John & Anne Wiley

2015/07/23

Rocky Pt. to Granite Cyn.

Beyond Bixby things start to look more upscale and Carmel By The Sea (if that’s a look). Just past the Rocky Point is this collection of nice looking places with great seaside locations an easy drive from the city. Is this still Big Sur? Some say yes, others no.

5568 Rocky Pt. Homes

5568 Rocky Pt. Homes

More homes cluster around the lovely Garrapata Creek Bridge where they’re mostly hidden from the highway by trees like the pic above.

5565 Garrapata Creek

5565 Garrapata Creek

Even more beautiful is the Granite Canyon bridge, where a small waterfall drops directly into the ocean in most tides.

5553 Granite Canyon

5553 Granite Canyon

Just beyond is the Marine Pollution Studies Laboratory (MPSL) where U.C. Davis is doing some cutting edge research on the water quality in this relatively pristine area.

5549 Granite Cyn MPSL

5549 Granite Cyn MPSL

Looking back toward Rocky Creek where we left off yesterday, you can see how many marvels we see in a slow progression that still takes only three minutes. Simple amazing.

5560 Looking Back

5560 Looking Back

2015/07/22

Little Sur, Bixby, Rocky

At a wide curve in Hwy. 1, the Little Sur River has long fascinated me, so when approaching it from either direction we’d pull over to let traffic go by so I could slow down and enjoy it. A few times we even stopped on the shoulder to let sea sounds and smells mingle with the magic of the place in the silence between vehicles.

5598 Little Sur River

5598 Little Sur River

Though the surf sound is missing it’s visually nicer from the air, because we needn’t wait for low tide and scramble out past the rocks to risk a rogue wave while looking at the sea-carved stone.

5594 Carved Stone

5594 Carved Stone

Another spot popular with us is Bixby Bridge, and even some of the speeders will pull over there for a look.

5587 Bixby Bridge

5587 Bixby Bridge

Not many know about or try to get a look at Dinosaur Rock out at the point, but we like this perspective plus Castle Rock and the sea caves.

5577 Dino Rock

5577 Dino Rock

In a different region, the Rocky Creek Bridge with rare orchids and sea otters would draw a crowd, but so close to Bixby this one gets little attention.

5586 Rocky Creek Bridge

5586 Rocky Creek Bridge

2015/07/21

The Point

We’ve never been out to the light at Point Sur, and that part of the drive along the flat is less striking to me. But now that we more often fly this route than drive it, this is one of many great vistas.

5617 Pt. Sur to Carmel

5617 Pt. Sur to Carmel

I’d assumed this installation on the flat to be associated with the light station, but in researching this series of pix discovered it’s the Point Sur SOSUS Naval Facility. I quite enjoyed reading that wiki about it, though from the air it doesn’t look like much these days.

5615 USN SOSUS Point Sur

5615 USN SOSUS Point Sur

By contrast, this beautiful old two-story stone keeper’s house out at the light looks really cool!

5603 Keeper of the Light

5603 Keeper of the Light

Down at the tip of the hill, the current Point Sur Lighthouse is of course truly magnificent and is still useful even in this era of GPS and other electronic aids to navigation. Now it mostly evokes a time when stoic tireless crews operating this beacon were honored for the lives they saved.

5608 Point Sur Light

5608 Point Sur Light

2015/07/20

Molera Marvels

Molera has some more easily accessible paths to the coast from Hwy. 1, with remarkable beaches like this.

5630 Molera Beach

5630 Molera Beach

Those who clamber across the point might glimpse the unusual red sand beach beneath the rock overhang.

5629 Molera Point

5629 Molera Point

I guess few have seen this next spot other than the land owners and their ranch hands, or maybe people who make the dangerous trek along the public coast at low tide.

5625 Caves & Conifers

5625 Caves & Conifers

That sea cave to the right of center looks pretty deep, and the whole place has an appealing magic. I wonder if they ever give tours. My guess is they don’t want the attention and are too busy making a living in this rugged spot between Molera and Pt. Sur.

5621 Dry Ranching

5621 Dry Ranching a Wet Coast

2015/07/19

Pfeiffer

Pfeiffer State Beach is both popular and little known, because the Big Sur drive is so incredibly beautiful that few people bother to take the short detour to simply Be in this enchanted place. Even on this “busy” perfect warm weekend day the dozen or two people here could walk a few steps and find complete solitude.

5641 Enchanted Beach

5641 Enchanted Beach

The sands, rocks, and waters all conspire to transform the mood of those who take this road less traveled.

5651 Pfeiffer State Beach

5651 Pfeiffer State Beach

Nearby is the more remote Cooper Point with its inexplicable slotted stone pointing to an alien world so familiar to explorers who sample its secrets.

5636 Cooper Point

5636 Cooper Point

Trails abound in this region seeming so far from the noise and bustle of the highway, yet only a short hike into a Pacific consciousness.

5632 Panorama Trail

5632 Panorama Trail

At the base of this trail through salty flowering heather whispers the soul of solitude at the feet of Pfeiffer Ridge. From our magic carpet perspective, patient mountains anchor our awareness. Washing our sandy feet again in waves of Summer memory.

5633 Pfeiffer Ridge

5633 Pfeiffer Ridge

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