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MacKerricher State Park
State park in California, United States
State park in California, United States
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | MacKerricher State Park |
| photo | MacKerricher Beach.jpg |
| map | USA California#USA |
| relief | 1 |
| location | Mendocino County, California |
| nearest_city | Fort Bragg, California |
| coordinates | |
| area | 2299 acre |
| established | 1952 |
| governing_body | California Department of Parks and Recreation |
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MacKerricher State Park is a state park in California in the United States. It is located 3 mi north of Fort Bragg in Mendocino County. It covers 9 mi of coastline and contains several types of coastal habitat, including beaches, dunes, headlands, coves, wetlands, tide pools, forest, and a freshwater lake.
Natural features
The northern coastline of the park is a long, sloping beach, and the southern section is made up of rocky cliffs and flats separating smaller strips of beach. Inland from the ocean is Lake Cleone, a former brackish marsh that was closed off by the construction of a road and became a 30 acre freshwater lake. Much of the northern section of the park is occupied by the Inglenook Fen Ten Mile Dunes Preserve, a sensitive dune complex with wetland and terrestrial vegetation zones. Laguna Point is a peninsula near the middle of the park. The Ten Mile River marks the upper boundary of the park, and several creeks drain run through the landscape and into the Pacific Ocean.
The headlands are covered in grasses and wildflowers. Wooded areas just inland have stands of bishop pine (Pinus muricata), shore pine (Pinus contorta), and Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii). Animals in the area include harbor seals, which haul out on the rocks to sun. Gray whales on their annual migration are visible from shore between December and April, providing whale watching opportunities. Other mammals include black-tailed deer, raccoons, gray foxes, and occasionally mountain lions. There are many forms of tide pool life. There are more than 90 species of birds, including migratory waterfowl and permanent residents such as ospreys, great blue herons, ring-necked ducks, and mallards.
History
Indigenous peoples of California, including the Pomo and Yuki peoples, lived in or traveled through the region, utilizing resources such as seaweed, shellfish, and acorns. They hired a staff of native people to work on their ranch, which produced butter, potatoes, and draft horses. In 1916 a logging branch of the California Western Railroad was built northward along the coast from the Union Lumber Company Fort Bragg sawmill to the Ten Mile River and up the middle fork of the river to Camp 6. Trains brought logs from the Ten Mile River to the Fort Bragg sawmill until the rails were replaced by a haul road for logging trucks in 1949, when descendants of Duncan and Jessie MacKerricher sold the MacKerricher property to the state of California, which made it a state park.
Recreation
Parks staff leads hikes and whale-watching ventures. It maintains campgrounds and other facilities. Lake Cleone is available for fishing. There are trails for walking, cycling, and horseback riding.
MacKerricher Coastal Trail
A 4.75 mi rail trail segment of the California Coastal Trail uses the former railroad grade later converted to a haul road for logging trucks. The southern end of the trail is a timber trestle over Pudding Creek, and the trail parallels the Pacific coast north to Ward Avenue. The 9 mi haul road was abandoned when 7,000 ft of the road's asphalt concrete pavement was washed out by flooding in 1983. The haul road has not been subsequently maintained, and the portion north of the washout is being destroyed by the park as a habitat restoration measure. Leashed dogs are allowed on the paved trail, but excluded from the dune areas to protect the snowy plover.
References
References
- [http://www.parks.ca.gov/pages/436/files/MacKerricherSPWebBrochure2012Rev.pdf MacKerricher State Park Brochure.] {{webarchive. link. (2013-12-03 California Department of Parks and Recreation. Rev. 2012.)
- The park contains 95% of the entire distribution of the rare [[Chorizanthe howellii. Mendocino spineflower]] (''Chorizanthe howellii''), which grows in the protected dunes of the Inglenook Preserve.[http://www.fws.gov/cno/es/images/Chorizanthe%20howellii%205YR%20CNO%20FINAL%20JEM%2027Aug07.pdf ''Chorizanthe howellii'' 5-Year Review: Summary and Evaluation.] United States Fish & Wildlife Service, Arcata. September 2007.
- [https://archive.today/20131127181501/http://mendoparks.mcn.org/Macker.htmn State Parks of the Mendocino District: MacKerricher.] California State Parks, Mendocino District.
- Tahja, Katy M.. (2008). "Rails Across the Noyo". Tahjanjoki Press.
- "MacKerricher Coastal Trail". Mendocino Land Trust.
- Salcedo-Chourre, Tracy. (2001). "Rails-to-Trails, California". The Globe Pequot Press.
- "Six Things We'd Like You to Know About the Ten Mile Dunes Project". [[California State Parks]].
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