.>

Muir Woods features several trails
that offer a variety of
habitats, terrain, and degree of hiking difficulty.

Main
Trail Loop From Muir Woods Visitor Center To Cathedral Grove
Round-trip distance: 1 mile
Time required: an easy 1 hour
Muir
Woods' main trail begins at the visitor center and follows Redwood
Creek on both sides of the stream. Though a level, easy stroll, you
can shorten your walk by crossing on the second or third of four bridges
and returning to the visitor center. The path is wide, paved and wheelchair
and stroller accessible. Numbered signs begin after the second
bridge. The numbers correspond to the stops described in our Nature
Trail Booklet. You'll find a close-up map of the main trail on the
inside cover of our guide.

Main Trail To Fourth
Bridge And Return Via Hillside Trail
Round-trip distance: 2 miles
Time required: + 1½ hour
Easy to Moderate Difficulty
This is a great route to take if you want to get away from the
busy main trail and do just a little hiking. Look for the "Hillside Trail" sign
after the fourth bridge on the main trail. Walk uphill, about 40 yards, to where the path
curves along the canyon edge and doubles back around a side stream. The easy, dirt path
offers a higher vantage point from which to view the forest.

Fern Creek
Trail To Camp Eastwood
Round-trip distance: 3 miles
Time required: + 2 hours
Moderate Difficulty
You'll
find a resting spot off Fern Creek Trail, which travels along lush
Fern Creek through a forested redwood canyon. Look for the trail head
sign a quarter-mile past Cathedral Grove and, a short distance later,
Kent Tree, a 220-foot Douglas-fir favored by William Kent, who donated
Muir Woods to the U.S. government. After following the stream for
a mile, you'll find drinking water, restrooms, tables and sunshine!
This spot, named the "Alice Eastwood" camp, is the original
terminus of a "gravity" rail car line that carried passengers
to the top of Mt. Tam and, by the draw of gravity, down into Muir
Woods in the early 1900s. The Plevin cut, originally part of the rail
line, will bring you back to the main Muir Woods trail.

Dipsea
Trail And Return Via Ben Johnson Trail
Round-trip distance: 4 miles
Time required: + 3 hours
Moderate Difficulty
Want to climb to a view of Mt. Tamalpais, the Pacific Ocean and
San Francisco? Take the Dipsea Trail. Start across the bridge off the lower/overflow
parking lot. A half-mile steep grade through lush, fern-lined forest brings you out of the
canyon to an exposed ridge. The trail eases as it passes through grassland. After the
trail enters a redwood forest for a quarter-mile of gradual uphill walking, you reach the
Ben Johnson Trail cutoff. Follow it in a slow descent back to the main Muir Woods trail.
For a longer hike, stay on the Dipsea Trail to Stinson Beach.

Bootjack
Trail To Ben Johnson Trail Loop
Round-trip distance: 6 miles
Time required: + 3½ hours
Moderate to Hard Difficulty
If
you have time for a half-day hike, and want an ideal resting spot,
choose this trail loop. Muir Woods' main trail becomes the Bootjack
Trail after the fourth bridge, and follows Redwood Creek until the
forest opens at Van Wyck Meadow, a historic gathering site. To the
left begins a trail portion built during World War I by the Tamalpais
Conservation Club. You'll cross many canyons while remaining on level
ground. To catch the Stapleveldt Trail, take the left fork (TCC Trail)
at the trail markers. Switchbacks bring you down to Ben Johnson Trail,
leading you back to Muir Woods.

Ocean View Trail Routes
The
Ocean View Trail (Note: Also called the Panoramic Trail - Was named
the Ocean View Trail when a fire cleared the view to the ocean, the
trees have since regrown.) originates in Muir Woods and travels up
to the Panoramic Highway. Although steep in parts, the trail is mostly
gentle climbs. You'll witness the range of plant life on Mt. Tamalpais:
redwoods within the canyons, tan oak, coastal live oak, madrone and
Douglas-fir on the middle elevations, and chaparral topping higher
slopes. The next two hikes start in Muir Woods and connect with the
Ocean View Trail.

Ocean
View Trail To Lost Trail To Fern Creek
Round-trip distance: 3 miles
Time required: + 2 hours
Moderate Difficulty
Lost Trail gets its name from being covered for 30 years after a
1930s landslide. To visit a quiet, peaceful forest, walk the Lost Trail. Take the Ocean
View Trail (look for the sign), off the main trail. After approximately 1.3 miles, take
the Lost Trail turnoff on the left and descend through deep forests of Douglas-fir into
the redwoods. Lost Trail ends at Fern Creek Trail; turn left and follow Fern Creek Trail
back to Muir Woods.

Ocean
View Trail To Redwood Trail To Sun Trail
Round-trip distance: 5.2 miles
Time required: + 3 hours
Moderate to Hard Difficulty
This
half-day hike offers a stop midway at the Tourist Club for a rest
and views. Follow the Ocean View Trail for 1.5 miles, then turn right
where it intersects the trail parallel to the Panoramic Highway. After
a short distance, turn off onto Redwood Trail, a level path that curves
around the canyons, maintaining an elevation of 800 feet. Catch the
views of the Pacific Ocean and Muir Woods. After 1.7 miles on Redwood
Trail, you'll reach the Tourist Club, established in 1912. Although
a sign at the Tourist Club directs you toward Muir Woods, the route
is steep, dangerous and an erosion problem. Instead, take the Sun
Trail loop 0.7 miles, cross Muir Woods Road and catch the Dipsea Trail
back to Muir Woods.


ARAMARK is an authorized
concessionaire of the National Park Service.
Copyright © 2002 ARAMARK. All rights reserved.
Photos by Mark Henderson.
|