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COVER STORY: SUMMER OF FUN!
Kids' Activities | Swimming
Holes | Music Festivals
| Redwood Run
IN THE NEWS |
FROM THE PUBLISHER | OFF THE PAVEMENT
TALK OF THE TABLE | THE HUM | CALENDAR
May 24, 2007
Splashdown
83-year-old Albert Miller has your swim spot
covered
By Hank Sims
Below: Albert Miller shows off a favorite swimming hole
on the Van Duzen -- Swimmers' Delight in the county park. Photo
by Barbara Clark/Senior News.
When it comes time to head to the river, most
people in the Humboldt Bay Area -- Eureka, Arcata, McKinleyville
-- automatically think Willow Creek. The Trinity River is one
of the mightiest in the region (especially since the powers-that-be
decreased diversions to the Central Valley a few years back)
and when you get that far inland in July you are definitively
reminded that it is summer. Days of 100-plus degrees are the
norm. Tish Tang, Devil's Elbow, the South Fork -- you learn about
them in college and they stay with you for the rest of your life.
For good reason.
For some reason, though, the guru of local swimming
spots -- Albert B. Miller of Fortuna -- doesn't touch the Willow
Creek area in his Guide to Natural Swimming Holes, now
in its third edition. Perhaps it's because he simply hasn't gotten
to it yet. The 83-year-old Miller says that he's got 20 new tips
to check out, but the cost of gasoline has discouraged him from
hitting the road.
Miller's pamphlet was born of two things: a lifelong
love of swimming and a column suggestion from the editors of
the Senior News, where he has been writing since retiring
to the area from Palo Alto 10 years ago. "I got a
lot of energy from doing this job -- I enjoy doing it,"
Miller says.
It's not entirely easy to get your hands on the
Guide. Fevered swim fans pass around copies like samizdat.
If you're interested, Miller tells us he's expecting another
shipment from the printers at any moment, and you can call or
e-mail him if you'd like to order your copy. He's reachable at
725-2791 or millertype@sbcglobal.net.
However, as a sort of a tease for the real thing,
Miller decided that he'd share three of his favorite secret spots
with Journal readers. So if you're looking to avoid the
crowded scene on the Trinity, or if the plus-100 temperatures
are a little too much for you, here's some suggestions.
One thing, though -- follow Miller's advice and
be river-safe, especially if you've got kids in tow. Local rivers
can be surprisingly powerful, and it's the rare year that doesn't
claim the lives of one or two swimmers. Exercise caution. That
goes triple on the mighty Trinity. Tip: Many businesses in river
country, including Bob's Shopping Center in Willow Creek, loan
out lifejackets for free.
That said, here's a sampling of Miller's favorite
spots.
High Rock
RIVER: Eel.
MILLER'S TAKE: "It's a fantastic place.
I describe it very thoroughly. It's a bit of a hike to get in
there. The river is wide and deep and it crosses between two
redwood forest shorelines, underneath a very high monolith. It's
very picturesque."
DIRECTIONS: On the Avenue of the Giants,
drive 2.4 miles south of Redcrest to the High Rock Conservation
Camp sign on the right (that's 4/10 of a mile south of the High
Rock Bar road sign). Drive 1/10 of a mile farther south to the
first turnout on the left. From the turnout walk 50 yards down
to the main north-south trail; then go left 130 yards to the
cutoff trail. Walk down the cutoff trail 230 yards to a sandy
beach at this choice swimming hole underneath High Rock.
Lower
Bull Creek Flat
Right: Lower Bull Creek flat swimming hole.
Photo by Albert Miller.
RIVER: Bull Creek, a tributary of the South
Fork of the Eel.
MILLER'S TAKE: "It's the location,
under some of the tallest redwoods on the North Coast. It takes
10 minutes from the parking space to get to the swimming hole.
The only thing is that it's in a creek, which is not as large
as the river swimming holes."
DIRECTIONS: From Dyerville Overlook on the
Avenue of the Giants, drive west exactly 1.3 miles on Mattole
Road in the Rockefeller Forest to the Lower Bull Creek Flat sign
on the left. Turn left down the narrow entry road to Day Use
parking. From there, enter the Forest Loop Trail. Bear right
on the trail for 10 minutes through the grove of giant redwoods
to the Big Tree Trail sign on the right. Walk down that trail
from the sign to the summer bridge. Upstream, a 10-by-30-yard
swimming hole is bordered by 300-foot ancient redwoods.
Fish Hatchery
RIVER: Mad.
MILLER'S TAKE: "Clothing optional.
It's a favorite with the students there ... a series of holes
bordered by sandy patches."
DIRECTIONS: Drive east on Hwy 299 five miles
to the Blue Lake turnoff. Drive ahead one block to Chartin Road.
Go right on Chartin one block then left on South Railroad to
the end of the road. Bear right to Hatchery Road and drive two
miles to the Mad River Fish Hatchery.
Enter the parking lot, drive to the end and park.
You will see a small park with picnic tables, and restrooms at
the end of the parking lot. There is a California Fish and Games
graphic in front of the restrooms that illustrates the cycle
of salmon and steelhead reproduction at the hatchery when it
is operating. Go behind the graphic and walk to your right parallel
to the hatchery's concrete waterway to the end of the pavement
(150 yards). There, a narrow trail begins. Continue in the same
direction to the end of the trail (50 yards).
Climb down the rock embankment to the river and
wade across the stream to the dry wash on the far side. Walk
upstream past the first bend in the river to clothing-optional
swimming holes and frequent small beaches in the Mad River wilderness.

TOP
COVER STORY: SUMMER OF FUN!
Kids' Activities | Swimming
Holes | Music Festivals
| Redwood Run
IN THE NEWS |
FROM THE PUBLISHER | OFF THE PAVEMENT
TALK OF THE TABLE | THE HUM | CALENDAR
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