Sequioa: Man and Tree Perspectives

  • Thread starter Thread starter gf beranek
  • Start date Start date
  • Replies Replies 16
  • Views Views 2K

gf beranek

Old Schooler
Joined
Apr 18, 2007
Messages
14,808
Location
God's country, North Coast
Here's a variety of man and tree perspectives,, just to show the size of some of the trees we hiked through.

The last one is the General Grant Tree,, 3rd largest in the world,, they say.
 

Attachments

  • Sequioa 012r.jpg
    Sequioa 012r.jpg
    341.4 KB · Views: 66
  • Sequioa 013r.jpg
    Sequioa 013r.jpg
    351 KB · Views: 66
  • Sequioa 039r.jpg
    Sequioa 039r.jpg
    355.6 KB · Views: 64
  • Sequioa 040r.jpg
    Sequioa 040r.jpg
    355.1 KB · Views: 63
  • Sequioa 054r.jpg
    Sequioa 054r.jpg
    268.5 KB · Views: 62
  • Sequioa 061r.jpg
    Sequioa 061r.jpg
    346.3 KB · Views: 62
  • Grant Tree 003r.jpg
    Grant Tree 003r.jpg
    343 KB · Views: 63
Great pictures,Jerry.
The Grant tree must be the second largest today, since the top of the Washington tree collapsed about 4 years ago.
My wife and I hiked out to see the Washington tree in spring 2005 and most of the top had broken off it. Big chunks of wood lying everywhere. It was still a very impressive sight.
I just read somewhere that the rest of the top collapsed last year, so all that is left is the lower part of the trunk.
We had two close bear encounters while hiking out there, that really made my day.
 
Last edited:
We saw The Washington Tree. It's all busted up. Beautiful trail beyond it except that I got quite scared a couple times. Saw the fresh bear stuff and had to leave.
 
Cool pics! I like the second one; you could have some fun with captions on that picture. "The dreaded rock-devouring Sequoia"

BTW, which one of you can run faster? :lol:
 
The one bear, we saw, was about 100 yards off walking on his ( her?) rear legs while bending some small spruce trees down and eating the top buds. Quite fun to watch.
My wife practically walked into the second one as she was going around one of the larger trees. It was busy ripping into a rotten log, apparently looking for eats, so it didn't even register that we were there.
I'm not scared of black bears, Grizzlies is another matter.My wife Inge Britt and I got really tired of them while we were hitchhiking through Yukon and Alaska.When you sleep in a tent every night, they are just such a hassle.
 
I've always found the size of the trees and they way the woods feels around you up there (omit tourists if you will) to be a humbling experience. Makes my troubles go away as they become so small of an importance in the scheme of things. Very nice pics Jerry and Mrs. B. Looks like you two had a great time of it :)
 
With the time zone changes, that's about 7-8 hours on the plane. And the fact that you lose all rights as a US citizen when you get on a plane. They can steal your chit, strip search you, hold you against your will or throw you in jail and you have no recourse.
 
Back
Top