BENEATH THE SHADOWS OF GIANTS It is normal to feel oneās very smallness. Indeed, amid the Redwood National and State Parks, it is easy to imagine the trees being guardians of a sacred placeāas the native Yurok did or as the towering ents that sprung from the fantastical imagination of Tolkien.

This land of legendary trees has enormous power to enchant. Covered in evergreen peaks surpassing 300 feet and full of mystic fogs, every moment presents a natural spectacle that awes and captivates. Up its lumbrous middle, U.S. Route 101 runs south to north like a long, paved trunk. And for the adventurous RVer, hundreds of miles of trails branch out into its inexpressible, evergreen, Autumn stillness.

An Evergreen Path Through Fog and Fern
Damnation Creek Trail in Del Norte Coast Redwood State Park leads you through dense dens of ferns. Western light combs through pillared trees and pierces the afternoon fog along the elevated 3.4-mile, out-and-back trek. Itās open year-round, but its stunning coastal conclusion is currently closed due to bridge repairs.
Nearest Parking Lot Coordinate 41° 38ā 54ā N 124° 06ā 49ā W

Out of the Canopy to the Coast
Breaking free from the redwoods, take the two-mile Coastal Trail and Yurok Loop in Redwood National Park. Youāll trade living towers for open sky, silent old-growth forests for driftwood, and crashing waves. Just donāt forget your camera.
Nearest Parking Lot Coordinate 41° 35ā 40ā N 124° 05ā 57ā W

A Creek Walled in Living Green
The Fern Canyon Loop Trail is one of those miracles of nature that stays with you your whole life. But prepare to get your feet wet, because the creek itself is your trail as you enter the frond-covered walls of Fern Canyon in Prairie Creek Redwood State Park.
Nearest Parking Lot Coordinate 41° 24ā 02ā N 124° 03ā 56ā W

Enjoy an evergreen Autumn under natureās lofty skyscrapers along the California coast

There are not many places on this planet where you can drive your vehicle through a tree. But one of themāthe Tour-Thru Treeāis in the Redwood National and State Parks. (And yes, you might have to unhitch to pull off that little maneuver.) But driving through a living tree thatās over 800 years old is only the beginning of the wonders youāll see in this 139,000-acre park complex (one federal and three state).

From the southernmost entrance at Thomas H. Kuchel Visitor Center in Orick, youāre a half-hour drive away up U.S. Route 101 and Newton B. Drury Scenic Parkway to the only full hookup in the area: Klamath River RV Park. But donāt be in a hurry to get there. Detours abound that put you on hiking trails beneath tree-sized limbs filled with white-tailed kites, flying squirrels, and the copper-colored rufous hummingbird. Bears roam these parts. Otters play in these rivers and sea lions loll across the beachesāall just waiting to be seen.



