Featured Links

Other Topics
Sponsored Links







Quote of the Day

"I frequently tramped eight or ten miles through the deepest snow to keep an appointment with a beech-tree, or a yellow birch, or an old acquaintance among the pines."

Henry David Thoreau



Recommended Products



Click here for eBay Motors!


 






 
Featured Hiking Articles

Essential Hiking Equipment For Your Safety
Taking a hike means expecting the unexpected, so it’s best to be prepared for some of the more common things that can occur on a daylong or weeks-long trek. There are some very useful items that you should always take with you any time you go hiking. ...

Hiking Journals – Preserve Your Hiking Experiences
Hiking is a great way to escape the rat race and be one with nature. Alas, your hiking experiences can fade with time. The best way to prevent this is to keep a hiking journal for your trail experiences. Hiking JournalsTake a minute to give some ...

Preparation Checklist for Hiking in South Africa
The comfortable backpack and a good water bottle are absolutely essential and comfortable strong shoes are also very important. The weight of your backpack (packed) may not exceed one third of your body weight.Hikers must be fairly fit and should ...




Giant Sequoias - Hiking Boole Tree Loop
 
The Giant Sequoia trees of California are a site to see. Despite heavy logging efforts, you can still hike through these massive trees on the Boole Tree Loop.

Giant Sequoia National Monument

The park system in central California is incredible. You have Sequoia National Park, the first national park ever designated in the country. Next to it is King Canyon National Park, created in 1940. Surrounding a good portion of these two is the new Giant Sequoia National Monument, designated such by President Clinton in 2000. The three parks form a sanctuary for incredible scenery, including the Giant Sequoias on the Boole Tree Loop hiking trail.

Although directions are included below, I have to mention the drive to Boole Tree is incredible. As you drive through Stump Meadow, you will see some of the biggest stumps in the world and get a real feel for what has been destroyed. The biggest is the Chicago Stump measuring 70 FEET around its perimeter. Sadly, the tree was cut down so it could be displayed in a museum in Chicago in the 1880s when such trees seemed plentiful.

The Boole Tree Loop is only 2.5 miles, but will take a couple of hours since you'll be staring up in the air like an idiot and looking at some incredible views. Since it is a loop, you can go either direction you wish. The first part of the trail will wind through at least 40 Giant Sequoia stumps that will boggle your mind with their size. Passing these, you'll head up to a plateau where you can look down upon valleys in the canyon with Spanish Mountain in the distance. Regardless of which way you go, you'll eventually come

upon Boole Tree.

Boole Tree is big, but not as big as many of the stumps you'll see. Boole Tree stands roughly 275 feet high with a perimeter of some 35 feet. It is estimated to be over 2,000 years old and is one of the biggest living trees in the world. Ironically, the tree is named after a lumber mill owner that spared it. To bad he wasn't feeling as gracious with the other Giant Sequoias as all the stumps attest.

The Giant Sequoia National Monument is roughly an hour east of Fresno, California. Highway 180 is the most used entrance to the park from the west coast. Upon entering the park, you'll pass through a ranger station. Drive north from there and hand a left at Grant Grove after traveling just over a mile. Continue until you hit Grant Grove Village. Just after it, you'll see sign for Stump Meadow. Take a left and start driving. After a couple of miles, you'll see a parking lot with a sign.

If you're coming from Los Angeles, the drive will take five hours as will driving from San Francisco. Of course, drive times are dependent on traffic conditions in both cities.

Taking a hike through the Giant Sequoia National Monument is tremendous. It will give you a perspective of Mother Nature that few see.

About the author:

Rick Chapo is with http://www.nomadjournals.com - makers of writing journals for hiking, backpacking and camping. Writing journals are great Christmas gifts for him or her. Visit http://www.nomadjournaltrips.com for more hiking articles and stories.
Written By: Rick Chapo


Google


Hiking News


Hiking and biking trail opens on the north bank of the Missouri River
Kansas City Star, MO - 1 hour ago
Platte County and Riverside on Friday opened a $1 million, 3.75-mile hiking and biking trail on the Missouri River’s north bank. ...
Sunday editorial: Expand KC's puny system of trails Kansas City Star
all 2 news articles

Restaurants offering deals, but also hiking prices
The Associated Press - 12 hours ago
Restaurant companies trying to get consumers back into their restaurants are planning to offer lots of deals this fall. But there won't be discounts across ...

UPDATE: Exeter man hiking Appalachian Trail reaches Maine
Reading Eagle, PA - 5 hours ago
Crosier was first introduced to hiking in Boy Scouts, taking several trips on the Appalachian Trail in Berks County. He lost touch with the activity until ...

Hikes planned from Fontana Village
Asheville Citizen-Times, NC - 1 hour ago
FONTANA VILLAGE – Fontana Hiking Club will meet at 10 am today at Fontana Village marina for a nine-mile hike along the Eagle Creek trail, with about 15 ...
Walnut Creek Village Council plans community meetings Goldsboro News Argus
all 2 news articles

NECN

Mount Si hiker dies; 2 stranded in Cascades
Seattle Times, United States - 22 hours ago
Hiking poles or ice axes may be of help on stretches of unexpected icy or snow-covered patches. A 27-year-old man died after falling about 200 feet on Mount ...
Rescuers Reach Stranded Climbers in Washington State WJLA
Rescuers reach stranded hikers KOMO News
Desperate situation develops for Wash. hikers trapped on tiny ledge KPIC
Backpacker Magazine - Seattle Post Intelligencer
all 117 news articles