2024 Pashnit Touring on a Hayabusa

Calaveras Big Trees protects a collection of giant sierra redwoods discovered by hunter A.T. Dowd in 1852. The discovery of the world's largest living thing in turn put the area on the international map.

Adjacent to the parking area is a tree stump so massive, it was used as a dance floor in the late 1850s. A bowling alley was built on top of the body of the fallen tree. This tree was so large, there wasn’t a saw big enough at the time to cut through it.

DSC02314.jpg


Early loggers used mining equipment known as a pump auger and drilled a layer of holes through the base of the tree to fell it where it still stands today.

DSC02310.jpg


DSC02316.jpg
 
Sierra Redwoods are so large, they contain enough wood to build 40 five-room homes. While not the tallest like the coast redwoods, these trees are as tall as the Statue of Liberty and weigh 4000 tons.

How to imagine 4000 tons? Well, 4000 Tons works out to 8,000,000 loaves of bread, 1700 pickup trucks, 55 Space Shuttles, or 900,000 cats.

Young trees can grow 6-10 feet per year for trees less than 150 years old. The oldest known giant sequoia has been measured at 3,300 years of age. At the base, the trees can grow to 30 feet thick and 94 feet around the circumference. The folks back east could not believe such a thing existed. After all, a tree that was 30 feet thick was pure invention.

DSC02321.jpg


Conservationists of the time packed their bags to view these giants in person, promoters of the time saw dollar signs.

People that discovered these trees used various methods to show the folks back home how big the trees really were. They drove their cars up on the trees and had their pictures taken. Holes were cut into the bases, and you could drive through them, which you can still do today in nearby Sequoia National Park. or at the Chandelier Tree in Leggett.

DSC02317.jpg


The grand irony to loggers is the wood, unlike coast redwoods, from Sequoia trees is largely unusable in commercial uses. Wood from the giant sequoia is surprisingly brittle, and of poor use in manufacturing. The wood from these massive trees was used for matchsticks, pencils, and fence boards. The logging industry eventually abandoned efforts to cut down the massive trees due to poor profits and the growing conservation movement to save these trees. However, it’s been estimated 34 percent of the giant sequoias were cut down.

DSC02328.jpg
 
DSC02325.jpg


DSC02326.jpg


There were 92 giant sequoias in the valley outside Arnold in 1852. The two largest became the focus of much attention. The Discovery Tree was cut down and used as a dance floor. The second largest was the Mother of the Forest, discovered to be 2,520 years old, 328 feet high and 94 feet in girth. The bark at the base was 18 inches thick. The bark that was stripped from the sequoia for the traveling exhibit & just the bark weighed 60 tons. The bark was eventually lost in a fire.

DSC02329.jpg
 
As soon as we get near the summit, Highway 4 - Ebbetts Pass narrows to single lane, It's pure delight up here.

DSC02331.jpg


DSC02339.jpg


It goes like this for 23 miles.

DSC02337.jpg
 
Seven miles to the east of Alpine Lake, one of the most picturesque lakes in the Sierra. Mosquito Lake at 8,040’ is tiny, shallow, fit only for kayaks and canoes, and drains into two watersheds- the western side into the North Fork Stanislaus River, the eastern into Pacific Creek and then into the North Fork Mokelumne River from its position at the very crest of the Sierra.

Highway 4 was cut right at the edge of this small body of water. In the middle of Mosquito Lake is a small summer cabin that’s been photographed by every traveler that comes this way. The cabins date to the 1920s when several Angels Camp residents traveled here and built summer cabins. The pond was dammed, and the water level raised to resemble a small lake. Mosquito Lake is the mid-point of this ride, and often one of the best stopping points for a quick break.

DSC02341.jpg


Portions of the ride are very steep with a 24% grade in several locations with two different sets of multiple hairpins on the eastern side of the range.

DSC02343.jpg


DSC02349.jpg
 
Last edited:
DSC02348.jpg


DSC02349.jpg


Other vehicles are rare, but we move way over when we see them coming at us. Proper lane position is essential when headed into hairpins and blind corners.

DSC02351.jpg
 
Highway 4 actually has two summits with a bowl in the middle. First climbing up to Ebbetts Pass, descending, then climbing back up several thousand feet to Pacific Grade Summit at 8050 ft.

Pacific Grade Summit when we rode it last year in June.
DSC06431.JPG


DSC02357.jpg


DSC02358.jpg
 
Descending the the bright yellow aspen trees and then back up Monitor Pass - our fourth Sierra mountain pass of the day.

DSC02359.jpg


Leviathan Peak up ahead - I rode up to the summit a year ago on the Hayabusa to the fire lookout up there.

DSC02360.jpg


DSC02361.jpg
 
This pullout on Monitor Pass is the perfect photo spot.

It's tradition to stop here and snap a shot of the bike - 20 years running. :D

IMG_7942.jpg


DSC01137.JPG


DSC06455.jpg


DSC00191.jpg


dsc00239_53753747654_o.jpg
 
The walk thru the north grove of old growth Sequoias is a real treat inside the Big Trees park. I walked thru it twice with people that had never seen such trees. What an experience! You mention lane position being important up there. No foolin! I had a really close call heading east right in those narrow one lane downhill twisties. A sheriff’s SUV heading west was right in the middle coming around a blind uphill corner. If I hadn’t been to the far right we might have collided, it was a double swerve and juuuuust a tad too close.
 
Back
Top