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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home2/lorriego/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114I’d rather hike than blog, so I’ve been MIA from Shrinkrapped for a bit. But it’s been a fantastic diversion, as decent rainfall in Northern California after four years of drought has left our hills emerald and strewn with wildflowers such that we haven’t seen for awhile. Still, my keyboard fingers are a bit itchy and I’ve been feeling a bit guilty, so here’s\u00a0a sample of where I’ve been lately to make up for blogging negligence.<\/p>\n
While we were in Palm Springs, Joshua Tree, and The Pinnacles<\/a>,<\/p>\n it was cool and rainy back home. So when we returned, we feasted on the intense green hills\u00a0in our own backyard during\u00a0a great hike with friends on the Big Rock Trail in Lucas Valley:<\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n The day before Easter, we hiked at Point Reyes National Seashore and saw Harlequin flowers and lilies on the Muddy Hollow and Estero trails:<\/p>\n Then on Easter Sunday, we hiked up the Morning Sun Trail into the Marin Headlands above Gerbode Valley, where developers were stopped from putting in housing for 30,000 in the late 1960s. At the same time, our daughter was riding her bicycle across the Golden Gate Bridge–it’s so nice to have her nearby instead of in Barcelona!<\/p>\n Just this past weekend, we drove north to hike above Calistoga–the morning fog was still in the valley as we started up the trail. The old Oat Hill Mine Road\u00a0connects Calistoga with Aetna Springs Road in Pope Valley, and was used by mercury miners in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.\u00a0You can still see ruts carved into the rock by heavy wagons in place along the trail. It was hard enough walking on the rocky trail–I would never survive the jostling of those who came west in wagons (not to mention the jostling the mountain bikers who whizzed past us survive in their modern-day spandex–some people are just gluttons for punishment!).<\/p>\n There are wonderful volcanic rock formations known as the Palisades\u00a0along the way, and the minerals in the soil, helped by the rain, put on a wonderful display of lupine,\u00a0 poppies, mimulus, and other wildflowers. (A man we met on the trail directed us to a cache of rare St. Helena Fawn Lilies, pictured at the top of this post.)<\/p>\n Then it was home again. Not too shabby walking around town each morning either!<\/p>\n *<\/p>\n What are your favorite springtime outings?<\/em><\/p>\n <\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" I’d rather hike than blog, so I’ve been MIA from Shrinkrapped for a bit. But it’s been a fantastic diversion, as decent rainfall in Northern California after four years of drought has left our hills emerald and strewn with wildflowers … Continue reading