallest and do not have the broadest girth.
Kings Canyon is a glacially-formed valley and the drive to the end of the road is incredible. It is unfortunate that we didn't have time to do a substantial hike around the area, but the Zumwalt Meadow Loop Trail was stunning. The walk took us over a river, around the golden meadow, through the forest border, and then clambering over shattered granite boulders.
As I thought about the immense history and the forces that shaped this place, I couldn't help but worship the God of this creation.



A stump of the largest Sequoia tree ever known to have lived

The Grants before the General Grant Tree

The General Grant Tree

The family in front of the General Grant Tree

Beautiful autumnal Aspens among the Sequoia

The Grant family standing in a giant fire scar on the Resurrection Tree

Eliza sitting on a big sawed stump

Measuring a big sawed stump using the family

Sawed giant stump in a meadow

Eliza 'in' the Mark Twain stump
(the stump of a tree cut down by loggers to prove to East Coasters
how big Sequoia trees were) 


Mule deer and fawn near the trail

The summit of the Buena Vista trail


Buena Vista - view of the valley
Frilled lizard

The family at Roaring River Falls

Eliza at Zumwalt Meadow

A view of the Kings River from the suspension bridge

Zumwalt meadow in the setting sun - granite cliffs in the background

Autumn colours sprouting from the collapsed granite boulders

Zumwalt Meadow

4 comments:

  1. Love the pic of Eliza inside the cracks in the tree stump!

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    1. Thanks Heather. It was pretty cool; though sad to think that the tree was cut down to prove something.
      The silver lining is that this sacrificial tree sparked a movement to preserve these giants

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  2. wow, I love the kids to compare the size.

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    1. Thanks Barb. I also took photos of the largest Sequoia - the General Sherman, but it's difficult to get a photo that really shows its size.

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