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Towering, twisted, and wind-carved, the endangered bishop pine makes a noble sentry in Pt. Reyes National Seashore. But it doesn't reproduce very well. The tree's grenade-like cones don't open like most cones we know; they need heat, either from a very hot day (and that happens, like, NEVER at Pt. Reyes) or fire. And so we turn to 1995, when mature bishop pines (like the skeletons shown above) burned as their cones cracked open and spewed thousands of seeds into the mountain's quartz-diorite soil (primo habitat for finicky bishop pines). Baby trees sprouted everywhere: easily 20 or more in a square yard. They grew, and grew, spidery and dense, like spindling toothbrushes with pine needles for bristles, first 5, then 10, and now, a decade and a half after the burn, towering 15 feet tall. Bending in gentle arches over Bucklin Trail, they create--you guessed it--the illusion of Alice's magic portal.
Check it out now and you'll also see lovely and rare Marin manzanita in bloom, plus Douglas iris, enormous wild lilac (ceonothus), day lilies, yellow violets, and a tangle of other wildflowers. We didn't see a rabbit or a hare or a hatter, but we did see one of those rare mountain beavers. More on that next time. Until then, have fun in the rabbit hole. Trail map and directions: Take Mt. Vision road and park at the end of the road; hike down Bucklin and up Drakes View trails, then back on Inverness Ridge Trail to your car.
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