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Wikipedia

Big Sur

Big Sur (/ˈsɜːr/) is a rugged and mountainous section of the Central Coast of the U.S. state of California, between Carmel Highlands and San Simeon, where the Santa Lucia Mountains rise abruptly from the Pacific Ocean. It is frequently praised for its dramatic scenery. Big Sur has been called the "longest and most scenic stretch of undeveloped coastline in the contiguous United States",[1] a sublime "national treasure that demands extraordinary procedures to protect it from development",[2] and "one of the most beautiful coastlines anywhere in the world, an isolated stretch of road, mythic in reputation".[3] The views, redwood forests, hiking, beaches, and other recreational opportunities have made Big Sur a popular destination for visitors from across the world. With 4.5 to 7 million visitors annually,[4] it is among the top tourist destinations in the United States, comparable to Yosemite National Park, but with considerably fewer services, and less parking, roads, and related infrastructure.[5][6][7][8][9]

Big Sur, California
Coastline
Big Sur, California
Location in California
Coordinates: 36°17′57″N 121°52′24″W / 36.299216°N 121.873402°W / 36.299216; -121.873402
CountryUnited States
StateCalifornia
CountiesMonterey, San Luis Obispo

Big Sur Village is a collection of small roadside businesses and homes.[10]: 2  The larger region known as Big Sur does not have specific boundaries but is generally considered to include the 71-mile (114 km) segment of California State Route 1 between Malpaso Creek near Carmel Highlands[11] in the north and San Carpóforo Creek near San Simeon in the south,[12] as well as the entire Santa Lucia range between these creeks.[10] The interior region is mostly uninhabited, while the coast remains relatively isolated and sparsely populated, with between 1,800 and 2,000 year-round residents[13] and relatively few visitor accommodations scattered among four small settlements. The region remained one of the most inaccessible areas of California and the entire United States until, after 18 years of construction, the Carmel–San Simeon Highway (now signed as part of State Route 1) was completed in 1937. Along with the ocean views, this winding, narrow road, often cut into the face of towering seaside cliffs, dominates the visitor's experience of Big Sur. The highway has been closed more than 55 times by landslides, and in May 2017, a 2,000,000-cubic-foot (57,000 m3) slide blocked the highway at Mud Creek, north of Salmon Creek near the San Luis Obispo County line, to just south of Gorda. The road was reopened on July 18, 2018.

The region is protected by the Big Sur Local Coastal Plan, which preserves it as "open space, a small residential community, and agricultural ranching."[14] Approved in 1986, the plan is one of the most restrictive local-use programs in the state,[15] and is widely regarded as one of the most restrictive documents of its kind anywhere.[16] The program protects viewsheds from the highway and many vantage points, and severely restricts the density of development. About 60% of the coastal region is owned by governmental or private agencies which do not allow any development. The majority of the interior region is part of the Los Padres National Forest, Ventana Wilderness, Silver Peak Wilderness or Fort Hunter Liggett.

Location edit

 
Approximate boundaries of the Big Sur region

Big Sur is not an incorporated town but a region without formal boundaries in California's Central Coast region.[17] The region is often confused with the small community of buildings and services 26 miles (42 km) south of Carmel in the Big Sur River valley, sometimes referred to by locals as Big Sur Village, but officially known as Big Sur.[17][18][19]: 8 [20]: 7 [21] Some visitors think Big Sur only refers to Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park, whose environmental setting is extremely different from the overall rocky coastal environment.[22]

Historical boundaries edit

The various informal boundaries applied to the region have gradually expanded north and south over time. Esther Pfeiffer Ewoldson, who was born in 1904 and was a granddaughter of Big Sur pioneers Michael and Barbara Pfeiffer, wrote that the region extended from the Little Sur River 23 miles (37 km) south to Slates Hot Springs. Members of the Harlan Family, who homesteaded the Lucia region 9 miles (14 km) south of Slates Hot Springs, said that Big Sur was "miles and miles to the north of us."[19]: 6  Prior to the construction of Highway 1, residents on the south coast had little contact with residents to the north of them.[19]

Northern and southern boundaries edit

Most current descriptions of the area refer to Malpaso Creek 4.5 miles (7.2 km) south of the Carmel River as the northern border.[11][failed verification] The southern border is generally accepted to be San Carpóforo Creek in San Luis Obispo County.[12]

Settlements edit

 
View of Gorda, one of the small clusters of services in Big Sur

The Big Sur region is largely rural and the 1,800 to 2,000 residents are widely distributed. There are a concentration of homes in the north at Palo Colorado Canyon, Big Sur Village, and Posts. Other residential areas include Otter Cove, Garrapata Ridge, Garrapata Canyon, Bixby Canyon, Pfeiffer Ridge, Sycamore Canyon, Coastlands, and Partington Ridge.

In the south, residents are in the vicinity of Slates Hot Springs, Plaskett, Lucia, and Gorda. Homes are also located near Burns Creek, Buck Creek to Lime Creek, Plaskett Ridge, and Redwood Gulch.[23]

Inland extent edit

The vast majority of visitors only see Big Sur's dramatic coastline and consider the Big Sur region to include only the coastal flanks of the Santa Lucia Mountains, which at various points extend from 3 to 12 miles (5 to 19 km) inland.[24]

Some residents place the eastern border at the boundaries of the vast inland areas comprising the Los Padres National Forest, Ventana Wilderness, and Silver Peak Wilderness, or the unpopulated regions all the way to the eastern foothills of the Santa Lucia Mountains.[10] Author and local historian Jeff Norman considered Big Sur to extend inland to include the watersheds that drain into the Pacific Ocean.[20]: 7 

Author Lillian Ross wrote about life in Big Sur in several books. She and her husband Harry Dick Ross lived in southern Big Sur near Lime Creek beginning in 1939. Harry, a wood sculptor, worked at Hearst's estate in San Simeon as a tile-setter. She famously described Big Sur as "not a place at all but a state of mind."[25][26][27]

Etymology edit

 
Big Sur: rocky coast, fog and giant kelp

The name "Big Sur" has its origins in the area's early Spanish history. While the Portolá expedition was exploring Alta California, they arrived at San Carpóforo Canyon near present-day San Simeon on September 13, 1769. Unable to penetrate the difficult terrain along the coast, they detoured inland through the San Antonio and Salinas Valleys before arriving at Monterey Bay, where they founded Monterey and named it the provincial capital.[28]

The Spanish referred to the vast and relatively unexplored coastal region to the south of Monterey as el país grande del sur, meaning 'the big country of the south'. This was often shortened to el sur grande 'the big south'.[29][30] The two major rivers draining this portion of the coast were named El Rio Grande del Sur and El Rio Chiquito del Sur.[20]: 7 

The first recorded use of the name el Sud (meaning 'the South') was on a map of the Rancho El Sur land grant given by Governor José Figueroa to Juan Bautista Alvarado on July 30, 1834.[31] The first American use of the name 'Sur' was by the United States Coast Survey in 1851, which renamed a point of land that looked like an island and was shaped like a trumpet, known to the Spanish as Morro de la Trompa and Punta Que Parece Isla, to Point Sur.[21]

Big Sur's first post office was named "Posts" after William Brainard Post, in whose home it was located. He had obtained a patent to land at the top of the grade south of the Big Sur River, where he built a home in 1867.[32] Confusion ensued when mail intended for the Presidio was sent to Big Sur, and mail for the local residents was sent to the military post. The residents changed the name of the post office to Arbolado ('woodland'), but that was confused by the post office for Alvarado, a street in Monterey. The post office operated at Posts from 1889 to 1910; it was moved in 1905 several miles northwest to Big Sur Village.[33] The English-speaking homesteaders petitioned the United States Post Office in Washington D.C. to change the name of their post office from Arbolado to Big Sur, and the rubber stamp using that name was returned on March 6, 1915, cementing the use of Big Sur as the place name.[19]: 8 [20]: 7 [34][21]

Popularity edit

 
The Big Sur coast, looking north toward Bixby Creek Bridge

Big Sur is renowned worldwide for its natural features and relatively pristine scenery. It is rated among the top 35 tourist destinations in the world.[5] The Big Sur coast has been called the "longest and most scenic stretch of undeveloped coastline in the [contiguous] United States."[1] The region has been described as a "national treasure that demands extraordinary procedures to protect it from development."[2] Robert Lindsey wrote in The New York Times that it is "one of the most stunning meetings of land and sea in the world."[35] The Washington Times stated that it is "one of the most beautiful coastlines anywhere in the world, an isolated stretch of road, mythic in reputation."[3] Condé Nast Traveler named State Route 1 through Big Sur one of the top 10 world-famous streets, comparable to Broadway in New York City and the Champs-Élysées in Paris.[36] Realtor Mark Peterson commented, "Big Sur's popularity has erupted with the growth of social media. It has become a year-round destination."[37]

Writers have compared Big Sur to other natural wonders like the Grand Canyon.[38] Novelist Herbert Gold described it as "one of the grand American retreats for those who nourish themselves with wilderness."[39]

Big Sur is the California that men dreamed of years ago, this is the Pacific that Balboa looked at from the Peak of Darien, this is the face of the earth as the Creator intended it to look.

Scenic designations edit

The section of Highway 1 running through Big Sur is widely considered one of the most scenic driving routes in the United States, if not the world.[40][41][42] The views are one reason that Big Sur was ranked second among all United States destinations in TripAdvisor's 2008 Travelers' Choice Destination Awards.[43] The unblemished natural scenery owes much of its preservation to the highly restrictive development plans enforced in Big Sur; no billboards or advertisements are permitted along the highway and signage for businesses must be modestly scaled and of a rural nature conforming to the Big Sur region. The state of California designated the 72-mile (116 km) section of the highway from Cambria to Carmel Highlands as the first California Scenic Highway in 1965.[44][45] In 1966, First Lady Lady Bird Johnson led the official scenic road designation ceremony at Bixby Creek Bridge.[46] In 1996, the road became one of the first designated by the federal government as an "All-American Road" under the National Scenic Byways Program.[6][47][48][49] CNN Traveler named McWay Falls as the most beautiful place in California.[50]

Driving popularity edit

The drive along Highway 1 has been described as "one of the best drives on Earth", and is considered one of the top 10 motorcycle rides in the United States.[51] Highway 1 was named the most popular drive in California in 2014 by the American Automobile Association.[52] The region receives as many and sometimes more visitors than Yosemite National Park. Unlike the national park managed by a single entity, the Big Sur region is ruled over by multiple government and private land owners, offers only occasional bus service, limited parking, few restrooms, and a single, narrow two-lane highway that for most of its length clings to the steep coastal cliffs. North-bound traffic during the peak summer season and holiday weekends is often backed up for about 20 miles (32 km) from Big Sur Village to Carmel Highlands. Due to the large number of visitors during the summer, congestion and slow traffic between Carmel and Posts is becoming the norm.[8][7][5][9][6] However, during the winter, the road is frequently closed due to washouts and slides.

Protection edit

Despite its popularity, the region is heavily protected to preserve the rural and natural character of the land. The entire Big Sur coast is located within the protected coastal zone established by the 1976 California Coastal Act. This includes land use within a defined "coastal zone" extending inland from 3,000 ft (910 m) up to 5 mi (8.0 km). The California Coastal Commission has the authority to control the construction of any type, including buildings, housing, roads, as well as fire and erosion abatement structures, and can issue fines for unapproved construction. The Coastal Zone is specifically defined by law as an area that extends from the State's seaward boundary of jurisdiction, and inland for a distance from the Mean High Tide Line of between a couple of hundred feet in urban areas, to up to five miles in rural areas.[53] The Big Sur Local Coastal Plan, approved by the Monterey County Supervisors in 1981, states that the region is meant to be an experience that visitors transit through, not a destination. For that reason, development of all kinds is severely restricted.[54]

Attractions edit

 
Bixby Creek Bridge, shown here looking southwest, is a popular attraction in Big Sur.
 
Bixby Creek Bridge at night

Besides sightseeing from the highway, Big Sur offers hiking and outdoor activities. There are a large number of state and federal lands and parks, including McWay Falls at Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park, one of only two waterfalls in California that plunge directly into the ocean. The waterfall is located near the foundation of a grand stone cliffside house built in 1940 by Lathrop and Hélène Hooper Brown which was the region's first electrified home. However, parking is very limited and usually unavailable on summer weekends and holidays.[55]

Another notable landmark is Point Sur Lightstation, the only complete nineteenth century lighthouse complex open to the public in California.[56]

The Ventana Wildlife Center near Andrew Molera State Park features a free Discovery Center that enables visitors to learn about the California Condor recovery program and other wildlife.[57]

The Henry Miller Memorial Library is a nonprofit bookstore and arts center that opened in 1981 as a tribute to the writer. Miller lived in Big Sur from 1944 to February 1963 and wrote about Big Sur in his book Big Sur and the Oranges of Hieronymus Bosch. It is a gathering place for locals and has become the focal point of individuals with a literary mind,[58] a cultural center devoted to Miller's life and work, and a popular attraction for tourists.[59][60]

 
Santa Lucia Range from Nepenthe restaurant

Camping edit

There are both public and private campgrounds along the coast. Kirk Creek, Limekiln, and Plaskett Creek Campgrounds are located very near Highway 1. The public sites accommodate at least one vehicle while Plaskett Creek offers large group camping. The public campgrounds are privately managed and filled months ahead of time.[61] Dispersed camping along local roads or state highways is illegal and violators are regularly cited. Sleeping in cars is illegal and subject to a $1000 fine.[62]

Beaches edit

There are a few small, scenic beaches that are accessible to the public and popular for walking, but usually unsuitable for swimming, because of unpredictable currents, frigid temperatures, and dangerous surf.[63] The beach at Garrapata State Park is sometimes rated as the best beach in Big Sur. Depending on the season, visitors can view sea otters, sea lions, seals, and migrating whales from the beach. The beach is barely visible from Highway 1.[63]

Pfeiffer Beach is very popular but is only accessible via the narrow 2 miles (3.2 km) Sycamore Canyon Road. The parking lot at the beach only accommodates 60 vehicles and is usually full on summer and holiday weekends. During the summer, a shuttle operates from the US Forest Service headquarters to the beach. The wide sandy expanse offers views of a scenic arch rock offshore. It is sometimes confused with the beach at Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park to the south.[63]

In the south, Sand Dollar Beach is the longest stretch of beach in Big Sur. It is popular with hikers and photographers for its views of nearby bluffs. The beach is 25 miles (40 km) south of the Big Sur village on Highway 1. A steep staircase leads down to the beach from the highway.[63] Jade Cove, 2 miles (3.2 km) south of Sand Dollar Beach, is also sometimes popular with visitors.

Swiss Canyon Beach is a long, sandy beach that's visible when looking north from the mouth of the Big Sur River in Andrew Molera State Park. The eastern side of the beach is bounded by private land. The beach may be accessible from the southern end depending on the tide.[64]

Some beaches are surrounded by private land. At the mouth of the Little Sur river are some of the largest dunes on the Big Sur coast. The mouth of the Little Sur River, the dunes, and the mile-long Little Sur River beach are within the boundaries of the El Sur Ranch and are inaccessible to the public. The owner of the ranch maintains a secure fence and has prominently posted "Private Property" and "No Trespassing" signs on the fence along Highway 1 as suggested by legal precedent.[65] While the beach below the mean high tide line is open to the public, the law does not permit individuals to trespass on private property to reach the public beach. Individuals who trespass to reach the beach have been cited.[66][67]

Other beaches that are inaccessible to the public include Point Sur Beach, a long sandy beach located below and to the north of Point Sur Lighthouse.[68] There is a small beach at Rocky Point that is surrounded by private property, making it inaccessible. The beach at the foot of McWay falls is physically inaccessible from the shore. To the south near the county line, Wreck Beach south of Pfeiffer Beach is not accessible. Gamboa Point Beach near the Monterey / San Luis Obispo count line is closed to the public.[68][69]

Hiking edit

The Pine Ridge Trail (USFS 3E06) is the most popular hiking route into the Ventana Wilderness. Hikers can use it to access many campsites in the backcountry, including Ventana Camp, Terrace Creek, Barlow Flats, Sykes, and Redwood camps. When open, it is accessible from the Big Sur Station. The trail, connecting trails, and the campsites along its route were closed during the Soberanes Fire in July 2016. They were damaged by the fire itself and further damaged by the heavy rains during the following winter. As of August 2017, the trail was blocked by four major washouts and more than 100 fallen trees across the path. Reopening the trail will require an environmental assessment, and perhaps re-routing the trail entirely.

The Mt. Manuel Trail (USFS 2E06) begins within Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park. It follows a northeasterly route up the slopes of Mt. Manuel. Hikers following this route can access Vado, Launtz Creek, and Tin House campsites. It connects to the Little Sur trail that provides access to the Little Sur River watershed. The trail is not maintained.[70]

The North Coast Ridge Road (USFS 20S05) is accessible from the road to the Ventana Inn and indirectly from the south via Limekiln State Park. Parking is available in the north at Cadillac Flat near the Ventana Inn. From Ventana Inn, the trail climbs steeply to the crest of the coastal ridge and south about 30 miles (48 km) to near Cone Peak. There are wide views in all directions for almost the entire hike. It connects to several trails over its length, including Terrace Creek Trail (closed as of January 2018), Boronda Trail, DeAngulo Trail, Big Sur Trail, Marble Peak Trail, Bee Camp Trail, Lost Valley Connector Trail, Rodeo Flat Trail, and the Arroyo Seco Trail. It provides access to Timber Top and Cold Spring Camp. It passes near the summit of Anderson Peak (4,099 feet (1,249 m)) and Marble Peak (4,031 feet (1,229 m)), and through to the Nacimiento-Fergusson Road and through connects to the Cone Peak Road. It is not open to vehicular traffic or bicycles. As of January 2018, the trail is closed.[71][72]

Garrapata State Park, Andrew Molera State Park, Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park, and Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park all contain short hiking trails. As of January 2018, almost all trails on the east side of Highway 1 in these parks are closed due to the Soberanes Fire and damage sustained during heavy rains the following winter. Some trails west of Highway 1 are open.[73]

Places of contemplation edit

 
An evening aerial view of the Esalen Institute

Among the places that draw visitors is the formerly counterculture but now upscale Esalen Institute. Esalen hosted many figures of the nascent "New Age" and, in the 1960s, played an important role in popularizing Eastern philosophies, the "Human Potential Movement", and Gestalt therapy in the United States.[39] Esalen is named after the Native Americans who congregated there at the natural hot springs possibly for thousands of years. Far from the coast within the Los Padres National Forest, the Tassajara Zen Mountain Center, accessible via a steep, narrow, 12-mile (19 km) dirt road, is only open to guests during the summer months.

Big Sur is also the location of a Catholic monastery, the New Camaldoli Hermitage. The Hermitage in Big Sur was founded in 1957. It rents a few simple rooms for visitors who would like to engage in silent meditation and contemplation. Normally all retreats are silent and undirected.[74]

 
Historic menu cover from Nepenthe restaurant, a Big Sur icon since 1949[75]
 
McWay Falls and McWay Cove

Special events edit

The Big Sur International Marathon is an annual marathon that begins south of Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park and ends at the Crossroads Shopping Center in Carmel-by-the-Sea. The marathon was established in 1986 and attracts about 4,500 participants annually.[76]

Civic leaders in Big Sur stage a run each year in October to raise funds for the Big Sur Volunteer Fire Brigade and the Big Sur Health Center. Since the race, known as the Big Sur River Run, was founded in 1971, more than $1,025,104 has been donated to the two organizations. The run through the redwoods was canceled in 2016 due to the Soberanes Fire and in 2017 due to winter storms.[77][78]

The Big Sur Folk Festival was held from 1964 to 1971. It began unintentionally when Nancy Carlen, a friend of singer Joan Baez, organized a weekend seminar at the Esalen Institute in June 1964 titled "The New Folk Music". On Sunday afternoon, they invited all the neighbors for a free, open performance. This became the first festival.[79] The festival was held yearly on the grounds of the Esalen Institute, except for 1970, when it was held at the Monterey County Fairgrounds. Even when well-known acts like Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young or the Beach Boys performed, the event was purposefully kept small with no more than a few thousand in attendance.[80]

State and federal lands edit

State parks edit

 
Point Sur and light station from the north

The state parks in Big Sur grew out of the original residents' desire to protect and preserve the land they admired. "The early settlers considered land stewardship their obligation to the community."[81] The first was Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park. John Pfeiffer, son of pioneers Michael Pfeiffer and Barbara Laquet, was offered $210,000 for his land near Sycamore Canyon by a Los Angeles developer, who wanted to build a subdivision on the land. Instead, Pfeiffer sold 700 acres (2.8 km2) to the state of California in 1933.[82][83]

As of January 2018, portions of most of these parks are closed due to after effects of the Soberanes Fire.[84] From north to south, the following state parks are in use:[85]

State reserves edit

Federal land edit

As of January 2018, some trails and campsites within the following areas are closed, due to damage caused by the 2016 Soberanes Fire and the following winter's rains.[85]

Overuse issues edit

During most summer weekends and on all major holidays, Big Sur is overwhelmingly crowded.[86] Although some Big Sur residents catered to adventurous travelers in the early twentieth century,[19]: 10  the modern tourist economy began when Highway 1 opened the region to automobiles in 1937, but only took off after World War II-era gasoline rationing and a ban on pleasure driving ended in August 1945.[87] Big Sur has become a destination for travelers both within the United States and internationally.[88][89][90][91]

Increasing numbers of visitors edit

The number of visitors to Big Sur has risen from about 1.5 million in 1978,[87] to about 3 million in 1980,[92] to an estimated 4 to 5 million during 2014 and 2015, comparable to or greater than the number of visitors to Yosemite National Park.[93] Unlike Yosemite, which is managed by a single federal entity, about one-quarter of the land in Big Sur is privately owned and the remainder is managed by a conglomeration of federal, state, local, and private agencies. Yosemite offers 5,400 parking spots and a free, daily, park-wide bus service. In Big Sur during the summer, there is a single public bus that runs three times daily and a single shuttle van that operates on Thursday through Sunday from the Big Sur Station to Pfeiffer Beach.[94] The owner of the Nepenthe restaurant estimated in 2017 that the number of visitors had increased by 40% since 2011. Big Sur residents and business owners are concerned about the impact visitors are having on the region. Traffic and parking is consistently bad during summer and holidays weekends and some visitors don't obey the laws.[95][96]: 6 

Residents began discussing the potential necessity of shuttle buses, tollgates along Highway 1, and limits on the number of private autos allowed on the highway in 1978.[87] One of the reasons for Big Sur's popularity is that it is only a one-day drive for about 7 million people. With the advent of social media, hashtags like "#sykeshotsprings" and "#pineridgetrail", two popular destinations within Big Sur, encourage more visitors.[86][97] Visitors must pay $15 for a parking spot at a trailhead parking lot and take a 14-passenger van to Pfeiffer Beach.[98][99][100][101][96]: 6  In response to visitor abuses, an anonymous Big Sur resident began an Instagram account in May 2019 named BigSurHatesYou intended to shame visitors into treating the Big Sur region better.[102][103]

The television series Big Little Lies, which is filmed in the Monterey and Big Sur area, has increased the number of visitors to the area.[104]

Restricted public transportation edit

Public transportation is available to and from Monterey on Monterey–Salinas Transit. The summer schedule operates from Memorial Day to Labor Day three times a day, while the winter schedule only offers bus service on weekends. The route is subject to interruption due to wind and severe inclement weather.[105]

Limited vehicle services edit

There are only six gas stations along Highway 1 in Big Sur, from Ragged Point in the south to Carmel Highlands in the north. Three of them are in the north near Big Sur Valley. The gas station at the Big Sur River Inn and Restaurant offers a steep discount to local residents.[106] The filling station in Gorda has one of the highest prices in the United States, as it is far from the electrical grid and part of the cost of auto fuel is used to support the operation of a diesel generator. All of them only operate during regular business hours and none of them supply diesel fuel. There are three Tesla recharging stations near Posts.[107][108][109][110]

Lack of restrooms edit

It's a 'scenic highway' with piles of shit up and down the highway.

— Butch Kronlund, Coast Property Owners Association Executive Director

There are only 16 public restrooms along the entire coast to accommodate the almost 5 million annual visitors. The number of visitors far exceeds the available restrooms, and most restrooms are not available in locations where tourists frequently visit.[111][112] Businesses report that the large number of visitors using their bathroom has overwhelmed their septic systems.[111]

If visitors can locate them, they can use bathrooms within California State Parks or federal campgrounds without paying an entrance fee.[113] But many of the bathrooms are not visible from Highway 1. This is due in part to the fact that restroom signs along Highway 1 were removed for aesthetic reasons.[111]

As a result, visitors often resort to defecating in the bushes near locations like the Bixby Creek Bridge.[111][112] Residents complain that visitors regularly defecate along Highway 1. Toilet paper, human waste, and trash litter the roadsides.[111] Residents have taken it upon themselves to clean up after visitors. The California Department of Transportation, which cleans the roadside areas about once a week, finds human waste during every cleanup.[112] Butch Kronlund, executive director of the Coast Property Owners Association, criticized the lack of restrooms. He says, "It's a 'scenic highway' with piles of shit up and down the highway."[95][114]

The 1976 California Coastal Act makes installing public bathrooms, trash bins, or even new road signs along Highway 1 extremely difficult. Several federal, state, and local agencies have jurisdiction in Big Sur, all of which must weigh in on decisions affecting residents and visitors.[115]

Few visitors' services edit

 
Deetjen's Big Sur Inn is listed on the National Register of Historic Places[116]

The land use restrictions that preserve Big Sur's natural beauty also mean that visitor accommodations are limited, often expensive, and places to stay fill up quickly during the busy summer season.

There are no urban areas, just three small clusters of restaurants, gas stations, motels, and camp grounds: Posts in the Big Sur River valley, Lucia, near Limekiln State Park, and Gorda, on the southern coast. Scattered among these distant settlements are nine small grocery stores, a few gift shops, and no chain hotels, supermarkets, or fast-food outlets, and no plans to add facilities or shopping.[117][118][119] Among the places to stay and eat are the luxury Ventana Inn, Post Ranch, and the Nepenthe restaurant, built around the cabin Orson Welles and Rita Hayworth impulsively bought.

Limited accommodations edit

 
One of the accommodations at the Treebones campsite and resort in Big Sur

There are fewer than 300 hotel rooms on the entire 90-mile (140 km) stretch of Highway 1 between San Simeon and Carmel. Lodging include a few cabins, motels, and campgrounds, and higher-end resorts such as the Post Ranch Inn, charging as much as $1,800, and the Ventana Inn, with suites up to $2,400 per night.[120][121] There are some short-term rentals, but their legality is still being determined.[122]

Illegal camping edit

Some social media sites report the availability of free camping on the side of roads, but camping of any sort or parking overnight along highways and local roads is illegal and violators are regularly cited. Sleeping in cars is illegal and subject to a $1000 fine.[62] Casual campers have at times turned every wide spot along the Nacimiento-Fergusson Road into an illegal campsite, although there are no bathrooms or fire pits. Residents complain about illegal camp fires and people defecating along the road without using proper sanitation.[98] Camping is only permitted within designated private and state or federal park campsites or within USFS lands.[123][124]

On July 22, 2016, an illegal campfire within Garrapata State Park, where camping is not permitted, got out of control. The resulting Soberanes Fire burned 132,127 acres (53,470 ha), 57 homes and 11 outbuildings, and killed a bulldozer operator. It took almost three months to extinguish and cost about $236 million to suppress.[125] In October, 2017, a visitor from Florida was arrested for starting an illegal campfire that grew out of control.[126]

Solutions under consideration edit

The Community Association of Big Sur (formerly the Big Sur Property Owners Association) is proposing some solutions. They want to close the parking lot at Bixby Creek for a year to encourage visitors to take public transportation. They are considering asking community volunteers to keep tourists from walking onto the bridge, which is both dangerous and illegal. Tourists who want to get to Pfeiffer Beach over the current mile-long, one-lane road to a small 65-car parking lot would be required to reserve and pay for parking ahead of time or take a shuttle. Parking on the highway shoulder at popular McWay Falls to avoid a $10 parking lot fee would be prohibited. Another idea under consideration is a ban on dispersed camping in the national forest during fire season "until proper backcountry monitoring and enforcement exists." An illegal campfire in 2017 burned 57 homes and killed one firefighter. The Forest Service used to have several backcountry rangers but now has none.[115]

Culture edit

The arrival of Bay Area artists in Carmel-by-the-Sea beginning in 1904 was the beginning of a literary and artistic colony on the northern edge of Big Sur. Robinson Jeffers moved to Carmel in September 1914, and over his lifetime wrote many evocative poems about the isolation and natural beauty of Big Sur. Beginning in the 1920s, his poetry introduced the romantic idea of Big Sur's wild, untamed spaces to a national audience, which encouraged many of the later visitors.

 
The Henry Miller Memorial Library. Author Henry Miller lived in Big Sur from 1944 to 1962.

Henry Miller moved to Big Sur at the invitation of the Greco-French artist Jean Varda, uncle of filmmaker Agnès Varda. He lived in Big Sur for almost 20 years, from 1944 to 1962. When he first arrived, he was broke and novelist Lynda Sargent was renting a cabin from a local riding club. She allowed Miller to live rent-free for a while. But when the cabin was sold to Orson Welles and Rita Hayworth in 1945, Miller moved several miles south to a wood cabin on Partington Ridge that had been owned by his friend Emil White.[127]

While in Big Sur, Miller, avant-garde musician Harry Partch and Jean Varda were part of a local group of bohemians known as the Anderson Creek Gang, many of whom lived at the former highway work camp near the mouth of Anderson Creek. Miller lived in a shack there during 1946 before moving back to the cabin on Partington Ridge in 1947. In his 1957 essay/memoir/novel Big Sur and the Oranges of Hieronymus Bosch, Miller described the joys and hardships that came from escaping the "air-conditioned nightmare" of modern life.[128]

Bohemian reputation edit

Hunter S. Thompson worked as a security guard and caretaker at a resort in Big Sur Hot Springs for eight months in 1961, just before the Esalen Institute was founded at that location. While there, he published his first feature story in the nationally distributed men's magazine Rogue about Big Sur's artisan and bohemian culture.[129][130] In the article, he described how the Bohemian image attracted people who annoyed residents:

Every weekend Dick Hartford, owner of the local Village Store, is plagued by people looking for "sex orgies," "wild drinking brawls," or "the road to Henry Miller's house" as if once they found Miller everything else would be taken care of ...

Time was when this place was as lonely and isolated as any spot in America. But no longer; inevitably, Big Sur has been "discovered." Life called it a "Rugged, Romantic World Apart," and presented nine pages of pictures to prove it. After that, there was no hope ...

And on some weekends, it seems like all seven million of them are right here, bubbling over with questions: "Where's the art colony man? I've come all the way from Tennessee to join it." "Say, fella, where do I find this nudist colony?"... Or the one that drove Miller half-crazy: "Ah-ha! So you're Henry Miller! Well my name is Claude Fink and I've come to join the cult of sex and anarchy."[131]

Other writers and artists were also attracted by Big Sur, including Edward Weston, Richard Brautigan, Emile Norman and Jack Kerouac.[132] Big Sur acquired a bohemian reputation with these newcomers. Kerouac followed Miller to Big Sur and included the rugged coast in large parts of two of his novels. He spent a few days in early 1960 at fellow poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti's cabin in Bixby Canyon and based his novel Big Sur on his time there.

Notable people edit

Well-known individuals have called Big Sur home, including:

Highway 1 impact edit

Before the construction of California State Route 1, the California coast south of Carmel and north of San Simeon was one of the most remote regions in the state, rivaling at the time nearly any other region in the United States for its difficult access. At the turn of the 19th century, the 30 mi (48 km) trip from Monterey to the Pfeiffer Ranch in the Big Sur valley could take three days by wagon. It was a rough road that ended in present-day Big Sur Village and could be impassible in winter.[133] There was no road beyond the Pfeiffer Ranch, only a horseback trail connecting the homesteads to the south. The ride from Pfeiffer Ranch to San Carpóforo canyon was about 60 miles (97 km) in a direct line, but about three times that by horseback. J. Smeaton Chase, who traveled on horseback up the coast in 1911, reported that a stagecoach carried passengers from Posts (then named Arbolado) to the Everett Hotel in Monterey on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays.[134]

The highway was first proposed by Dr. John L. D. Roberts, a physician who was summoned on April 21, 1894, to treat survivors of the wreck of the 493 tons (447 t; 440 long tons) S.S. Los Angeles (originally USRC Wayanda), which had run aground near the Point Sur Light Station about 25 miles (40 km) south of Carmel-by-the-Sea. The ride on his two-wheeled, horse-drawn cart took him 3+12 hours, a very fast trip for the day. Construction began in 1921, ceased for two years in 1926 when funding ran out, and after 18 years of construction, the Carmel–San Simeon Highway was completed in 1937. The route was incorporated into the state highway system and re-designated as Highway 1 in 1939.

The highway is a dominant feature of the Big Sur coast, providing the primary means of access and transportation. The Big Sur portion of Highway 1 is generally considered to include the 71-mile (114 km) segment adjoining the unincorporated region of Big Sur between Malpaso Creek near Carmel Highlands[11] in the north and San Carpóforo Creek near San Simeon in the south.[12]

Along with the ocean views, this winding, narrow road, often cut into the face of seaside cliffs, dominates the visitor's experience of Big Sur.[135] The views, redwood forests, hiking, beaches, and other recreational opportunities have made Big Sur a destination for about 4.5 to 7 million people who live within a day's drive and for visitors from elsewhere in the world. [136]

The highway has been closed more than 55 times by landslides, and in May 2017, a 2,000,000-cubic-foot (57,000 m3) slide blocked the highway at Mud Creek, north of Salmon Creek near the San Luis Obispo County line, to just south of Gorda. The road was reopened on July 18, 2018, but is subject to closure during heavy storms.

Big Sur land use edit

The policies protecting land used in Big Sur are some of the most restrictive local-use standards in California,[15] and are widely regarded as one of the most restrictive development protections anywhere.[16] The program protects viewsheds from the highway and many vantage points and severely restricts the density of development. About 60% of the coastal region is owned by governmental or private agencies which do not allow any development. The majority of the interior region is part of the Los Padres National Forest, Ventana Wilderness, Silver Peak Wilderness, or Fort Hunter Liggett. The area is protected by the Big Sur Local Coastal Plan, which preserves it as "open space, a small residential community, and agricultural ranching."[14] Its intention is "preserving the environment and visual access to it, the policies of the local coastal plan are to minimize, or limit, all destination activities."[137]

The unincorporated region encompassing Big Sur does not have specific boundaries, but is generally considered to include the 71-mile (114 km) segment of California State Route 1 between Malpaso Creek near Carmel Highlands[11] in the north and San Carpóforo Creek near San Simeon in the south,[12] as well as the entire Santa Lucia range between these creeks.[10] The interior region is mostly uninhabited, while the coast remains relatively isolated and sparsely populated, with between 1,800 and 2,000 year-round residents[13] and relatively few visitor accommodations scattered among the four small settlements.

History edit

Native Americans edit

Three tribes of Native Americans — the Ohlone, Esselen, and Salinan — are the first known people to have inhabited the area. The Ohlone, also known as the Costanoans, is believed to have lived in the region from San Francisco to Point Sur. The Esselen lived in the area between Point Sur south to Big Creek and inland including the upper tributaries of the Carmel River and Arroyo Seco watersheds. The Salinan lived from Big Creek south to San Carpóforo Creek.[138]

Archaeological evidence shows that the Esselen lived in Big Sur as early as 3500 BC, leading a nomadic, hunter-gatherer existence.[139][46] The aboriginal people inhabited fixed village locations, and followed food sources seasonally, living near the coast in winter to harvest rich stocks of otter, mussels, abalone, and other sea life. In the summer and fall, they traveled inland to gather acorns and hunt deer.[140] Middens attributed to the Essleen have been found as far south as Slates Hot Springs.

The native people hollowed mortar holes into large exposed rocks or boulders which they used to grind the acorns into flour. These can be found throughout the region. Arrows were made of cane and pointed with hardwood foreshafts.[140] The tribes also used controlled burning techniques to increase tree growth and food production.[10]: 269–270  The population was limited as the Santa Lucia Mountains made the area relatively inaccessible and long-term habitation a challenge. The population of the Esselen who lived in the Big Sur area are estimated from a few hundred to a thousand or more.[141][142]

The Salinan people are believed to have lived south of Junipero Serra Peak, perhaps ranging from Slates Hot Springs on the coast to Soledad in the Salinas Valley and into northern San Luis Obispo County. When European settlers arrived on the southern Big Sur coast in the 1860s, they found some native people living on Mill Creek south of the present-day Nacimiento-Fergusson Road. Mabel Plaskett, whose family homesteaded along the coast in September, 1869, wrote about two families who lived along the creek. Gabriel Fontes lived in a cave high up on the north slope of Mill Creek. He had two daughters, Alberta and Antonia. Alberta became a governess for a wealthy family and traveled to Europe several times. As of 1959, Tony lived in Jackson, California with family.[143][144]

Another native family was Cayatan and Lucia Canieti. She was the daughter of Antonio Gomez. They had two daughters, Hattie and Regina. They attended the Mansfield School in Manchester with the settlers' children.[144] Mortar holes attributed to the tribe are found at Wagon Caves northwest of Jolon, California.[143][145] Pre-contact population estimates range from 3,000 to 700.

Spanish exploration and settlement edit

The first Europeans to see Big Sur were Spanish mariners led by Juan Cabrillo in 1542, who sailed up the coast without landing. When Cabrillo sailed by, he described the coastal range as "mountains which seem to reach the heavens, and the sea beats on them; sailing along close to land, it appears as though they would fall on the ships."[10]: 272 

Two centuries passed before the Spaniards attempted to colonize the area. On September 13, 1769, an expedition led by Gaspar de Portolá were the first Europeans to enter the Big Sur region when they arrived at San Carpóforo Canyon near Ragged Point.[10]: 272  While camping there, they were visited by six indigenous people who offered pinole and fish and received beads in exchange. They explored the coast ahead and concluded it was impassable. They were forced to turn inland up the steep arroyo. The march through the mountains was one of the most difficult portions of the expedition's journey. The Spanish were forced to "make a road with crowbar and pickaxe". Crespi wrote, "The mountains which enclose it are perilously steep, and all are inaccessible, not only for men but also for goats and deer." From a high peak near the San Antonio River, they could see nothing but mountains in every direction.[28]: 190  They reached Monterey on October 1. [12] [146][147] When they attempted to explore further south, the scouts found their way blocked by "the same cliff that had forced us back from the shore and obliged us to travel through the mountains."[28]: 205 

After the Spanish established the California missions in 1770, they baptized and forced the native population to labor at the missions. While living at the missions, the aboriginal population was exposed to diseases unknown to them, like smallpox and measles, for which they had no immunity, devastating the Native American population and their culture. Many of the remaining Native Americans assimilated with Spanish and Mexican ranchers in the nineteenth century.[10]: 264–267 

In 1909, forest supervisors reported that three Indian families still lived within what was then known as the Monterey National Forest. The Encinale family of 16 members and the Quintana family with three members lived in the vicinity of The Indians (now known as Santa Lucia Memorial Park west of Ft. Hunger Liggett). The Mora family consisting of three members was living to the south along the Nacimiento-Ferguson Road.[148]

Spanish ranchos edit

Along with the rest of Alta California, Big Sur became part of Mexico when it gained independence from Spain in 1821. But, due to its inaccessibility, only a few small portions of the Big Sur region were included in land grants given by Mexican governors José Figueroa and Juan Bautista Alvarado.[96]: 8 

Rancho Tularcitos

Rancho Tularcitos, 26,581-acre (10,757 ha) of land, was granted in 1834 by Governor José Figueroa to Rafael Goméz.[149] It was located in upper Carmel Valley along Tularcitos Creek.[150]

Rancho San Francisquito

Rancho San Francisquito was a 8,813-acre (35.66 km2) land grant given in 1835 by Governor José Castro to Catalina Manzanelli de Munrás. She was the wife of Esteban Munrás (1798–1850), a Monterey trader, amateur painter, and grantee of Rancho San Vicente.[151] The grant was located in the upper Carmel Valley, inland and east of Rancho San Jose y Sur Chiquito.[152]

Rancho Milpitas

Rancho Milpitas was a 43,281-acre (17,515 ha) land grant given in 1838 by governor Juan Alvarado to Ygnacio Pastor.[151] The grant encompassed present-day Jolon and land to the west.[153] When Pastor obtained title from the Public Land Commission in 1875, Faxon Atherton immediately purchased the land. By 1880, the James Brown Cattle Company owned and operated Rancho Milpitas and neighboring Rancho Los Ojitos. William Randolph Hearst's Piedmont Land and Cattle Company acquired the rancho in 1925.[154] In 1940, in anticipation of the increased forces required in World War II, the U.S. War Department purchased the land from Hearst to create a troop training facility known as the Hunter Liggett Military Reservation.[155]

Rancho El Sur

On July 30, 1834, Figueroa granted Rancho El Sur, two square leagues of land totalling 8,949-acres (3,622 ha), to Juan Bautista Alvarado.[156]: 21 [157] The grant extended from the Little Sur River to what is now known as Cooper Point.[158][159] Alvarado later traded Rancho El Sur for the more accessible Rancho Bolsa del Potrero y Moro Cojo in the northern Salinas Valley, owned by his uncle by marriage, Captain John B. R. Cooper.[160] About one-half of Rancho El Sur is still an operating cattle ranch.

Rancho San Jose y Sur Chiquito

In 1839, Alvarado granted Rancho San Jose y Sur Chiquito, also about two square leagues of land totalling 8,876-acre (3,592 ha), to Marcelino Escobar, a prominent official of Monterey.[161] The grant was bounded on the north by the Carmel River and on the south by Palo Colorado Canyon.[162]

In 1848, two days after the discovery of gold at Sutter's Mill, Mexico ceded California to the United States as a result of the Mexican–American War.

First survey edit

During the first survey of the coast conducted by the U.S. Coast Survey in 1886, the surveyor reported:

The country between the shoreline and the Coast Range of mountains, running parallel with the shoreline from San Carpojoro to Point Sur is probably the roughest piece of coastline on the whole Pacific coast of the United States from San Diego to Cape Flattery.

The highest peaks of the crest of the coast range are located at an average distance from the coast of three and a half miles [5.6 km]. In this distance they rise to elevations of from three thousand six hundred to five thousand feet [1,100 to 1,500 m] above the sea-level. From San Carpoforo Creek to Pfeiffer's Point, a distance of 54 miles (87 km), the shore-line is iron-bound coast with no possible chance of getting from the hills to the shore-line and back except at the mouths of the creeks and at such places as Coxe's Hole and Slate's Hot Springs, where there are short stretches of sandy and rocky beaches from fifty to one hundred yards [meters] in length. In many places the sea bluffs are perpendicular, and rise from one thousand to one thousand five hundred feet [300 to 460 m] above the sea. The country is cut up by deep cañons [canyons], walled in with high and precipitous bluffs. These cañons are densely wooded with redwood, oak, and yellow and silver pine timber.

The redwood trees are from three to six feet [0.91 to 1.83 m] in diameter and from one hundred to one hundred and fifty feet high [30 to 46 m]. The oaks and pines are of the same average dimensions. Beautiful streams of clear cold water, filled with an abundance of salmon or trout, are to be found in all the canyons. The spurs running from the summits of the range to the ocean bluffs are covered with a dense growth of brush and scattering clumps of oak and pine timber. The chaparral is very thick, and in many places grows to a height of ten or fifteen feet [3–5 m] ... The spurs, slopes, and canons are impenetrable ...[163][164]

Homesteaders edit

The first known European settler in Big Sur was John Davis who in 1853 built a cabin near the present-day site of the Mount Manuel Trail trailhead.[10]: 326  In 1868, Native Americans Manual and Florence Innocenti bought Davis' cabin and land for $50.

John Bautista Rogers Cooper, born John Rogers Cooper, was a Yankee from the British Channel Islands who arrived in Monterey in 1823.[165] He became a Mexican citizen, converted to Catholicism, and was given a Spanish name at his baptism. He married Native American Encarnacion Vallejo and acquired considerable land, including Rancho El Sur, on which he had a cabin built in April or May 1861.[166] The Cooper Cabin is the oldest surviving structure in Big Sur.[167]

 
Joseph W. Post House, a historic structure built in 1867–1877.

William B. Post arrived in California in 1848 and was the foreman of the Soberanes Ranch when he built a single-room cabin in 1867. His son added to it in 1877, when the family moved there full-time. The Post House is a historic landmark and is on the grounds of the Ventana Inn resort.

Michael Pfeiffer, his wife, and four children arrived in Big Sur in 1869 to settle on the south coast. After reaching Sycamore Canyon, they found it to their liking and decided to stay.[10]: 326  He filed a land patent on January 20, 1883, claiming two sections of land he already resided on near and immediately north of the mouth of Sycamore Canyon.[168] They had six more children later on.

Another important pioneer-era historic resource is the Swetnam / Trotter House, a late 19th-century dwelling located at the mouth of Palo Colorado Canyon.

 
The Cooper Cabin is the oldest structure on the Big Sur coast, built in 1861 for Captain J.B.R. Cooper

After the passage of the federal Homestead Act in 1862, a few hardy settlers were drawn by the promise of free 160-acre (65  ha) parcels. After the claimant filed for the land, they had gained full ownership after five years of residence or by paying $1.50 per acre within six months.[169] Each claim was for 160 acres, a quarter section of free government land.[148]

Other settlers included William F. Notley, who homesteaded at the mouth of Palo Colorado Canyon in 1891. He began harvesting tanoak bark from the canyon, a lucrative source of income at the time. Notley's Landing is named after him. Isaac Swetnam worked for Notley and built a house at the mouth of Palo Colorado Canyon, which as of 2018 is still a residence. Sam Trotter, who also worked for Notley, later bought Swetnam's house. He married Adelaide Pfeiffer, the daughter of Micheal Pfeiffer, and they raised a family there from 1906 to 1923.

William and Sarah (Barnes) Plaskett and their family settled in Pacific Valley in 1869. They built several homes and a saw mill.[170]: 38  Homesteader John Junge built a one-room redwood cabin in 1920.[171] The John Little State Natural Reserve straddling the mouth of Lime Creek preserves the original 1917 cabin of conservationist Elizabeth K. Livermore.[172]

Many other local sites retain names from settlers during this period: Bottcher, Cooper's Point, Gamboa, Anderson, Partington, Dani, Harlans, McQuades, Ross, and McWay are a few of the place names.[171] Wilber Harlan, a native of Indiana, homesteaded near Lucia in 1885. His family descendants are as of 2017 still operating the Lucia Lodge.[171][173]

Industrial era and gold rush edit

 
A major forest product of the Big Sur coast was the bark of Tanbark Oak
 
Bixby Landing in 1911 was used to transport products to and from ships offshore

The local industries provided more work and supported a larger population than it does today. Jobs included harvesting lumber and tanoak bark, gold mining, and limestone processing.

From the 1860s through the start of the twentieth century, lumbermen cut down most of the readily accessible coast redwoods. Redwood harvesting further inland was always limited by the rugged terrain and difficulty in transporting the lumber to market. Redwood was cut in large amounts for use onsite in limestone kilns. Two companies operated large-scale limestone extraction and processing. The Monterey Lime Company operated near Long Ridge, east of Bixby Creek, and the Rockland Lime and Lumber Company operated a kiln at what later became known Limekiln Creek in the south.[174]

William F. Notley was one of the first to harvest the bark of the Tanbark Oak from the Little Sur River canyon.[175] Tanbark was used to manufacture tannic acid, necessary to the growing leather tanning industry located in Santa Cruz, and to preserve fish nets.[176] The tanbark was harvested from the isolated trees inland, left to dry, corded, and brought out on mules or hauled out on "go-devils". The go-devil was a wagon with two wheels on the front, while the rear had rails for pulling. A point on the Palo Colorado road is still nicknamed "The Hoist" because of the very steep road which required wagon-loads of tanbark and lumber to be hoisted by block and tackle hitched to oxen.[177] The old block and tackle on a beam is still mounted between mailboxes.[178]

The 30 mi (48 km) trip from Monterey to the Pfeiffer Ranch usually took all day by wagon. If the road was in bad shape, the stage driver only took a lightweight spring wagon. The rough road ended at the Pfeiffer Resort on the Big Sur River. It could be impassible in winter. Notley constructed a dog-hole port at the mouth of the Palo Colorado River, and a small village grew up from 1898 to 1907 around at what is known today as Notley's Landing.[179][180] Bixby built a sawmill on his property, and to get the lumber and lime to market, built a similar doghole port at the mouth of what was then known as Mill's Creek, today as Bixby Creek.[174] The tanbark was loaded by cable and a chute onto waiting vessels anchored offshore. In 1889, as much as 50,000 cords of tanbark were hauled out from the Little Sur River and Big Sur River watersheds.[10]: 330  A cable hoist and chute were used to move goods to and from schooners anchored just offshore.[133]Near the start of the 20th century, the tan oak trees were becoming seriously depleted, which slowly led to the demise of the industries they had created.[175] Only the foundations of the doghole ports remain today.[95]

In the 1880s, gold was found in the Los Burros District at Alder Creek in the mountains east of present-day Gorda. The gold rush town of Manchester at 35°52′48″N 121°23′31″W / 35.880°N 121.392°W / 35.880; -121.392 existed for a few short years.[181][182][183] The town boasted a population of 200, four stores, a restaurant, five saloons, a dance hall, and a hotel, but it was abandoned soon after the start of the twentieth century and burned to the ground in 1909.[19][184] Miners extracted about $150,000 in gold (about $5.28 million in 2022) during the mine's existence.[170]: 30 

Residents also received supplies by steamship that would make a trip once a year in the fall from San Francisco to Big Sur to drop off supplies that could not be transported by wagon.[95] In 1894, ranch owners Post, Pfeiffer, and Castro hired the Pacific Coast Steamship Company's 180 feet (55 m) steamer Bonita to bring lumber and seed oats to the mouth of the Big Sur River and Big Creek, north of Lucia.[185] Lightering was used to transport freight to and from the beach. A large crowd gathered to receive supplies from and to load butter, honey, beans, wool, hides, and other products onto the ship.[186]

In the late 1800s, the Ventana Power Company operated a sawmill near present-day Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park. They began planning to build a dam on the Big Sur River just downstream of the confluence of Ventana Creek and the Big Sur River. They hoped to sell the electricity to the City of Monterey. They built a diversion channel along the Big Sur River, but the 1906 San Francisco earthquake bankrupted the company and they abandoned the project. The stonework from the diversion channel is still visible.[187] Few other signs of this brief industrial period are visible. The rugged, isolated terrain kept out all but the sturdiest and most self-sufficient settlers. Travelers who ventured south of the Post Ranch rode horseback along trails that connected the various homesteaders along the coast.[46]

The 1900 Monterey County voting register indicates 61 male voters in the Big Sur area. The majority (47) were either farmers or ranchers. Other trades included a gardener, apiarist, fruit grower, woodsman, laborer, lighthouse keeper, blacksmith, surveyor, miner, and teamster. Lumber-related occupations include bark peelers, woodchoppers, and wood overseers.[174]

Geography edit

Geology edit

The Santa Lucia Mountain Range, which dominates the Big Sur region, is 140 miles (230 km) long, extending from Carmel in the north to the Cuyama River in San Luis Obispo County. The range is never more than 11 miles (18 km) from the coast.[20]: 11 

The Santa Lucia Mountains are characterized by extremely steep slopes, all associated with watersheds flowing directly or indirectly into the Pacific Ocean. The range forms the steepest coastal slope in the contiguous United States.[20]: 12  The mountains are of recent tectonic origin, and its rugged, steep, and dissected deep stream canyons. The general trend of the range is northwest-southeast, paralleling the numerous faults that transect the area.[188]

The topography is complex, however, reflecting active uplift and deformation, a variety of lithological types, rapidly incising stream networks, and highly unstable slopes. Stream channels and hill slopes are very steep, with average hill slope gradients exceeding 60% in some interior watersheds. The coastal side of the range rises directly from the shoreline, with oceanfront ridges rising directly 4,000 to 5,000 feet (1,200 to 1,500 m) to the crest of the coastal range. Big Sur's Cone Peak, at an elevation of 5,155 feet (1,571 m), is only 3 miles (4.8 km) from the ocean and is the tallest coastal mountain in the contiguous United States.[189][10]

The basement rocks of the Santa Lucia Range contain Mesozoic Franciscan and Salinian Block rocks.[188] The Franciscan complex is composed of greywacke sandstone and greenstone, with serpentinite bodies and other Ultramafic rocks present. Small areas of marble and limestone lenses form resistant outcrops that are prominent landscape features, often white to light gray. The Salinian block is made up of highly fractured, and deeply weathered meta-sediments, especially biotite schist and gneiss, intruded by plutonic (granitic) rocks such as quartz diorite and granodiorite. Both formations have been disrupted and tectonically slivered by motion on the San Andreas and associated fault systems. The Palo Colorado and Church Creek faults are prominent features influencing the linear northwest-southeast alignment of primary drainages.[188]

Marine influence edit

Along with much of the central and northern California coast, Big Sur frequently has dense fog in summer. Fog and lack of precipitation during the summer both result from the North Pacific High's presence offshore during that season. The high-pressure cell inhibits rainfall and generates northwesterly airflow. These prevailing summer winds from the northwest drive the ocean surface water slightly offshore (through the Ekman effect) which generates an upwelling of colder subsurface water. Warm surface air blowing over cold upwelling ocean water close to the coast is cooled to create a surface-based inversion.[10]: 33–35  Summer fog is common below about 2,000 feet (610 m) elevation. During 2014 and 2015, researchers recorded summer seasonal totals of 125 centimetres (49 in) and 31 centimetres (12 in) of fog water drip under open shrub canopies. They concluded that precipitation from fog dripping into the soils under coastal shrub canopies can be as much as 50% of annual average rainfall rates.[190] The fog usually moves out to sea during the day and closes in at night, but sometimes heavy fog blankets the coast all day.[citation needed]

Wildfires edit

Historic fires edit

Fire plays a key role in the ecology of the upper slopes of the Big Sur region's mountains where chaparral dominates the landscape.[191] It is known that Native Americans burned chaparral to increase food production and promote grasslands for textiles, but little is known about the natural frequency of fire in the Santa Lucia Mountains.[10]: 269–270 [192] A study of fire scars on sugar pines on Junipero Serra Peak found that at least six fires had burned the region between 1790 and 1901.[193] During the Spanish and Mexican era the Native Americans set fires regularly in coastal and valley grasslands to control brush growth and reduce fire risk.[193] The European homesteaders followed that tradition and set controlled burns every winter when conditions were right.[194]

 
FEMA team assesses wildfire damage after the Basin Fire, 2008

Following the depopulation of the Native Americans from the region in the late 1800s, there have been several very large fires in the Big Sur area. In 1894, a fire burned for weeks through the upper watersheds of all of the major streams in the Big Sur region. Another large fire in 1898 burned without any effort by the few residents to put it out, except to save their buildings.[195] In 1903, a fire started by an untended campfire near Chews Ridge burned a path 6 miles (9.7 km) wide to the coast over three months. In 1906, a fire that began in Palo Colorado Canyon from the embers of a campfire burned 150,000 acres (61,000 ha) over 35 days and was finally extinguished by the first rainfall of the season.[196] The number of fires declined when the U.S. Forest Service began managing the land in 1907.[193]

Modern wildfires edit

In recent history, the area was struck by the Molera Fire in 1972, which resulted in flooding and mud flows in the Big Sur River valley that buried portions of several buildings the following winter.[197] The area was burned by Marble Cone Fire in 1977, the Rat Creek Gorda Complex Fire in 1985, the Kirk Complex Fire in 1999, the Basin Complex Fire in 2008, the Pfeiffer Fire in December 2013, and the Soberanes Fire in 2016.[198]

 
The 2016 Soberanes fire tops a ridge covered in fire retardant adjacent to the Pacific Ocean

The Basin Complex Fire forced an eight-day evacuation of Big Sur and the closure of Highway 1, beginning just before the July 4, 2008 holiday weekend.[199] The fire, which burned over 130,000 acres (53,000 ha), represented the largest of many lightning-caused wildfires that had broken out throughout California during the same period.[200] Although the fire caused no loss of life, it destroyed 27 homes, and the tourist-dependent economy lost about a third of its expected summer revenue.[201][202] The Pfeiffer Fire from December 17 to 20, 2013 burned 917 acres (371 ha)and destroyed 34 homes in an area near Pfeiffer Ridge Road and Sycamore Canyon Road.[203]

The July 2016 Soberanes Fire was caused by unknown individuals who started and lost control of an illegal campfire in the Garrapata Creek watershed. After it burned 57 homes in the Garrapata and Palo Colorado Canyon areas, firefighters were able to build lines around parts of the Big Sur community. A bulldozer operator was killed when his equipment overturned during night operations in Palo Colorado Canyon.

Coast residents east of Highway 1 were required to evacuate for short periods, and Highway 1 was shut down at intervals over several days to allow firefighters to conduct backfire operations. Visitors avoided the area and tourism revenue was impacted for several weeks.[204]

In April, 2022, Ivan Gomez was convicted of 16 felony counts including arson for purposefully starting a fire near Lime Creek on August 18, 2020. The Dolan Fire killed a dozen Critically Endangered California Condors when it burned through the 80 acres (32 ha) Big Sur Condor Sanctuary operated by the Ventana Wildlife Society of Monterey. The 125,000 acres (51,000 ha) fire was not fully contained until December 31, more than four months after it started.[205]

Effect on Redwoods edit

In the lower elevations and canyons, the California Redwood is often found. Its thick bark, along with foliage that starts high above the ground, protect the species from both fire and insect damage, contributing to the coast redwood's longevity.[206] Fire appears to benefit redwoods by removing competitive species. A 2010 study compared post-wildfire survival and regeneration of redwood and associated species. It concluded that fires of all severity increase the relative abundance of redwood and higher-severity fires provide the greatest benefit.[207]

Climate edit

 
Upper image from March and lower image from October, showing a typical fog bank nearly 1,000 feet (300 m) thick. Also illustrating the difference in vegetation between the winter rainy season and dry early fall.

Big Sur typically enjoys a mild Mediterranean climate, with a sunny, dry summer and fall, and cool, wet winter. Coastal temperatures range from the 50s at night to the 70s by day (Fahrenheit) from June through October, and in the 40s to 60s from November through May. Further inland, away from the ocean's moderating influence, temperatures are much more variable. The weather varies widely due to the influence of the jagged topography, creating many microclimates.

 
Big Sur Coast in April 1969 after a wet winter

The record maximum temperature was 111 °F (43.9 °C) on September 7, 2020, and the record low was 26 °F (−3.3 °C), recorded on February 9, 2009.

During the winter, Big Sur experiences some of the heaviest rainfall in California.[208] More than 70 percent of the rain falls from December through March. The summer is generally dry. The Santa Lucia range rises to more than 5,800  ft (1760 m), and the amount of rainfall greatly increases as the elevation rises and cools the air, but rainfall amounts decrease sharply in the rain shadow of the coastal mountains. Scientists estimate that about 90 in. (230  cm) falls on average near the ridge tops. But actual totals vary considerably.[10] Snowfall is rare on the coast, but is common in the winter months on the higher ridges of the Santa Lucia Range.[209]

Monterey County maintains a remote rain gauge for flood prediction on Mining Ridge at 4,000 ft (1200 m) about 4 miles (6.4 km) north-east of Cone Peak. The gauge frequently receives more rain than any gauge in the Monterey and San Francisco Bay Areas. The wettest winter season was 1982–1983, when it rained more than 178 in. (452 cm) but the total is unknown because the rain gauge failed at that point. The wettest calendar year on record was 1982-83, when it rained 88.85 inches (2,257 mm).[10][210]

The month with the greatest rain fall total was December 1955 when it rained a record 27.21 inches (691 mm). At Pfeiffer–Big Sur State Park on the coast, rainfall averaged about 43 in. (109 cm) annually from 1914 to 1987. In 1975–1976, it rained only 15 in. (39 cm) at the park, compared to 85 in. (216 cm) in 1982–1983.[10]

Climate data for Big Sur, California (1991–2020 normals, extremes 1993–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 81
(27)
85
(29)
88
(31)
98
(37)
96
(36)
102
(39)
103
(39)
101
(38)
111
(44)
102
(39)
90
(32)
78
(26)
111
(44)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 73.1
(22.8)
74.1
(23.4)
78.2
(25.7)
83.9
(28.8)
85.9
(29.9)
90.0
(32.2)
90.5
(32.5)
92.1
(33.4)
93.3
(34.1)
90.1
(32.3)
79.6
(26.4)
69.8
(21.0)
98.4
(36.9)
Mean daily maximum °F (°C) 60.5
(15.8)
61.1
(16.2)
64.2
(17.9)
67.3
(19.6)
70.5
(21.4)
74.2
(23.4)
75.4
(24.1)
77.4
(25.2)
76.8
(24.9)
73.5
(23.1)
65.3
(18.5)
59.3
(15.2)
68.8
(20.4)
Daily mean °F (°C) 51.4
(10.8)
51.9
(11.1)
53.7
(12.1)
55.4
(13.0)
58.0
(14.4)
61.1
(16.2)
63.0
(17.2)
63.8
(17.7)
63.5
(17.5)
61.0
(16.1)
55.3
(12.9)
50.9
(10.5)
57.4
(14.1)
Mean daily minimum °F (°C) 42.4
(5.8)
42.8
(6.0)
43.3
(6.3)
43.5
(6.4)
45.5
(7.5)
48.0
(8.9)
50.5
(10.3)
50.1
(10.1)
50.1
(10.1)
48.5
(9.2)
45.4
(7.4)
42.5
(5.8)
46.1
(7.8)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 33.8
(1.0)
34.0
(1.1)
34.8
(1.6)
35.3
(1.8)
39.0
(3.9)
41.1
(5.1)
43.7
(6.5)
43.9
(6.6)
42.5
(5.8)
39.8
(4.3)
36.7
(2.6)
33.8
(1.0)
30.1
(−1.1)
Record low °F (°C) 27
(−3)
26
(−3)
27
(−3)
28
(−2)
35
(2)
37
(3)
41
(5)
40
(4)
39
(4)
31
(−1)
28
(−2)
27
(−3)
26
(−3)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 9.48
(241)
8.59
(218)
6.72
(171)
2.94
(75)
1.15
(29)
0.20
(5.1)
0.06
(1.5)
0.05
(1.3)
0.13
(3.3)
1.88
(48)
4.16
(106)
9.18
(233)
44.54
(1,131)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 10.7 11.2 10.2 6.3 3.7 0.8 0.3 0.4 0.7 3.0 6.9 10.6 64.8
Source: NOAA[211][212]

Flora and fauna edit

 
Big Sur coast looking south near Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park

The many climates of Big Sur result in great biodiversity, including many rare and endangered species such as the wild orchid Piperia yadonii, which is found only on the Monterey Peninsula and on Rocky Ridge in the Los Padres forest. Arid, dusty chaparral-covered hills exist within easy walking distance of lush riparian woodland. Fort Hunter-Liggett is host to about one-fourth of all Tule elk found in California and provides roosting places for bald eagles and endangered condors. It also is home to some of the healthiest stands of the live valley and blue oaks.[213]

Southern limit of redwood trees edit

The high coastal mountains trap moisture from the clouds: fog in summer, rain, and snow in winter creating a favorable environment for the coast redwood (Sequoia sempervirens) trees found in the Big Sur region. They are found near the ocean in canyon bottoms or inland canyons alongside creeks and in other areas that meet its requirements for cooler temperatures and moisture. Due to drier conditions, trees in the Big Sur region only grow about 200 feet (61 m) tall, smaller than specimens found to the north.[214]

The redwood trees in Big Sur are the remnant of much larger groves. Many old-growth trees were cut by the Ventana Power Company which operated a sawmill near present-day Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park from the late 1800s through 1906 when its operations were bankrupted by the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. When John and Florence Pfeiffer opened Pffeifer's Ranch Resort in 1910, they built guest cabins from lumber cut using the mill. The mill was resurrected when Highway 1 was constructed during the 1920s. It supplied lumber for housing built for workers.[215][216]

While many trees were harvested, several inaccessible locations were never logged. A large grove of trees is found along the north fork of the Little Sur River. William Randolph Hearst was interested in preserving the uncut redwood forest, and on November 18, 1921, he purchased about 1,445 acres (585 ha) from the Eberhard and Kron Tanning Company of Santa Cruz for about $50,000. He later donated the land to the Monterey Bay Area Council of the Boy Scouts of America, who completed the construction of Camp Pico Blanco in 1954.[217]

In 2008, scientist J. Michael Fay published a map of the old growth redwoods based on his transect of the entire redwood range.[218] The southernmost naturally occurring grove of redwoods is found within the Big Sur region in the Southern Redwood Botanical Area, a 17 acres (6.9 ha) reserve located in the Little Redwood Gulch watershed adjacent to the Silver Peak Wilderness. It is just north of the Salmon Creek trailhead.[214][219] The southernmost tree is about 15 feet (4.6 m) from Highway 1 at the approximate coordinates 35°49′42″N 121°23′14″W / 35.82833°N 121.38722°W / 35.82833; -121.38722

Plant species edit

The rare Santa Lucia fir (Abies bracteata) is found only in the Santa Lucia mountains. A common "foreign" species is the Monterey pine (Pinus radiata), which was uncommon in Big Sur until the late nineteenth century, though its major native habitat is only a few miles upwind on the Monterey Peninsula when many homeowners began to plant the quick-growing tree as a windbreak. There are many broadleaved trees as well, such as the tanoak (Lithocarpus densiflorus), coast live oak (Quercus agrifolia), and California bay laurel (Umbellularia californica). In the rain shadow, the forests disappear and the vegetation becomes open oak woodland, then transitions into the more familiar fire-tolerant California chaparral scrub.

Wildlife edit

 
A harbor seal on a Big Sur beach

The Big Sur River watershed provides habitat for mountain lion, deer, fox, coyotes, and non-native wild boars. The boars, of Russian stock, were introduced in the 1920s by George Gordon Moore, the owner of Rancho San Carlos.[220] Because most of the upper reaches of the Big Sur River watershed are within the Los Padres National Forest and the Ventana Wilderness, much of the river is in pristine condition.

Former Grizzly bear range

The region was historically populated by California grizzly bears. During the Spanish period of California history, the Spaniards rarely entered the area, except to capture runaway Mission Indians or to hunt grizzly bears that ate their livestock. The Mexican settlers captured bears for Monterey's bear and bull fights and they also sold their skins for 6 to 10 pesos to trading ships that visited Monterey. Bear Trap Canyon near Bixby Creek was one of their favorite sites for trapping grizzly bears.[221][222]

The California grizzly bear (Ursus arctos californicus) was heavier and larger than grizzly bears found elsewhere in the continental United States. Malcolm Margolin in The Ohlone Way wrote that "These enormous bears were everywhere, feeding on berries, lumbering along the beaches, congregating beneath oak trees during acorn season, and stationed along nearly every stream and creek during the annual runs of salmon and steelhead." Grizzly bears presented a serious threat to human beings armed with only a bow and arrows and the Native Americans used to avoid them whenever possible.[223]

The Monterey Herald noted on July 4, 1874:

Last Monday, Captain A. Smith, who resides about ten miles from town, in the Carmel Valley, succeeded in poisoning a large grizzly bear. Bruin had been annoying the neighborhood by destroying cattle, etc., for several years past, and all efforts to exterminate him seem futile. In some manner, however, he was induced to partake of that “cold pizen” the captain had prepared for his special benefit. He is not likely to repeat his experiment.[223]

There are remnants of a grizzly bear trap within Palo Corona Regional Park east of Point Lobos in a grove of redwood trees next to a creek.[224]

European settlers paid bounties on the bears who regularly preyed on livestock until the early 20th century.[19]: 4  Absolom (Rocky) Beasley hunted grizzly bears throughout the Santa Lucia Range and claimed to have killed 139 bears in his lifetime.[225] The Pfeiffer family would fill a bait ball of swine entrails with strychnine and hang it from a tree. They wrote that the last grizzly bear was seen in Monterey County in 1941 on the Cooper Ranch near the mouth of the Little Sur River.[226] : 21  Other sources report that last California grizzly was seen in 1924.[224][227]

Since about 1980, American black bears have been sighted in the area, likely expanding their range from southern California and filling in the ecological niche left when the grizzly bear was exterminated.[10]: 261 

Steelhead

The California Department of Fish and Game says the Little Sur River is the "most important spawning stream for Steelhead" distinct population segment on the Central Coast, where the fish is listed as threatened.[228] and that it "is one of the best steelhead streams in the county."[229]: 166  The Big Sur River is also a key habitat for the steelhead.[230][231]

A US fisheries service report estimates that the number of trout in the entire south-central coast area—including the Pajaro River, Salinas River, Carmel River, Big Sur River, and Little Sur River—have dwindled from about 4,750 fish in 1965 to about 800 in 2005.[232]

Numerous fauna are found in the Big Sur region. Among amphibians the California giant salamander (Dicamptodon ensatus) is found here, which point marks the southern extent of its range.[233]

California condor

The California condor (Gymnogyps californianus) is a critically endangered species that was near extinction when the remaining wild birds were captured. A captive breeding program was begun in 1987. The Ventana Wildlife Society acquired 80 acres near Anderson Canyon that it used for a captive breeding program.[234] After some success, a few birds were released in 1991 and 1992 in Big Sur, and again in 1996 in Arizona near the Grand Canyon.[235]

In 1997, the Ventana Wildlife Society began releasing captive-bred California Condors in Big Sur. The birds take six years to mature before they can produce offspring, and a nest was discovered in a redwood tree in 2006.[236][237] This was the first time in more than 100 years in which a pair of California condors had been seen nesting in Northern California.[238] The repopulation effort has been successful in part because a significant portion of the birds' diet includes carcasses of large sea creatures that have washed ashore, which are unlikely to be contaminated with lead, the principal cause of the bird's mortality.[239]

As of July 2014, the Ventana Wildlife Society managed 34 free-flying condors.[240] There were part of a total population of 437 condors spread over California, Baja California and Arizona, of which 232 are wild birds and 205 are in captivity.[241]

Marine protected areas edit

 
Coast view of the Big Creek State Marine Reserve

The off-shore region of the Big Sur Coast is protected by the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Within that sanctuary are other conservation areas and parks. The onshore topography that drops abruptly into the Pacific continues offshore where a narrow continental shelf drops to the continental slope in only a few miles. The ocean reaches a depth of more than 12,000 feet (3,700 m) just 50 mi (80 km) offshore. Two deep submarine canyons cut into the shelf near the Big Sur coast: the Sur Submarine Canyon, reaching a depth of 3,000 ft (910 m) just 8 mi (13 km) south of Point Sur, and Partington Submarine Canyon, which reaches a similar depth of 6.8 mi (10.9 km) offshore of Grimes Canyon.[10]

Like underwater parks, these marine protected areas help conserve ocean wildlife and marine ecosystems.

Demographics edit

 
Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park after fire

Big Sur is sparsely populated. There are about 1,800 to 2,000 year-round residents, only a few hundred more residents than found there in 1900.[30] Big Sur residents include descendants of the original ranching families, artists, writers, service staff, along with homeowners. The mountainous terrain, restrictions imposed by the Big Sur Coastal Use Plan,[242] limited availability of property than can be developed, and the expense required to build on available land has kept Big Sur relatively undeveloped. According to the Big Sur Chamber of Commerce, about half the businesses derive their income from the hospitality industry, and they in turn produce about 90 percent of the local economy.[243]

Population data edit

The United States does not define a census-designated place called Big Sur, but it does define a census tract (115) that includes almost all of the Big Sur coast, beginning in the north at Malpaso Creek and ending south of Lucia. It doesn't include New Camoldi Hermitage, Gorda, and Ragged Point where a few dozen people live, and it doesn't include the isolated private inholdings within the Los Padres National Forest. It includes much of the interior coast as far west as the Tassajara Zen Center.

In 1977, there were 1,813 residents and 846 dwelling units.[244] In 2018, the Census Bureau estimated there were 1,728 residents, (1,125 white, 525 Latino or Hispanic), 892 housing units, 639 households, 253 vacant or rental housing units; the median value of owner-occupied housing units was $877,100. Per capita income was $34,845; median income $63,843; mean income $81,766.[245]

The racial makeup of this area was 87.6% White, 1.1% African American, 1.3% Native American, 2.4% Asian, 0.0% Pacific Islander, 5.5% from other races, and 3.0% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race was 9.6% of the population. In the 93920 ZCTA, the population age was widely distributed, with 20.2% under the age of 20, 4.5% from 20 to 24, 26.9% from 25 to 44, 37.0% from 45 to 64, and 11.2% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 43.2 years. The median income in 2000 for a household in 93920 ZCTA was $41,304, and the median income for a family was $65,083.[246]

Fire protection edit

Two local volunteer fire departments provide emergency services in the region. CalFire's nearest station is located in Carmel 33 miles (53 km) north of Big Sur Village. The United States Forest Service's Nacimiento Ranger Station is located on Nacimiento-Fergusson Road 7 miles (11 km) from the coast highway.[247][86] It was destroyed by the arson-set Dolan Fire on September 8, 2020 and is to be rebuilt.[248]

During winter storms following the 2020 Dolan Fire, entire sections of the Nacimiento-Fergusson Road were washed away, and it has remained closed since then. In January 2022, U.S. Representative Jimmy Panetta announced that he had obtained $126 million in Federal Highway Administration funds to repair the road and rebuild the USFS Nacimiento Ranger Station destroyed in the blaze. This includes replacing the fire station, barracks, engine garage and pumphouse, along with some site utilities, such as a water well, solar connections and access roads.[249]

Due to the remoteness of the region, it may take first responders more than one hour to respond to an emergency event. Following initial response and depending on the location, the nearest hospital is up to an hour away. In critical cases, patients can be flown out by air ambulance depending on their injuries and weather conditions.[86]

The volunteer Mid Coast Fire Brigade located on Palo Colorado Road was organized in June, 1979. Residents raised $300,000 to build a firehouse.[250] Members receive training in CPR, defibrillation, rope rescue, vehicle extrication, water rescue as well as structural, vehicle and wildland firefighting skills.[251] As of 2004, there were about 300 households in the Palo Colorado Canyon area.

The volunteer Big Sur Fire Brigade was founded by Gary Koeppel on August 1, 1974. He persuaded Walter Trotter, a member of a pioneer Big Sur family, to become the first fire chief. Trotter was enormously well-known and influential, and he very quickly appointed a number of volunteers. The brigade provides emergency response from mile marker 58.3 north of the Little Sur River bridge on Highway 1 to the San Luis Obispo County Line. The department has two stations. Station 1 is located south of Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park at the Post Ranch. Station 2 is located near Gorda.[252]

Education edit

Two schools are available to students in Big Sur. To the north, the Captain Cooper School serves 52 students from grades K-5 who live in the vicinity of Palo Colorado Canyon, Big Sur Village, Posts, and Slates Hot Springs. The land for the school was donated in 1962 by Frances Molera. She stipulated that it be named after her pioneer grandfather, Juan B. R. Cooper, who bought Rancho El Sur in 1840. The school was built by community members without assistance from the Carmel Unified School District, who assumed management of the school once it was complete.[253] Older students take a bus to Carmel schools.[254][255]

To the south, the Pacific Valley School was founded by the Plaskett family in 1880. It serves 22 students in grades K–12 in the areas near Plaskett, Lucia, and Gorda.[256] Closed repeatedly due to low or no enrollment, it reopened in the 1950s. Pacific Valley School is one of two schools in the Big Sur Unified School District. It has a 3:1 student/teacher ratio. They engage in collaborative learning between age groups.[257][258]

Government edit

At the county level, Big Sur is represented on the Monterey County Board of Supervisors by Mary Adams.[259] In the California State Assembly, Big Sur is in the 17th Senate District, represented by Democrat John Laird, and in the 30th Assembly District, represented by Democrat Dawn Addis.[260] In the United States House of Representatives, Big Sur is in California's 19th congressional district, represented by Democrat Jimmy Panetta.[261]

In popular culture edit

In literature edit

In 1962, famous Beat author Jack Kerouac released the novel Big Sur, which prominently features the location throughout the narrative. It became one of Kerouc’s most prolific works.[262]

In 1995, prominent environmentalist David Brower published Not Man Apart: Photographs of the Big Sur Coast, featuring Jeffers' poetry and photography of the Big Sur coast. In the posthumously published 2002 book Stones of the Sur, Carmel landscape photographer Morley Baer combined his classical black-and-white photographs of Big Sur with some of Jeffers' poetry.[263][264]

In film edit

The area's increasing popularity and reputation for beauty have attracted the attention of movie and television personalities and producers. Orson Welles and his wife at the time, Rita Hayworth, bought a Big Sur cabin on impulse during a trip down the coast in 1944. The couple never spent a single night there, and the property is now the location of a restaurant.

A number of well-known films are set in Big Sur, including The Sandpiper (1965), starring Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Eva Marie Saint and Charles Bronson. The 1974 film Zandy's Bride, starring Gene Hackman and Liv Ullmann, was also based in the region.[265] In 2013, Jack Kerouac's novel Big Sur was adapted into a film of the same name, starring Kate Bosworth and directed by the actress' husband, Michael Polish. As of 2017, 19 movies had been filmed in the Big Sur region, beginning with Suspicion in 1941.[266]

In music edit

"California Saga: California" (1973), a single on The Beach Boys' album Holland, depicts the rugged wilderness in the area and the culture of its inhabitants.[267]

"Going Back to Big Sur" was written by Johnny Rivers, who sang it on his 1968 album "Realization."[268] The closing stanzas: "Guess I'll drive up Highway One / Did the ocean kiss the setting sun? / The stars dancing in the sky / Sort of puts you on a natural high Going back to Big Sur / This time, I might just stay /I'm going back and straighten out my head /Just south of Monterey / And that girl."

The song "Big Sur Moon" from Buckethead's album Colma is named after the area.[269]

The song "Bixby Canyon Bridge" from Death Cab for Cutie's album Narrow Stairs explores the narrator's visit to Big Sur, waiting for an epiphany that never comes.[270]

The Dharma at Big Sur, by John Adams, for electric violin and orchestra, was composed in 2003 for the opening of Disney Hall in Los Angeles.[271]

Alanis Morissette released the song Big Sur as her "ode to Big Sur with all its majesty" as exclusive bonus track on the Target edition of her 2012 Havoc and Bright Lights album.[272] The song was released as single in 2014.

In computing edit

Apple's desktop operating system, macOS Big Sur, announced on June 22, 2020, during WWDC, is named after this region.[273]

See also edit

References edit

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other, uses, disambiguation, ɜːr, rugged, mountainous, section, central, coast, state, california, between, carmel, highlands, simeon, where, santa, lucia, mountains, rise, abruptly, from, pacific, ocean, frequently, praised, dramatic, scenery, been, called, l. For other uses see Big Sur disambiguation Big Sur ˈ s ɜːr is a rugged and mountainous section of the Central Coast of the U S state of California between Carmel Highlands and San Simeon where the Santa Lucia Mountains rise abruptly from the Pacific Ocean It is frequently praised for its dramatic scenery Big Sur has been called the longest and most scenic stretch of undeveloped coastline in the contiguous United States 1 a sublime national treasure that demands extraordinary procedures to protect it from development 2 and one of the most beautiful coastlines anywhere in the world an isolated stretch of road mythic in reputation 3 The views redwood forests hiking beaches and other recreational opportunities have made Big Sur a popular destination for visitors from across the world With 4 5 to 7 million visitors annually 4 it is among the top tourist destinations in the United States comparable to Yosemite National Park but with considerably fewer services and less parking roads and related infrastructure 5 6 7 8 9 Big Sur CaliforniaRegionCoastlineBig Sur CaliforniaLocation in CaliforniaCoordinates 36 17 57 N 121 52 24 W 36 299216 N 121 873402 W 36 299216 121 873402CountryUnited StatesStateCaliforniaCountiesMonterey San Luis ObispoBig Sur Village is a collection of small roadside businesses and homes 10 2 The larger region known as Big Sur does not have specific boundaries but is generally considered to include the 71 mile 114 km segment of California State Route 1 between Malpaso Creek near Carmel Highlands 11 in the north and San Carpoforo Creek near San Simeon in the south 12 as well as the entire Santa Lucia range between these creeks 10 The interior region is mostly uninhabited while the coast remains relatively isolated and sparsely populated with between 1 800 and 2 000 year round residents 13 and relatively few visitor accommodations scattered among four small settlements The region remained one of the most inaccessible areas of California and the entire United States until after 18 years of construction the Carmel San Simeon Highway now signed as part of State Route 1 was completed in 1937 Along with the ocean views this winding narrow road often cut into the face of towering seaside cliffs dominates the visitor s experience of Big Sur The highway has been closed more than 55 times by landslides and in May 2017 a 2 000 000 cubic foot 57 000 m3 slide blocked the highway at Mud Creek north of Salmon Creek near the San Luis Obispo County line to just south of Gorda The road was reopened on July 18 2018 The region is protected by the Big Sur Local Coastal Plan which preserves it as open space a small residential community and agricultural ranching 14 Approved in 1986 the plan is one of the most restrictive local use programs in the state 15 and is widely regarded as one of the most restrictive documents of its kind anywhere 16 The program protects viewsheds from the highway and many vantage points and severely restricts the density of development About 60 of the coastal region is owned by governmental or private agencies which do not allow any development The majority of the interior region is part of the Los Padres National Forest Ventana Wilderness Silver Peak Wilderness or Fort Hunter Liggett Contents 1 Location 1 1 Historical boundaries 1 2 Northern and southern boundaries 1 3 Settlements 1 4 Inland extent 2 Etymology 3 Popularity 3 1 Scenic designations 3 2 Driving popularity 3 3 Protection 4 Attractions 4 1 Camping 4 2 Beaches 4 3 Hiking 4 4 Places of contemplation 4 5 Special events 5 State and federal lands 5 1 State parks 5 2 State reserves 5 3 Federal land 6 Overuse issues 6 1 Increasing numbers of visitors 6 2 Restricted public transportation 6 3 Limited vehicle services 6 4 Lack of restrooms 6 5 Few visitors services 6 6 Limited accommodations 6 7 Illegal camping 6 8 Solutions under consideration 7 Culture 7 1 Bohemian reputation 8 Notable people 9 Highway 1 impact 10 Big Sur land use 11 History 11 1 Native Americans 11 2 Spanish exploration and settlement 11 3 Spanish ranchos 11 4 First survey 11 5 Homesteaders 11 6 Industrial era and gold rush 12 Geography 12 1 Geology 12 2 Marine influence 13 Wildfires 13 1 Historic fires 13 2 Modern wildfires 13 3 Effect on Redwoods 14 Climate 15 Flora and fauna 15 1 Southern limit of redwood trees 15 2 Plant species 15 3 Wildlife 15 4 Marine protected areas 16 Demographics 16 1 Population data 17 Fire protection 18 Education 19 Government 20 In popular culture 20 1 In literature 20 2 In film 20 3 In music 20 4 In computing 21 See also 22 References 23 Further reading 24 External linksLocation edit nbsp Approximate boundaries of the Big Sur regionBig Sur is not an incorporated town but a region without formal boundaries in California s Central Coast region 17 The region is often confused with the small community of buildings and services 26 miles 42 km south of Carmel in the Big Sur River valley sometimes referred to by locals as Big Sur Village but officially known as Big Sur 17 18 19 8 20 7 21 Some visitors think Big Sur only refers to Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park whose environmental setting is extremely different from the overall rocky coastal environment 22 Historical boundaries edit The various informal boundaries applied to the region have gradually expanded north and south over time Esther Pfeiffer Ewoldson who was born in 1904 and was a granddaughter of Big Sur pioneers Michael and Barbara Pfeiffer wrote that the region extended from the Little Sur River 23 miles 37 km south to Slates Hot Springs Members of the Harlan Family who homesteaded the Lucia region 9 miles 14 km south of Slates Hot Springs said that Big Sur was miles and miles to the north of us 19 6 Prior to the construction of Highway 1 residents on the south coast had little contact with residents to the north of them 19 Northern and southern boundaries edit Most current descriptions of the area refer to Malpaso Creek 4 5 miles 7 2 km south of the Carmel River as the northern border 11 failed verification The southern border is generally accepted to be San Carpoforo Creek in San Luis Obispo County 12 Settlements edit nbsp View of Gorda one of the small clusters of services in Big SurThe Big Sur region is largely rural and the 1 800 to 2 000 residents are widely distributed There are a concentration of homes in the north at Palo Colorado Canyon Big Sur Village and Posts Other residential areas include Otter Cove Garrapata Ridge Garrapata Canyon Bixby Canyon Pfeiffer Ridge Sycamore Canyon Coastlands and Partington Ridge In the south residents are in the vicinity of Slates Hot Springs Plaskett Lucia and Gorda Homes are also located near Burns Creek Buck Creek to Lime Creek Plaskett Ridge and Redwood Gulch 23 Inland extent edit The vast majority of visitors only see Big Sur s dramatic coastline and consider the Big Sur region to include only the coastal flanks of the Santa Lucia Mountains which at various points extend from 3 to 12 miles 5 to 19 km inland 24 Some residents place the eastern border at the boundaries of the vast inland areas comprising the Los Padres National Forest Ventana Wilderness and Silver Peak Wilderness or the unpopulated regions all the way to the eastern foothills of the Santa Lucia Mountains 10 Author and local historian Jeff Norman considered Big Sur to extend inland to include the watersheds that drain into the Pacific Ocean 20 7 Author Lillian Ross wrote about life in Big Sur in several books She and her husband Harry Dick Ross lived in southern Big Sur near Lime Creek beginning in 1939 Harry a wood sculptor worked at Hearst s estate in San Simeon as a tile setter She famously described Big Sur as not a place at all but a state of mind 25 26 27 Etymology edit nbsp Big Sur rocky coast fog and giant kelpThe name Big Sur has its origins in the area s early Spanish history While the Portola expedition was exploring Alta California they arrived at San Carpoforo Canyon near present day San Simeon on September 13 1769 Unable to penetrate the difficult terrain along the coast they detoured inland through the San Antonio and Salinas Valleys before arriving at Monterey Bay where they founded Monterey and named it the provincial capital 28 The Spanish referred to the vast and relatively unexplored coastal region to the south of Monterey as el pais grande del sur meaning the big country of the south This was often shortened to el sur grande the big south 29 30 The two major rivers draining this portion of the coast were named El Rio Grande del Sur and El Rio Chiquito del Sur 20 7 The first recorded use of the name el Sud meaning the South was on a map of the Rancho El Sur land grant given by Governor Jose Figueroa to Juan Bautista Alvarado on July 30 1834 31 The first American use of the name Sur was by the United States Coast Survey in 1851 which renamed a point of land that looked like an island and was shaped like a trumpet known to the Spanish as Morro de la Trompa and Punta Que Parece Isla to Point Sur 21 Big Sur s first post office was named Posts after William Brainard Post in whose home it was located He had obtained a patent to land at the top of the grade south of the Big Sur River where he built a home in 1867 32 Confusion ensued when mail intended for the Presidio was sent to Big Sur and mail for the local residents was sent to the military post The residents changed the name of the post office to Arbolado woodland but that was confused by the post office for Alvarado a street in Monterey The post office operated at Posts from 1889 to 1910 it was moved in 1905 several miles northwest to Big Sur Village 33 The English speaking homesteaders petitioned the United States Post Office in Washington D C to change the name of their post office from Arbolado to Big Sur and the rubber stamp using that name was returned on March 6 1915 cementing the use of Big Sur as the place name 19 8 20 7 34 21 Popularity edit nbsp The Big Sur coast looking north toward Bixby Creek BridgeBig Sur is renowned worldwide for its natural features and relatively pristine scenery It is rated among the top 35 tourist destinations in the world 5 The Big Sur coast has been called the longest and most scenic stretch of undeveloped coastline in the contiguous United States 1 The region has been described as a national treasure that demands extraordinary procedures to protect it from development 2 Robert Lindsey wrote in The New York Times that it is one of the most stunning meetings of land and sea in the world 35 The Washington Times stated that it is one of the most beautiful coastlines anywhere in the world an isolated stretch of road mythic in reputation 3 Conde Nast Traveler named State Route 1 through Big Sur one of the top 10 world famous streets comparable to Broadway in New York City and the Champs Elysees in Paris 36 Realtor Mark Peterson commented Big Sur s popularity has erupted with the growth of social media It has become a year round destination 37 Writers have compared Big Sur to other natural wonders like the Grand Canyon 38 Novelist Herbert Gold described it as one of the grand American retreats for those who nourish themselves with wilderness 39 Big Sur is the California that men dreamed of years ago this is the Pacific that Balboa looked at from the Peak of Darien this is the face of the earth as the Creator intended it to look Henry Miller 12 Scenic designations edit The section of Highway 1 running through Big Sur is widely considered one of the most scenic driving routes in the United States if not the world 40 41 42 The views are one reason that Big Sur was ranked second among all United States destinations in TripAdvisor s 2008 Travelers Choice Destination Awards 43 The unblemished natural scenery owes much of its preservation to the highly restrictive development plans enforced in Big Sur no billboards or advertisements are permitted along the highway and signage for businesses must be modestly scaled and of a rural nature conforming to the Big Sur region The state of California designated the 72 mile 116 km section of the highway from Cambria to Carmel Highlands as the first California Scenic Highway in 1965 44 45 In 1966 First Lady Lady Bird Johnson led the official scenic road designation ceremony at Bixby Creek Bridge 46 In 1996 the road became one of the first designated by the federal government as an All American Road under the National Scenic Byways Program 6 47 48 49 CNN Traveler named McWay Falls as the most beautiful place in California 50 Driving popularity edit The drive along Highway 1 has been described as one of the best drives on Earth and is considered one of the top 10 motorcycle rides in the United States 51 Highway 1 was named the most popular drive in California in 2014 by the American Automobile Association 52 The region receives as many and sometimes more visitors than Yosemite National Park Unlike the national park managed by a single entity the Big Sur region is ruled over by multiple government and private land owners offers only occasional bus service limited parking few restrooms and a single narrow two lane highway that for most of its length clings to the steep coastal cliffs North bound traffic during the peak summer season and holiday weekends is often backed up for about 20 miles 32 km from Big Sur Village to Carmel Highlands Due to the large number of visitors during the summer congestion and slow traffic between Carmel and Posts is becoming the norm 8 7 5 9 6 However during the winter the road is frequently closed due to washouts and slides Protection edit Despite its popularity the region is heavily protected to preserve the rural and natural character of the land The entire Big Sur coast is located within the protected coastal zone established by the 1976 California Coastal Act This includes land use within a defined coastal zone extending inland from 3 000 ft 910 m up to 5 mi 8 0 km The California Coastal Commission has the authority to control the construction of any type including buildings housing roads as well as fire and erosion abatement structures and can issue fines for unapproved construction The Coastal Zone is specifically defined by law as an area that extends from the State s seaward boundary of jurisdiction and inland for a distance from the Mean High Tide Line of between a couple of hundred feet in urban areas to up to five miles in rural areas 53 The Big Sur Local Coastal Plan approved by the Monterey County Supervisors in 1981 states that the region is meant to be an experience that visitors transit through not a destination For that reason development of all kinds is severely restricted 54 Attractions edit nbsp Bixby Creek Bridge shown here looking southwest is a popular attraction in Big Sur nbsp Bixby Creek Bridge at nightBesides sightseeing from the highway Big Sur offers hiking and outdoor activities There are a large number of state and federal lands and parks including McWay Falls at Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park one of only two waterfalls in California that plunge directly into the ocean The waterfall is located near the foundation of a grand stone cliffside house built in 1940 by Lathrop and Helene Hooper Brown which was the region s first electrified home However parking is very limited and usually unavailable on summer weekends and holidays 55 Another notable landmark is Point Sur Lightstation the only complete nineteenth century lighthouse complex open to the public in California 56 The Ventana Wildlife Center near Andrew Molera State Park features a free Discovery Center that enables visitors to learn about the California Condor recovery program and other wildlife 57 The Henry Miller Memorial Library is a nonprofit bookstore and arts center that opened in 1981 as a tribute to the writer Miller lived in Big Sur from 1944 to February 1963 and wrote about Big Sur in his book Big Sur and the Oranges of Hieronymus Bosch It is a gathering place for locals and has become the focal point of individuals with a literary mind 58 a cultural center devoted to Miller s life and work and a popular attraction for tourists 59 60 nbsp Santa Lucia Range from Nepenthe restaurantCamping edit There are both public and private campgrounds along the coast Kirk Creek Limekiln and Plaskett Creek Campgrounds are located very near Highway 1 The public sites accommodate at least one vehicle while Plaskett Creek offers large group camping The public campgrounds are privately managed and filled months ahead of time 61 Dispersed camping along local roads or state highways is illegal and violators are regularly cited Sleeping in cars is illegal and subject to a 1000 fine 62 Beaches edit There are a few small scenic beaches that are accessible to the public and popular for walking but usually unsuitable for swimming because of unpredictable currents frigid temperatures and dangerous surf 63 The beach at Garrapata State Park is sometimes rated as the best beach in Big Sur Depending on the season visitors can view sea otters sea lions seals and migrating whales from the beach The beach is barely visible from Highway 1 63 Pfeiffer Beach is very popular but is only accessible via the narrow 2 miles 3 2 km Sycamore Canyon Road The parking lot at the beach only accommodates 60 vehicles and is usually full on summer and holiday weekends During the summer a shuttle operates from the US Forest Service headquarters to the beach The wide sandy expanse offers views of a scenic arch rock offshore It is sometimes confused with the beach at Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park to the south 63 In the south Sand Dollar Beach is the longest stretch of beach in Big Sur It is popular with hikers and photographers for its views of nearby bluffs The beach is 25 miles 40 km south of the Big Sur village on Highway 1 A steep staircase leads down to the beach from the highway 63 Jade Cove 2 miles 3 2 km south of Sand Dollar Beach is also sometimes popular with visitors Swiss Canyon Beach is a long sandy beach that s visible when looking north from the mouth of the Big Sur River in Andrew Molera State Park The eastern side of the beach is bounded by private land The beach may be accessible from the southern end depending on the tide 64 Some beaches are surrounded by private land At the mouth of the Little Sur river are some of the largest dunes on the Big Sur coast The mouth of the Little Sur River the dunes and the mile long Little Sur River beach are within the boundaries of the El Sur Ranch and are inaccessible to the public The owner of the ranch maintains a secure fence and has prominently posted Private Property and No Trespassing signs on the fence along Highway 1 as suggested by legal precedent 65 While the beach below the mean high tide line is open to the public the law does not permit individuals to trespass on private property to reach the public beach Individuals who trespass to reach the beach have been cited 66 67 Other beaches that are inaccessible to the public include Point Sur Beach a long sandy beach located below and to the north of Point Sur Lighthouse 68 There is a small beach at Rocky Point that is surrounded by private property making it inaccessible The beach at the foot of McWay falls is physically inaccessible from the shore To the south near the county line Wreck Beach south of Pfeiffer Beach is not accessible Gamboa Point Beach near the Monterey San Luis Obispo count line is closed to the public 68 69 Hiking edit The Pine Ridge Trail USFS 3E06 is the most popular hiking route into the Ventana Wilderness Hikers can use it to access many campsites in the backcountry including Ventana Camp Terrace Creek Barlow Flats Sykes and Redwood camps When open it is accessible from the Big Sur Station The trail connecting trails and the campsites along its route were closed during the Soberanes Fire in July 2016 They were damaged by the fire itself and further damaged by the heavy rains during the following winter As of August 2017 update the trail was blocked by four major washouts and more than 100 fallen trees across the path Reopening the trail will require an environmental assessment and perhaps re routing the trail entirely The Mt Manuel Trail USFS 2E06 begins within Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park It follows a northeasterly route up the slopes of Mt Manuel Hikers following this route can access Vado Launtz Creek and Tin House campsites It connects to the Little Sur trail that provides access to the Little Sur River watershed The trail is not maintained 70 The North Coast Ridge Road USFS 20S05 is accessible from the road to the Ventana Inn and indirectly from the south via Limekiln State Park Parking is available in the north at Cadillac Flat near the Ventana Inn From Ventana Inn the trail climbs steeply to the crest of the coastal ridge and south about 30 miles 48 km to near Cone Peak There are wide views in all directions for almost the entire hike It connects to several trails over its length including Terrace Creek Trail closed as of January 2018 update Boronda Trail DeAngulo Trail Big Sur Trail Marble Peak Trail Bee Camp Trail Lost Valley Connector Trail Rodeo Flat Trail and the Arroyo Seco Trail It provides access to Timber Top and Cold Spring Camp It passes near the summit of Anderson Peak 4 099 feet 1 249 m and Marble Peak 4 031 feet 1 229 m and through to the Nacimiento Fergusson Road and through connects to the Cone Peak Road It is not open to vehicular traffic or bicycles As of January 2018 update the trail is closed 71 72 Garrapata State Park Andrew Molera State Park Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park and Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park all contain short hiking trails As of January 2018 update almost all trails on the east side of Highway 1 in these parks are closed due to the Soberanes Fire and damage sustained during heavy rains the following winter Some trails west of Highway 1 are open 73 Places of contemplation edit nbsp An evening aerial view of the Esalen InstituteAmong the places that draw visitors is the formerly counterculture but now upscale Esalen Institute Esalen hosted many figures of the nascent New Age and in the 1960s played an important role in popularizing Eastern philosophies the Human Potential Movement and Gestalt therapy in the United States 39 Esalen is named after the Native Americans who congregated there at the natural hot springs possibly for thousands of years Far from the coast within the Los Padres National Forest the Tassajara Zen Mountain Center accessible via a steep narrow 12 mile 19 km dirt road is only open to guests during the summer months Big Sur is also the location of a Catholic monastery the New Camaldoli Hermitage The Hermitage in Big Sur was founded in 1957 It rents a few simple rooms for visitors who would like to engage in silent meditation and contemplation Normally all retreats are silent and undirected 74 nbsp Historic menu cover from Nepenthe restaurant a Big Sur icon since 1949 75 nbsp McWay Falls and McWay CoveSpecial events edit The Big Sur International Marathon is an annual marathon that begins south of Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park and ends at the Crossroads Shopping Center in Carmel by the Sea The marathon was established in 1986 and attracts about 4 500 participants annually 76 Civic leaders in Big Sur stage a run each year in October to raise funds for the Big Sur Volunteer Fire Brigade and the Big Sur Health Center Since the race known as the Big Sur River Run was founded in 1971 more than 1 025 104 has been donated to the two organizations The run through the redwoods was canceled in 2016 due to the Soberanes Fire and in 2017 due to winter storms 77 78 The Big Sur Folk Festival was held from 1964 to 1971 It began unintentionally when Nancy Carlen a friend of singer Joan Baez organized a weekend seminar at the Esalen Institute in June 1964 titled The New Folk Music On Sunday afternoon they invited all the neighbors for a free open performance This became the first festival 79 The festival was held yearly on the grounds of the Esalen Institute except for 1970 when it was held at the Monterey County Fairgrounds Even when well known acts like Crosby Stills Nash amp Young or the Beach Boys performed the event was purposefully kept small with no more than a few thousand in attendance 80 State and federal lands editState parks edit nbsp Point Sur and light station from the northThe state parks in Big Sur grew out of the original residents desire to protect and preserve the land they admired The early settlers considered land stewardship their obligation to the community 81 The first was Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park John Pfeiffer son of pioneers Michael Pfeiffer and Barbara Laquet was offered 210 000 for his land near Sycamore Canyon by a Los Angeles developer who wanted to build a subdivision on the land Instead Pfeiffer sold 700 acres 2 8 km2 to the state of California in 1933 82 83 As of January 2018 update portions of most of these parks are closed due to after effects of the Soberanes Fire 84 From north to south the following state parks are in use 85 Garrapata State Park Point Sur State Historic Park Andrew Molera State Park Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park Limekiln State ParkState reserves edit John Little State Natural Reserve Big Creek State Marine Reserve and Marine Conservation AreaFederal land edit As of January 2018 update some trails and campsites within the following areas are closed due to damage caused by the 2016 Soberanes Fire and the following winter s rains 85 Pfeiffer Beach Los Padres National Forest Ventana Wilderness Silver Peak WildernessOveruse issues editDuring most summer weekends and on all major holidays Big Sur is overwhelmingly crowded 86 Although some Big Sur residents catered to adventurous travelers in the early twentieth century 19 10 the modern tourist economy began when Highway 1 opened the region to automobiles in 1937 but only took off after World War II era gasoline rationing and a ban on pleasure driving ended in August 1945 87 Big Sur has become a destination for travelers both within the United States and internationally 88 89 90 91 Increasing numbers of visitors edit The number of visitors to Big Sur has risen from about 1 5 million in 1978 87 to about 3 million in 1980 92 to an estimated 4 to 5 million during 2014 and 2015 comparable to or greater than the number of visitors to Yosemite National Park 93 Unlike Yosemite which is managed by a single federal entity about one quarter of the land in Big Sur is privately owned and the remainder is managed by a conglomeration of federal state local and private agencies Yosemite offers 5 400 parking spots and a free daily park wide bus service In Big Sur during the summer there is a single public bus that runs three times daily and a single shuttle van that operates on Thursday through Sunday from the Big Sur Station to Pfeiffer Beach 94 The owner of the Nepenthe restaurant estimated in 2017 that the number of visitors had increased by 40 since 2011 Big Sur residents and business owners are concerned about the impact visitors are having on the region Traffic and parking is consistently bad during summer and holidays weekends and some visitors don t obey the laws 95 96 6 Residents began discussing the potential necessity of shuttle buses tollgates along Highway 1 and limits on the number of private autos allowed on the highway in 1978 87 One of the reasons for Big Sur s popularity is that it is only a one day drive for about 7 million people With the advent of social media hashtags like sykeshotsprings and pineridgetrail two popular destinations within Big Sur encourage more visitors 86 97 Visitors must pay 15 for a parking spot at a trailhead parking lot and take a 14 passenger van to Pfeiffer Beach 98 99 100 101 96 6 In response to visitor abuses an anonymous Big Sur resident began an Instagram account in May 2019 named BigSurHatesYou intended to shame visitors into treating the Big Sur region better 102 103 The television series Big Little Lies which is filmed in the Monterey and Big Sur area has increased the number of visitors to the area 104 Restricted public transportation edit Public transportation is available to and from Monterey on Monterey Salinas Transit The summer schedule operates from Memorial Day to Labor Day three times a day while the winter schedule only offers bus service on weekends The route is subject to interruption due to wind and severe inclement weather 105 Limited vehicle services edit There are only six gas stations along Highway 1 in Big Sur from Ragged Point in the south to Carmel Highlands in the north Three of them are in the north near Big Sur Valley The gas station at the Big Sur River Inn and Restaurant offers a steep discount to local residents 106 The filling station in Gorda has one of the highest prices in the United States as it is far from the electrical grid and part of the cost of auto fuel is used to support the operation of a diesel generator All of them only operate during regular business hours and none of them supply diesel fuel There are three Tesla recharging stations near Posts 107 108 109 110 Lack of restrooms edit It s a scenic highway with piles of shit up and down the highway Butch Kronlund Coast Property Owners Association Executive Director There are only 16 public restrooms along the entire coast to accommodate the almost 5 million annual visitors The number of visitors far exceeds the available restrooms and most restrooms are not available in locations where tourists frequently visit 111 112 Businesses report that the large number of visitors using their bathroom has overwhelmed their septic systems 111 If visitors can locate them they can use bathrooms within California State Parks or federal campgrounds without paying an entrance fee 113 But many of the bathrooms are not visible from Highway 1 This is due in part to the fact that restroom signs along Highway 1 were removed for aesthetic reasons 111 As a result visitors often resort to defecating in the bushes near locations like the Bixby Creek Bridge 111 112 Residents complain that visitors regularly defecate along Highway 1 Toilet paper human waste and trash litter the roadsides 111 Residents have taken it upon themselves to clean up after visitors The California Department of Transportation which cleans the roadside areas about once a week finds human waste during every cleanup 112 Butch Kronlund executive director of the Coast Property Owners Association criticized the lack of restrooms He says It s a scenic highway with piles of shit up and down the highway 95 114 The 1976 California Coastal Act makes installing public bathrooms trash bins or even new road signs along Highway 1 extremely difficult Several federal state and local agencies have jurisdiction in Big Sur all of which must weigh in on decisions affecting residents and visitors 115 Few visitors services edit nbsp Deetjen s Big Sur Inn is listed on the National Register of Historic Places 116 The land use restrictions that preserve Big Sur s natural beauty also mean that visitor accommodations are limited often expensive and places to stay fill up quickly during the busy summer season There are no urban areas just three small clusters of restaurants gas stations motels and camp grounds Posts in the Big Sur River valley Lucia near Limekiln State Park and Gorda on the southern coast Scattered among these distant settlements are nine small grocery stores a few gift shops and no chain hotels supermarkets or fast food outlets and no plans to add facilities or shopping 117 118 119 Among the places to stay and eat are the luxury Ventana Inn Post Ranch and the Nepenthe restaurant built around the cabin Orson Welles and Rita Hayworth impulsively bought Limited accommodations edit nbsp One of the accommodations at the Treebones campsite and resort in Big SurThere are fewer than 300 hotel rooms on the entire 90 mile 140 km stretch of Highway 1 between San Simeon and Carmel Lodging include a few cabins motels and campgrounds and higher end resorts such as the Post Ranch Inn charging as much as 1 800 and the Ventana Inn with suites up to 2 400 per night 120 121 There are some short term rentals but their legality is still being determined 122 Illegal camping edit Some social media sites report the availability of free camping on the side of roads but camping of any sort or parking overnight along highways and local roads is illegal and violators are regularly cited Sleeping in cars is illegal and subject to a 1000 fine 62 Casual campers have at times turned every wide spot along the Nacimiento Fergusson Road into an illegal campsite although there are no bathrooms or fire pits Residents complain about illegal camp fires and people defecating along the road without using proper sanitation 98 Camping is only permitted within designated private and state or federal park campsites or within USFS lands 123 124 On July 22 2016 an illegal campfire within Garrapata State Park where camping is not permitted got out of control The resulting Soberanes Fire burned 132 127 acres 53 470 ha 57 homes and 11 outbuildings and killed a bulldozer operator It took almost three months to extinguish and cost about 236 million to suppress 125 In October 2017 a visitor from Florida was arrested for starting an illegal campfire that grew out of control 126 Solutions under consideration edit The Community Association of Big Sur formerly the Big Sur Property Owners Association is proposing some solutions They want to close the parking lot at Bixby Creek for a year to encourage visitors to take public transportation They are considering asking community volunteers to keep tourists from walking onto the bridge which is both dangerous and illegal Tourists who want to get to Pfeiffer Beach over the current mile long one lane road to a small 65 car parking lot would be required to reserve and pay for parking ahead of time or take a shuttle Parking on the highway shoulder at popular McWay Falls to avoid a 10 parking lot fee would be prohibited Another idea under consideration is a ban on dispersed camping in the national forest during fire season until proper backcountry monitoring and enforcement exists An illegal campfire in 2017 burned 57 homes and killed one firefighter The Forest Service used to have several backcountry rangers but now has none 115 Culture editThe arrival of Bay Area artists in Carmel by the Sea beginning in 1904 was the beginning of a literary and artistic colony on the northern edge of Big Sur Robinson Jeffers moved to Carmel in September 1914 and over his lifetime wrote many evocative poems about the isolation and natural beauty of Big Sur Beginning in the 1920s his poetry introduced the romantic idea of Big Sur s wild untamed spaces to a national audience which encouraged many of the later visitors nbsp The Henry Miller Memorial Library Author Henry Miller lived in Big Sur from 1944 to 1962 Henry Miller moved to Big Sur at the invitation of the Greco French artist Jean Varda uncle of filmmaker Agnes Varda He lived in Big Sur for almost 20 years from 1944 to 1962 When he first arrived he was broke and novelist Lynda Sargent was renting a cabin from a local riding club She allowed Miller to live rent free for a while But when the cabin was sold to Orson Welles and Rita Hayworth in 1945 Miller moved several miles south to a wood cabin on Partington Ridge that had been owned by his friend Emil White 127 While in Big Sur Miller avant garde musician Harry Partch and Jean Varda were part of a local group of bohemians known as the Anderson Creek Gang many of whom lived at the former highway work camp near the mouth of Anderson Creek Miller lived in a shack there during 1946 before moving back to the cabin on Partington Ridge in 1947 In his 1957 essay memoir novel Big Sur and the Oranges of Hieronymus Bosch Miller described the joys and hardships that came from escaping the air conditioned nightmare of modern life 128 Bohemian reputation edit Hunter S Thompson worked as a security guard and caretaker at a resort in Big Sur Hot Springs for eight months in 1961 just before the Esalen Institute was founded at that location While there he published his first feature story in the nationally distributed men s magazine Rogue about Big Sur s artisan and bohemian culture 129 130 In the article he described how the Bohemian image attracted people who annoyed residents Every weekend Dick Hartford owner of the local Village Store is plagued by people looking for sex orgies wild drinking brawls or the road to Henry Miller s house as if once they found Miller everything else would be taken care of Time was when this place was as lonely and isolated as any spot in America But no longer inevitably Big Sur has been discovered Life called it a Rugged Romantic World Apart and presented nine pages of pictures to prove it After that there was no hope And on some weekends it seems like all seven million of them are right here bubbling over with questions Where s the art colony man I ve come all the way from Tennessee to join it Say fella where do I find this nudist colony Or the one that drove Miller half crazy Ah ha So you re Henry Miller Well my name is Claude Fink and I ve come to join the cult of sex and anarchy 131 Other writers and artists were also attracted by Big Sur including Edward Weston Richard Brautigan Emile Norman and Jack Kerouac 132 Big Sur acquired a bohemian reputation with these newcomers Kerouac followed Miller to Big Sur and included the rugged coast in large parts of two of his novels He spent a few days in early 1960 at fellow poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti s cabin in Bixby Canyon and based his novel Big Sur on his time there Notable people editSee also Category People from Big Sur California Well known individuals have called Big Sur home including Jose Abrego merchant politician Ansel Adams photographer musician Juan Bautista Alvarado politician Morley Baer photographer Jose Castro politician statesman and military officer John B R Cooper merchant landowner Kaffe Fassett textile artist Lawrence Ferlinghetti author Allen Funt actor Al Jardine musician Philip Johnson architect Carolyn Mary Kleefeld author and artist Henry Miller author and artist Mickey Muennig architect John Nesbitt radio announcer TV producer Emile Norman artist Kim Novak actress Nathaniel A Owings architect David Packard business executive Linus Pauling Nobel Prize winner Trent Reznor musician Johnny Rivers musician Nicholas Roosevelt diplomat Ted Turner business executive Jean Varda author Cole Weston photographer Edward Weston photographer Vilmos Zsigmond cinematographer Elizabeth Smart authorHighway 1 impact editMain article Big Sur Coast Highway Before the construction of California State Route 1 the California coast south of Carmel and north of San Simeon was one of the most remote regions in the state rivaling at the time nearly any other region in the United States for its difficult access At the turn of the 19th century the 30 mi 48 km trip from Monterey to the Pfeiffer Ranch in the Big Sur valley could take three days by wagon It was a rough road that ended in present day Big Sur Village and could be impassible in winter 133 There was no road beyond the Pfeiffer Ranch only a horseback trail connecting the homesteads to the south The ride from Pfeiffer Ranch to San Carpoforo canyon was about 60 miles 97 km in a direct line but about three times that by horseback J Smeaton Chase who traveled on horseback up the coast in 1911 reported that a stagecoach carried passengers from Posts then named Arbolado to the Everett Hotel in Monterey on Mondays Wednesdays and Fridays 134 The highway was first proposed by Dr John L D Roberts a physician who was summoned on April 21 1894 to treat survivors of the wreck of the 493 tons 447 t 440 long tons S S Los Angeles originally USRC Wayanda which had run aground near the Point Sur Light Station about 25 miles 40 km south of Carmel by the Sea The ride on his two wheeled horse drawn cart took him 3 1 2 hours a very fast trip for the day Construction began in 1921 ceased for two years in 1926 when funding ran out and after 18 years of construction the Carmel San Simeon Highway was completed in 1937 The route was incorporated into the state highway system and re designated as Highway 1 in 1939 The highway is a dominant feature of the Big Sur coast providing the primary means of access and transportation The Big Sur portion of Highway 1 is generally considered to include the 71 mile 114 km segment adjoining the unincorporated region of Big Sur between Malpaso Creek near Carmel Highlands 11 in the north and San Carpoforo Creek near San Simeon in the south 12 Along with the ocean views this winding narrow road often cut into the face of seaside cliffs dominates the visitor s experience of Big Sur 135 The views redwood forests hiking beaches and other recreational opportunities have made Big Sur a destination for about 4 5 to 7 million people who live within a day s drive and for visitors from elsewhere in the world 136 The highway has been closed more than 55 times by landslides and in May 2017 a 2 000 000 cubic foot 57 000 m3 slide blocked the highway at Mud Creek north of Salmon Creek near the San Luis Obispo County line to just south of Gorda The road was reopened on July 18 2018 but is subject to closure during heavy storms Big Sur land use editMain article Big Sur land use The policies protecting land used in Big Sur are some of the most restrictive local use standards in California 15 and are widely regarded as one of the most restrictive development protections anywhere 16 The program protects viewsheds from the highway and many vantage points and severely restricts the density of development About 60 of the coastal region is owned by governmental or private agencies which do not allow any development The majority of the interior region is part of the Los Padres National Forest Ventana Wilderness Silver Peak Wilderness or Fort Hunter Liggett The area is protected by the Big Sur Local Coastal Plan which preserves it as open space a small residential community and agricultural ranching 14 Its intention is preserving the environment and visual access to it the policies of the local coastal plan are to minimize or limit all destination activities 137 The unincorporated region encompassing Big Sur does not have specific boundaries but is generally considered to include the 71 mile 114 km segment of California State Route 1 between Malpaso Creek near Carmel Highlands 11 in the north and San Carpoforo Creek near San Simeon in the south 12 as well as the entire Santa Lucia range between these creeks 10 The interior region is mostly uninhabited while the coast remains relatively isolated and sparsely populated with between 1 800 and 2 000 year round residents 13 and relatively few visitor accommodations scattered among the four small settlements History editNative Americans edit Three tribes of Native Americans the Ohlone Esselen and Salinan are the first known people to have inhabited the area The Ohlone also known as the Costanoans is believed to have lived in the region from San Francisco to Point Sur The Esselen lived in the area between Point Sur south to Big Creek and inland including the upper tributaries of the Carmel River and Arroyo Seco watersheds The Salinan lived from Big Creek south to San Carpoforo Creek 138 Archaeological evidence shows that the Esselen lived in Big Sur as early as 3500 BC leading a nomadic hunter gatherer existence 139 46 The aboriginal people inhabited fixed village locations and followed food sources seasonally living near the coast in winter to harvest rich stocks of otter mussels abalone and other sea life In the summer and fall they traveled inland to gather acorns and hunt deer 140 Middens attributed to the Essleen have been found as far south as Slates Hot Springs The native people hollowed mortar holes into large exposed rocks or boulders which they used to grind the acorns into flour These can be found throughout the region Arrows were made of cane and pointed with hardwood foreshafts 140 The tribes also used controlled burning techniques to increase tree growth and food production 10 269 270 The population was limited as the Santa Lucia Mountains made the area relatively inaccessible and long term habitation a challenge The population of the Esselen who lived in the Big Sur area are estimated from a few hundred to a thousand or more 141 142 The Salinan people are believed to have lived south of Junipero Serra Peak perhaps ranging from Slates Hot Springs on the coast to Soledad in the Salinas Valley and into northern San Luis Obispo County When European settlers arrived on the southern Big Sur coast in the 1860s they found some native people living on Mill Creek south of the present day Nacimiento Fergusson Road Mabel Plaskett whose family homesteaded along the coast in September 1869 wrote about two families who lived along the creek Gabriel Fontes lived in a cave high up on the north slope of Mill Creek He had two daughters Alberta and Antonia Alberta became a governess for a wealthy family and traveled to Europe several times As of 1959 update Tony lived in Jackson California with family 143 144 Another native family was Cayatan and Lucia Canieti She was the daughter of Antonio Gomez They had two daughters Hattie and Regina They attended the Mansfield School in Manchester with the settlers children 144 Mortar holes attributed to the tribe are found at Wagon Caves northwest of Jolon California 143 145 Pre contact population estimates range from 3 000 to 700 Spanish exploration and settlement edit The first Europeans to see Big Sur were Spanish mariners led by Juan Cabrillo in 1542 who sailed up the coast without landing When Cabrillo sailed by he described the coastal range as mountains which seem to reach the heavens and the sea beats on them sailing along close to land it appears as though they would fall on the ships 10 272 Two centuries passed before the Spaniards attempted to colonize the area On September 13 1769 an expedition led by Gaspar de Portola were the first Europeans to enter the Big Sur region when they arrived at San Carpoforo Canyon near Ragged Point 10 272 While camping there they were visited by six indigenous people who offered pinole and fish and received beads in exchange They explored the coast ahead and concluded it was impassable They were forced to turn inland up the steep arroyo The march through the mountains was one of the most difficult portions of the expedition s journey The Spanish were forced to make a road with crowbar and pickaxe Crespi wrote The mountains which enclose it are perilously steep and all are inaccessible not only for men but also for goats and deer From a high peak near the San Antonio River they could see nothing but mountains in every direction 28 190 They reached Monterey on October 1 12 146 147 When they attempted to explore further south the scouts found their way blocked by the same cliff that had forced us back from the shore and obliged us to travel through the mountains 28 205 After the Spanish established the California missions in 1770 they baptized and forced the native population to labor at the missions While living at the missions the aboriginal population was exposed to diseases unknown to them like smallpox and measles for which they had no immunity devastating the Native American population and their culture Many of the remaining Native Americans assimilated with Spanish and Mexican ranchers in the nineteenth century 10 264 267 In 1909 forest supervisors reported that three Indian families still lived within what was then known as the Monterey National Forest The Encinale family of 16 members and the Quintana family with three members lived in the vicinity of The Indians now known as Santa Lucia Memorial Park west of Ft Hunger Liggett The Mora family consisting of three members was living to the south along the Nacimiento Ferguson Road 148 Spanish ranchos edit Along with the rest of Alta California Big Sur became part of Mexico when it gained independence from Spain in 1821 But due to its inaccessibility only a few small portions of the Big Sur region were included in land grants given by Mexican governors Jose Figueroa and Juan Bautista Alvarado 96 8 Rancho TularcitosMain article Rancho Tularcitos Gomez Rancho Tularcitos 26 581 acre 10 757 ha of land was granted in 1834 by Governor Jose Figueroa to Rafael Gomez 149 It was located in upper Carmel Valley along Tularcitos Creek 150 Rancho San FrancisquitoMain article Rancho San Francisquito Munras Rancho San Francisquito was a 8 813 acre 35 66 km2 land grant given in 1835 by Governor Jose Castro to Catalina Manzanelli de Munras She was the wife of Esteban Munras 1798 1850 a Monterey trader amateur painter and grantee of Rancho San Vicente 151 The grant was located in the upper Carmel Valley inland and east of Rancho San Jose y Sur Chiquito 152 Rancho MilpitasMain article Rancho Milpitas Pastor Rancho Milpitas was a 43 281 acre 17 515 ha land grant given in 1838 by governor Juan Alvarado to Ygnacio Pastor 151 The grant encompassed present day Jolon and land to the west 153 When Pastor obtained title from the Public Land Commission in 1875 Faxon Atherton immediately purchased the land By 1880 the James Brown Cattle Company owned and operated Rancho Milpitas and neighboring Rancho Los Ojitos William Randolph Hearst s Piedmont Land and Cattle Company acquired the rancho in 1925 154 In 1940 in anticipation of the increased forces required in World War II the U S War Department purchased the land from Hearst to create a troop training facility known as the Hunter Liggett Military Reservation 155 Rancho El SurMain article Rancho El Sur On July 30 1834 Figueroa granted Rancho El Sur two square leagues of land totalling 8 949 acres 3 622 ha to Juan Bautista Alvarado 156 21 157 The grant extended from the Little Sur River to what is now known as Cooper Point 158 159 Alvarado later traded Rancho El Sur for the more accessible Rancho Bolsa del Potrero y Moro Cojo in the northern Salinas Valley owned by his uncle by marriage Captain John B R Cooper 160 About one half of Rancho El Sur is still an operating cattle ranch Rancho San Jose y Sur ChiquitoMain article Rancho San Jose y Sur Chiquito In 1839 Alvarado granted Rancho San Jose y Sur Chiquito also about two square leagues of land totalling 8 876 acre 3 592 ha to Marcelino Escobar a prominent official of Monterey 161 The grant was bounded on the north by the Carmel River and on the south by Palo Colorado Canyon 162 In 1848 two days after the discovery of gold at Sutter s Mill Mexico ceded California to the United States as a result of the Mexican American War First survey edit During the first survey of the coast conducted by the U S Coast Survey in 1886 the surveyor reported The country between the shoreline and the Coast Range of mountains running parallel with the shoreline from San Carpojoro to Point Sur is probably the roughest piece of coastline on the whole Pacific coast of the United States from San Diego to Cape Flattery The highest peaks of the crest of the coast range are located at an average distance from the coast of three and a half miles 5 6 km In this distance they rise to elevations of from three thousand six hundred to five thousand feet 1 100 to 1 500 m above the sea level From San Carpoforo Creek to Pfeiffer s Point a distance of 54 miles 87 km the shore line is iron bound coast with no possible chance of getting from the hills to the shore line and back except at the mouths of the creeks and at such places as Coxe s Hole and Slate s Hot Springs where there are short stretches of sandy and rocky beaches from fifty to one hundred yards meters in length In many places the sea bluffs are perpendicular and rise from one thousand to one thousand five hundred feet 300 to 460 m above the sea The country is cut up by deep canons canyons walled in with high and precipitous bluffs These canons are densely wooded with redwood oak and yellow and silver pine timber The redwood trees are from three to six feet 0 91 to 1 83 m in diameter and from one hundred to one hundred and fifty feet high 30 to 46 m The oaks and pines are of the same average dimensions Beautiful streams of clear cold water filled with an abundance of salmon or trout are to be found in all the canyons The spurs running from the summits of the range to the ocean bluffs are covered with a dense growth of brush and scattering clumps of oak and pine timber The chaparral is very thick and in many places grows to a height of ten or fifteen feet 3 5 m The spurs slopes and canons are impenetrable 163 164 Homesteaders edit The first known European settler in Big Sur was John Davis who in 1853 built a cabin near the present day site of the Mount Manuel Trail trailhead 10 326 In 1868 Native Americans Manual and Florence Innocenti bought Davis cabin and land for 50 John Bautista Rogers Cooper born John Rogers Cooper was a Yankee from the British Channel Islands who arrived in Monterey in 1823 165 He became a Mexican citizen converted to Catholicism and was given a Spanish name at his baptism He married Native American Encarnacion Vallejo and acquired considerable land including Rancho El Sur on which he had a cabin built in April or May 1861 166 The Cooper Cabin is the oldest surviving structure in Big Sur 167 nbsp Joseph W Post House a historic structure built in 1867 1877 William B Post arrived in California in 1848 and was the foreman of the Soberanes Ranch when he built a single room cabin in 1867 His son added to it in 1877 when the family moved there full time The Post House is a historic landmark and is on the grounds of the Ventana Inn resort Michael Pfeiffer his wife and four children arrived in Big Sur in 1869 to settle on the south coast After reaching Sycamore Canyon they found it to their liking and decided to stay 10 326 He filed a land patent on January 20 1883 claiming two sections of land he already resided on near and immediately north of the mouth of Sycamore Canyon 168 They had six more children later on Another important pioneer era historic resource is the Swetnam Trotter House a late 19th century dwelling located at the mouth of Palo Colorado Canyon nbsp The Cooper Cabin is the oldest structure on the Big Sur coast built in 1861 for Captain J B R CooperAfter the passage of the federal Homestead Act in 1862 a few hardy settlers were drawn by the promise of free 160 acre 65 ha parcels After the claimant filed for the land they had gained full ownership after five years of residence or by paying 1 50 per acre within six months 169 Each claim was for 160 acres a quarter section of free government land 148 Other settlers included William F Notley who homesteaded at the mouth of Palo Colorado Canyon in 1891 He began harvesting tanoak bark from the canyon a lucrative source of income at the time Notley s Landing is named after him Isaac Swetnam worked for Notley and built a house at the mouth of Palo Colorado Canyon which as of 2018 update is still a residence Sam Trotter who also worked for Notley later bought Swetnam s house He married Adelaide Pfeiffer the daughter of Micheal Pfeiffer and they raised a family there from 1906 to 1923 William and Sarah Barnes Plaskett and their family settled in Pacific Valley in 1869 They built several homes and a saw mill 170 38 Homesteader John Junge built a one room redwood cabin in 1920 171 The John Little State Natural Reserve straddling the mouth of Lime Creek preserves the original 1917 cabin of conservationist Elizabeth K Livermore 172 Many other local sites retain names from settlers during this period Bottcher Cooper s Point Gamboa Anderson Partington Dani Harlans McQuades Ross and McWay are a few of the place names 171 Wilber Harlan a native of Indiana homesteaded near Lucia in 1885 His family descendants are as of 2017 update still operating the Lucia Lodge 171 173 Industrial era and gold rush edit nbsp A major forest product of the Big Sur coast was the bark of Tanbark Oak nbsp Bixby Landing in 1911 was used to transport products to and from ships offshoreThe local industries provided more work and supported a larger population than it does today Jobs included harvesting lumber and tanoak bark gold mining and limestone processing From the 1860s through the start of the twentieth century lumbermen cut down most of the readily accessible coast redwoods Redwood harvesting further inland was always limited by the rugged terrain and difficulty in transporting the lumber to market Redwood was cut in large amounts for use onsite in limestone kilns Two companies operated large scale limestone extraction and processing The Monterey Lime Company operated near Long Ridge east of Bixby Creek and the Rockland Lime and Lumber Company operated a kiln at what later became known Limekiln Creek in the south 174 William F Notley was one of the first to harvest the bark of the Tanbark Oak from the Little Sur River canyon 175 Tanbark was used to manufacture tannic acid necessary to the growing leather tanning industry located in Santa Cruz and to preserve fish nets 176 The tanbark was harvested from the isolated trees inland left to dry corded and brought out on mules or hauled out on go devils The go devil was a wagon with two wheels on the front while the rear had rails for pulling A point on the Palo Colorado road is still nicknamed The Hoist because of the very steep road which required wagon loads of tanbark and lumber to be hoisted by block and tackle hitched to oxen 177 The old block and tackle on a beam is still mounted between mailboxes 178 The 30 mi 48 km trip from Monterey to the Pfeiffer Ranch usually took all day by wagon If the road was in bad shape the stage driver only took a lightweight spring wagon The rough road ended at the Pfeiffer Resort on the Big Sur River It could be impassible in winter Notley constructed a dog hole port at the mouth of the Palo Colorado River and a small village grew up from 1898 to 1907 around at what is known today as Notley s Landing 179 180 Bixby built a sawmill on his property and to get the lumber and lime to market built a similar doghole port at the mouth of what was then known as Mill s Creek today as Bixby Creek 174 The tanbark was loaded by cable and a chute onto waiting vessels anchored offshore In 1889 as much as 50 000 cords of tanbark were hauled out from the Little Sur River and Big Sur River watersheds 10 330 A cable hoist and chute were used to move goods to and from schooners anchored just offshore 133 Near the start of the 20th century the tan oak trees were becoming seriously depleted which slowly led to the demise of the industries they had created 175 Only the foundations of the doghole ports remain today 95 In the 1880s gold was found in the Los Burros District at Alder Creek in the mountains east of present day Gorda The gold rush town of Manchester at 35 52 48 N 121 23 31 W 35 880 N 121 392 W 35 880 121 392 existed for a few short years 181 182 183 The town boasted a population of 200 four stores a restaurant five saloons a dance hall and a hotel but it was abandoned soon after the start of the twentieth century and burned to the ground in 1909 19 184 Miners extracted about 150 000 in gold about 5 28 million in 2022 during the mine s existence 170 30 Residents also received supplies by steamship that would make a trip once a year in the fall from San Francisco to Big Sur to drop off supplies that could not be transported by wagon 95 In 1894 ranch owners Post Pfeiffer and Castro hired the Pacific Coast Steamship Company s 180 feet 55 m steamer Bonita to bring lumber and seed oats to the mouth of the Big Sur River and Big Creek north of Lucia 185 Lightering was used to transport freight to and from the beach A large crowd gathered to receive supplies from and to load butter honey beans wool hides and other products onto the ship 186 In the late 1800s the Ventana Power Company operated a sawmill near present day Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park They began planning to build a dam on the Big Sur River just downstream of the confluence of Ventana Creek and the Big Sur River They hoped to sell the electricity to the City of Monterey They built a diversion channel along the Big Sur River but the 1906 San Francisco earthquake bankrupted the company and they abandoned the project The stonework from the diversion channel is still visible 187 Few other signs of this brief industrial period are visible The rugged isolated terrain kept out all but the sturdiest and most self sufficient settlers Travelers who ventured south of the Post Ranch rode horseback along trails that connected the various homesteaders along the coast 46 The 1900 Monterey County voting register indicates 61 male voters in the Big Sur area The majority 47 were either farmers or ranchers Other trades included a gardener apiarist fruit grower woodsman laborer lighthouse keeper blacksmith surveyor miner and teamster Lumber related occupations include bark peelers woodchoppers and wood overseers 174 Geography editGeology edit Main article Santa Lucia Range The Santa Lucia Mountain Range which dominates the Big Sur region is 140 miles 230 km long extending from Carmel in the north to the Cuyama River in San Luis Obispo County The range is never more than 11 miles 18 km from the coast 20 11 The Santa Lucia Mountains are characterized by extremely steep slopes all associated with watersheds flowing directly or indirectly into the Pacific Ocean The range forms the steepest coastal slope in the contiguous United States 20 12 The mountains are of recent tectonic origin and its rugged steep and dissected deep stream canyons The general trend of the range is northwest southeast paralleling the numerous faults that transect the area 188 The topography is complex however reflecting active uplift and deformation a variety of lithological types rapidly incising stream networks and highly unstable slopes Stream channels and hill slopes are very steep with average hill slope gradients exceeding 60 in some interior watersheds The coastal side of the range rises directly from the shoreline with oceanfront ridges rising directly 4 000 to 5 000 feet 1 200 to 1 500 m to the crest of the coastal range Big Sur s Cone Peak at an elevation of 5 155 feet 1 571 m is only 3 miles 4 8 km from the ocean and is the tallest coastal mountain in the contiguous United States 189 10 The basement rocks of the Santa Lucia Range contain Mesozoic Franciscan and Salinian Block rocks 188 The Franciscan complex is composed of greywacke sandstone and greenstone with serpentinite bodies and other Ultramafic rocks present Small areas of marble and limestone lenses form resistant outcrops that are prominent landscape features often white to light gray The Salinian block is made up of highly fractured and deeply weathered meta sediments especially biotite schist and gneiss intruded by plutonic granitic rocks such as quartz diorite and granodiorite Both formations have been disrupted and tectonically slivered by motion on the San Andreas and associated fault systems The Palo Colorado and Church Creek faults are prominent features influencing the linear northwest southeast alignment of primary drainages 188 Marine influence edit Along with much of the central and northern California coast Big Sur frequently has dense fog in summer Fog and lack of precipitation during the summer both result from the North Pacific High s presence offshore during that season The high pressure cell inhibits rainfall and generates northwesterly airflow These prevailing summer winds from the northwest drive the ocean surface water slightly offshore through the Ekman effect which generates an upwelling of colder subsurface water Warm surface air blowing over cold upwelling ocean water close to the coast is cooled to create a surface based inversion 10 33 35 Summer fog is common below about 2 000 feet 610 m elevation During 2014 and 2015 researchers recorded summer seasonal totals of 125 centimetres 49 in and 31 centimetres 12 in of fog water drip under open shrub canopies They concluded that precipitation from fog dripping into the soils under coastal shrub canopies can be as much as 50 of annual average rainfall rates 190 The fog usually moves out to sea during the day and closes in at night but sometimes heavy fog blankets the coast all day citation needed Wildfires editHistoric fires edit Fire plays a key role in the ecology of the upper slopes of the Big Sur region s mountains where chaparral dominates the landscape 191 It is known that Native Americans burned chaparral to increase food production and promote grasslands for textiles but little is known about the natural frequency of fire in the Santa Lucia Mountains 10 269 270 192 A study of fire scars on sugar pines on Junipero Serra Peak found that at least six fires had burned the region between 1790 and 1901 193 During the Spanish and Mexican era the Native Americans set fires regularly in coastal and valley grasslands to control brush growth and reduce fire risk 193 The European homesteaders followed that tradition and set controlled burns every winter when conditions were right 194 nbsp FEMA team assesses wildfire damage after the Basin Fire 2008Following the depopulation of the Native Americans from the region in the late 1800s there have been several very large fires in the Big Sur area In 1894 a fire burned for weeks through the upper watersheds of all of the major streams in the Big Sur region Another large fire in 1898 burned without any effort by the few residents to put it out except to save their buildings 195 In 1903 a fire started by an untended campfire near Chews Ridge burned a path 6 miles 9 7 km wide to the coast over three months In 1906 a fire that began in Palo Colorado Canyon from the embers of a campfire burned 150 000 acres 61 000 ha over 35 days and was finally extinguished by the first rainfall of the season 196 The number of fires declined when the U S Forest Service began managing the land in 1907 193 Modern wildfires edit In recent history the area was struck by the Molera Fire in 1972 which resulted in flooding and mud flows in the Big Sur River valley that buried portions of several buildings the following winter 197 The area was burned by Marble Cone Fire in 1977 the Rat Creek Gorda Complex Fire in 1985 the Kirk Complex Fire in 1999 the Basin Complex Fire in 2008 the Pfeiffer Fire in December 2013 and the Soberanes Fire in 2016 198 nbsp The 2016 Soberanes fire tops a ridge covered in fire retardant adjacent to the Pacific OceanThe Basin Complex Fire forced an eight day evacuation of Big Sur and the closure of Highway 1 beginning just before the July 4 2008 holiday weekend 199 The fire which burned over 130 000 acres 53 000 ha represented the largest of many lightning caused wildfires that had broken out throughout California during the same period 200 Although the fire caused no loss of life it destroyed 27 homes and the tourist dependent economy lost about a third of its expected summer revenue 201 202 The Pfeiffer Fire from December 17 to 20 2013 burned 917 acres 371 ha and destroyed 34 homes in an area near Pfeiffer Ridge Road and Sycamore Canyon Road 203 The July 2016 Soberanes Fire was caused by unknown individuals who started and lost control of an illegal campfire in the Garrapata Creek watershed After it burned 57 homes in the Garrapata and Palo Colorado Canyon areas firefighters were able to build lines around parts of the Big Sur community A bulldozer operator was killed when his equipment overturned during night operations in Palo Colorado Canyon Coast residents east of Highway 1 were required to evacuate for short periods and Highway 1 was shut down at intervals over several days to allow firefighters to conduct backfire operations Visitors avoided the area and tourism revenue was impacted for several weeks 204 In April 2022 Ivan Gomez was convicted of 16 felony counts including arson for purposefully starting a fire near Lime Creek on August 18 2020 The Dolan Fire killed a dozen Critically Endangered California Condors when it burned through the 80 acres 32 ha Big Sur Condor Sanctuary operated by the Ventana Wildlife Society of Monterey The 125 000 acres 51 000 ha fire was not fully contained until December 31 more than four months after it started 205 Effect on Redwoods edit In the lower elevations and canyons the California Redwood is often found Its thick bark along with foliage that starts high above the ground protect the species from both fire and insect damage contributing to the coast redwood s longevity 206 Fire appears to benefit redwoods by removing competitive species A 2010 study compared post wildfire survival and regeneration of redwood and associated species It concluded that fires of all severity increase the relative abundance of redwood and higher severity fires provide the greatest benefit 207 Climate edit nbsp Upper image from March and lower image from October showing a typical fog bank nearly 1 000 feet 300 m thick Also illustrating the difference in vegetation between the winter rainy season and dry early fall Big Sur typically enjoys a mild Mediterranean climate with a sunny dry summer and fall and cool wet winter Coastal temperatures range from the 50s at night to the 70s by day Fahrenheit from June through October and in the 40s to 60s from November through May Further inland away from the ocean s moderating influence temperatures are much more variable The weather varies widely due to the influence of the jagged topography creating many microclimates nbsp Big Sur Coast in April 1969 after a wet winterThe record maximum temperature was 111 F 43 9 C on September 7 2020 and the record low was 26 F 3 3 C recorded on February 9 2009 During the winter Big Sur experiences some of the heaviest rainfall in California 208 More than 70 percent of the rain falls from December through March The summer is generally dry The Santa Lucia range rises to more than 5 800 ft 1760 m and the amount of rainfall greatly increases as the elevation rises and cools the air but rainfall amounts decrease sharply in the rain shadow of the coastal mountains Scientists estimate that about 90 in 230 cm falls on average near the ridge tops But actual totals vary considerably 10 Snowfall is rare on the coast but is common in the winter months on the higher ridges of the Santa Lucia Range 209 Monterey County maintains a remote rain gauge for flood prediction on Mining Ridge at 4 000 ft 1200 m about 4 miles 6 4 km north east of Cone Peak The gauge frequently receives more rain than any gauge in the Monterey and San Francisco Bay Areas The wettest winter season was 1982 1983 when it rained more than 178 in 452 cm but the total is unknown because the rain gauge failed at that point The wettest calendar year on record was 1982 83 when it rained 88 85 inches 2 257 mm 10 210 The month with the greatest rain fall total was December 1955 when it rained a record 27 21 inches 691 mm At Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park on the coast rainfall averaged about 43 in 109 cm annually from 1914 to 1987 In 1975 1976 it rained only 15 in 39 cm at the park compared to 85 in 216 cm in 1982 1983 10 Climate data for Big Sur California 1991 2020 normals extremes 1993 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 81 27 85 29 88 31 98 37 96 36 102 39 103 39 101 38 111 44 102 39 90 32 78 26 111 44 Mean maximum F C 73 1 22 8 74 1 23 4 78 2 25 7 83 9 28 8 85 9 29 9 90 0 32 2 90 5 32 5 92 1 33 4 93 3 34 1 90 1 32 3 79 6 26 4 69 8 21 0 98 4 36 9 Mean daily maximum F C 60 5 15 8 61 1 16 2 64 2 17 9 67 3 19 6 70 5 21 4 74 2 23 4 75 4 24 1 77 4 25 2 76 8 24 9 73 5 23 1 65 3 18 5 59 3 15 2 68 8 20 4 Daily mean F C 51 4 10 8 51 9 11 1 53 7 12 1 55 4 13 0 58 0 14 4 61 1 16 2 63 0 17 2 63 8 17 7 63 5 17 5 61 0 16 1 55 3 12 9 50 9 10 5 57 4 14 1 Mean daily minimum F C 42 4 5 8 42 8 6 0 43 3 6 3 43 5 6 4 45 5 7 5 48 0 8 9 50 5 10 3 50 1 10 1 50 1 10 1 48 5 9 2 45 4 7 4 42 5 5 8 46 1 7 8 Mean minimum F C 33 8 1 0 34 0 1 1 34 8 1 6 35 3 1 8 39 0 3 9 41 1 5 1 43 7 6 5 43 9 6 6 42 5 5 8 39 8 4 3 36 7 2 6 33 8 1 0 30 1 1 1 Record low F C 27 3 26 3 27 3 28 2 35 2 37 3 41 5 40 4 39 4 31 1 28 2 27 3 26 3 Average precipitation inches mm 9 48 241 8 59 218 6 72 171 2 94 75 1 15 29 0 20 5 1 0 06 1 5 0 05 1 3 0 13 3 3 1 88 48 4 16 106 9 18 233 44 54 1 131 Average precipitation days 0 01 in 10 7 11 2 10 2 6 3 3 7 0 8 0 3 0 4 0 7 3 0 6 9 10 6 64 8Source NOAA 211 212 Flora and fauna editSee also California montane chaparral and woodlands nbsp Big Sur coast looking south near Julia Pfeiffer Burns State ParkThe many climates of Big Sur result in great biodiversity including many rare and endangered species such as the wild orchid Piperia yadonii which is found only on the Monterey Peninsula and on Rocky Ridge in the Los Padres forest Arid dusty chaparral covered hills exist within easy walking distance of lush riparian woodland Fort Hunter Liggett is host to about one fourth of all Tule elk found in California and provides roosting places for bald eagles and endangered condors It also is home to some of the healthiest stands of the live valley and blue oaks 213 Southern limit of redwood trees edit Main article Sequoia sempervirens The high coastal mountains trap moisture from the clouds fog in summer rain and snow in winter creating a favorable environment for the coast redwood Sequoia sempervirens trees found in the Big Sur region They are found near the ocean in canyon bottoms or inland canyons alongside creeks and in other areas that meet its requirements for cooler temperatures and moisture Due to drier conditions trees in the Big Sur region only grow about 200 feet 61 m tall smaller than specimens found to the north 214 The redwood trees in Big Sur are the remnant of much larger groves Many old growth trees were cut by the Ventana Power Company which operated a sawmill near present day Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park from the late 1800s through 1906 when its operations were bankrupted by the 1906 San Francisco earthquake When John and Florence Pfeiffer opened Pffeifer s Ranch Resort in 1910 they built guest cabins from lumber cut using the mill The mill was resurrected when Highway 1 was constructed during the 1920s It supplied lumber for housing built for workers 215 216 While many trees were harvested several inaccessible locations were never logged A large grove of trees is found along the north fork of the Little Sur River William Randolph Hearst was interested in preserving the uncut redwood forest and on November 18 1921 he purchased about 1 445 acres 585 ha from the Eberhard and Kron Tanning Company of Santa Cruz for about 50 000 He later donated the land to the Monterey Bay Area Council of the Boy Scouts of America who completed the construction of Camp Pico Blanco in 1954 217 In 2008 scientist J Michael Fay published a map of the old growth redwoods based on his transect of the entire redwood range 218 The southernmost naturally occurring grove of redwoods is found within the Big Sur region in the Southern Redwood Botanical Area a 17 acres 6 9 ha reserve located in the Little Redwood Gulch watershed adjacent to the Silver Peak Wilderness It is just north of the Salmon Creek trailhead 214 219 The southernmost tree is about 15 feet 4 6 m from Highway 1 at the approximate coordinates 35 49 42 N 121 23 14 W 35 82833 N 121 38722 W 35 82833 121 38722 Plant species edit The rare Santa Lucia fir Abies bracteata is found only in the Santa Lucia mountains A common foreign species is the Monterey pine Pinus radiata which was uncommon in Big Sur until the late nineteenth century though its major native habitat is only a few miles upwind on the Monterey Peninsula when many homeowners began to plant the quick growing tree as a windbreak There are many broadleaved trees as well such as the tanoak Lithocarpus densiflorus coast live oak Quercus agrifolia and California bay laurel Umbellularia californica In the rain shadow the forests disappear and the vegetation becomes open oak woodland then transitions into the more familiar fire tolerant California chaparral scrub Wildlife edit nbsp A harbor seal on a Big Sur beachThe Big Sur River watershed provides habitat for mountain lion deer fox coyotes and non native wild boars The boars of Russian stock were introduced in the 1920s by George Gordon Moore the owner of Rancho San Carlos 220 Because most of the upper reaches of the Big Sur River watershed are within the Los Padres National Forest and the Ventana Wilderness much of the river is in pristine condition Former Grizzly bear rangeMain article California grizzly bear The region was historically populated by California grizzly bears During the Spanish period of California history the Spaniards rarely entered the area except to capture runaway Mission Indians or to hunt grizzly bears that ate their livestock The Mexican settlers captured bears for Monterey s bear and bull fights and they also sold their skins for 6 to 10 pesos to trading ships that visited Monterey Bear Trap Canyon near Bixby Creek was one of their favorite sites for trapping grizzly bears 221 222 The California grizzly bear Ursus arctos californicus was heavier and larger than grizzly bears found elsewhere in the continental United States Malcolm Margolin in The Ohlone Way wrote that These enormous bears were everywhere feeding on berries lumbering along the beaches congregating beneath oak trees during acorn season and stationed along nearly every stream and creek during the annual runs of salmon and steelhead Grizzly bears presented a serious threat to human beings armed with only a bow and arrows and the Native Americans used to avoid them whenever possible 223 The Monterey Herald noted on July 4 1874 Last Monday Captain A Smith who resides about ten miles from town in the Carmel Valley succeeded in poisoning a large grizzly bear Bruin had been annoying the neighborhood by destroying cattle etc for several years past and all efforts to exterminate him seem futile In some manner however he was induced to partake of that cold pizen the captain had prepared for his special benefit He is not likely to repeat his experiment 223 There are remnants of a grizzly bear trap within Palo Corona Regional Park east of Point Lobos in a grove of redwood trees next to a creek 224 European settlers paid bounties on the bears who regularly preyed on livestock until the early 20th century 19 4 Absolom Rocky Beasley hunted grizzly bears throughout the Santa Lucia Range and claimed to have killed 139 bears in his lifetime 225 The Pfeiffer family would fill a bait ball of swine entrails with strychnine and hang it from a tree They wrote that the last grizzly bear was seen in Monterey County in 1941 on the Cooper Ranch near the mouth of the Little Sur River 226 21 Other sources report that last California grizzly was seen in 1924 224 227 Since about 1980 American black bears have been sighted in the area likely expanding their range from southern California and filling in the ecological niche left when the grizzly bear was exterminated 10 261 SteelheadMain article Rainbow trout The California Department of Fish and Game says the Little Sur River is the most important spawning stream for Steelhead distinct population segment on the Central Coast where the fish is listed as threatened 228 and that it is one of the best steelhead streams in the county 229 166 The Big Sur River is also a key habitat for the steelhead 230 231 A US fisheries service report estimates that the number of trout in the entire south central coast area including the Pajaro River Salinas River Carmel River Big Sur River and Little Sur River have dwindled from about 4 750 fish in 1965 to about 800 in 2005 232 Numerous fauna are found in the Big Sur region Among amphibians the California giant salamander Dicamptodon ensatus is found here which point marks the southern extent of its range 233 California condorMain article California condor The California condor Gymnogyps californianus is a critically endangered species that was near extinction when the remaining wild birds were captured A captive breeding program was begun in 1987 The Ventana Wildlife Society acquired 80 acres near Anderson Canyon that it used for a captive breeding program 234 After some success a few birds were released in 1991 and 1992 in Big Sur and again in 1996 in Arizona near the Grand Canyon 235 In 1997 the Ventana Wildlife Society began releasing captive bred California Condors in Big Sur The birds take six years to mature before they can produce offspring and a nest was discovered in a redwood tree in 2006 236 237 This was the first time in more than 100 years in which a pair of California condors had been seen nesting in Northern California 238 The repopulation effort has been successful in part because a significant portion of the birds diet includes carcasses of large sea creatures that have washed ashore which are unlikely to be contaminated with lead the principal cause of the bird s mortality 239 As of July 2014 update the Ventana Wildlife Society managed 34 free flying condors 240 There were part of a total population of 437 condors spread over California Baja California and Arizona of which 232 are wild birds and 205 are in captivity 241 Marine protected areas edit nbsp Coast view of the Big Creek State Marine ReserveThe off shore region of the Big Sur Coast is protected by the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary Within that sanctuary are other conservation areas and parks The onshore topography that drops abruptly into the Pacific continues offshore where a narrow continental shelf drops to the continental slope in only a few miles The ocean reaches a depth of more than 12 000 feet 3 700 m just 50 mi 80 km offshore Two deep submarine canyons cut into the shelf near the Big Sur coast the Sur Submarine Canyon reaching a depth of 3 000 ft 910 m just 8 mi 13 km south of Point Sur and Partington Submarine Canyon which reaches a similar depth of 6 8 mi 10 9 km offshore of Grimes Canyon 10 Like underwater parks these marine protected areas help conserve ocean wildlife and marine ecosystems Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary Point Lobos State Marine Reserve Point Sur State Marine Reserve and Marine Conservation Area Big Creek State Marine Reserve and Marine Conservation Area Salmon Creek State Area of Special Biological Significance California Sea Otter Game Refuge Julia Pfeiffer Burns Underwater ParkDemographics edit nbsp Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park after fireBig Sur is sparsely populated There are about 1 800 to 2 000 year round residents only a few hundred more residents than found there in 1900 30 Big Sur residents include descendants of the original ranching families artists writers service staff along with homeowners The mountainous terrain restrictions imposed by the Big Sur Coastal Use Plan 242 limited availability of property than can be developed and the expense required to build on available land has kept Big Sur relatively undeveloped According to the Big Sur Chamber of Commerce about half the businesses derive their income from the hospitality industry and they in turn produce about 90 percent of the local economy 243 Population data edit The United States does not define a census designated place called Big Sur but it does define a census tract 115 that includes almost all of the Big Sur coast beginning in the north at Malpaso Creek and ending south of Lucia It doesn t include New Camoldi Hermitage Gorda and Ragged Point where a few dozen people live and it doesn t include the isolated private inholdings within the Los Padres National Forest It includes much of the interior coast as far west as the Tassajara Zen Center In 1977 there were 1 813 residents and 846 dwelling units 244 In 2018 the Census Bureau estimated there were 1 728 residents 1 125 white 525 Latino or Hispanic 892 housing units 639 households 253 vacant or rental housing units the median value of owner occupied housing units was 877 100 Per capita income was 34 845 median income 63 843 mean income 81 766 245 The racial makeup of this area was 87 6 White 1 1 African American 1 3 Native American 2 4 Asian 0 0 Pacific Islander 5 5 from other races and 3 0 from two or more races Hispanic or Latino of any race was 9 6 of the population In the 93920 ZCTA the population age was widely distributed with 20 2 under the age of 20 4 5 from 20 to 24 26 9 from 25 to 44 37 0 from 45 to 64 and 11 2 who were 65 years of age or older The median age was 43 2 years The median income in 2000 for a household in 93920 ZCTA was 41 304 and the median income for a family was 65 083 246 Fire protection editTwo local volunteer fire departments provide emergency services in the region CalFire s nearest station is located in Carmel 33 miles 53 km north of Big Sur Village The United States Forest Service s Nacimiento Ranger Station is located on Nacimiento Fergusson Road 7 miles 11 km from the coast highway 247 86 It was destroyed by the arson set Dolan Fire on September 8 2020 and is to be rebuilt 248 During winter storms following the 2020 Dolan Fire entire sections of the Nacimiento Fergusson Road were washed away and it has remained closed since then In January 2022 U S Representative Jimmy Panetta announced that he had obtained 126 million in Federal Highway Administration funds to repair the road and rebuild the USFS Nacimiento Ranger Station destroyed in the blaze This includes replacing the fire station barracks engine garage and pumphouse along with some site utilities such as a water well solar connections and access roads 249 Due to the remoteness of the region it may take first responders more than one hour to respond to an emergency event Following initial response and depending on the location the nearest hospital is up to an hour away In critical cases patients can be flown out by air ambulance depending on their injuries and weather conditions 86 The volunteer Mid Coast Fire Brigade located on Palo Colorado Road was organized in June 1979 Residents raised 300 000 to build a firehouse 250 Members receive training in CPR defibrillation rope rescue vehicle extrication water rescue as well as structural vehicle and wildland firefighting skills 251 As of 2004 update there were about 300 households in the Palo Colorado Canyon area The volunteer Big Sur Fire Brigade was founded by Gary Koeppel on August 1 1974 He persuaded Walter Trotter a member of a pioneer Big Sur family to become the first fire chief Trotter was enormously well known and influential and he very quickly appointed a number of volunteers The brigade provides emergency response from mile marker 58 3 north of the Little Sur River bridge on Highway 1 to the San Luis Obispo County Line The department has two stations Station 1 is located south of Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park at the Post Ranch Station 2 is located near Gorda 252 Education editTwo schools are available to students in Big Sur To the north the Captain Cooper School serves 52 students from grades K 5 who live in the vicinity of Palo Colorado Canyon Big Sur Village Posts and Slates Hot Springs The land for the school was donated in 1962 by Frances Molera She stipulated that it be named after her pioneer grandfather Juan B R Cooper who bought Rancho El Sur in 1840 The school was built by community members without assistance from the Carmel Unified School District who assumed management of the school once it was complete 253 Older students take a bus to Carmel schools 254 255 To the south the Pacific Valley School was founded by the Plaskett family in 1880 It serves 22 students in grades K 12 in the areas near Plaskett Lucia and Gorda 256 Closed repeatedly due to low or no enrollment it reopened in the 1950s Pacific Valley School is one of two schools in the Big Sur Unified School District It has a 3 1 student teacher ratio They engage in collaborative learning between age groups 257 258 Government editAt the county level Big Sur is represented on the Monterey County Board of Supervisors by Mary Adams 259 In the California State Assembly Big Sur is in the 17th Senate District represented by Democrat John Laird and in the 30th Assembly District represented by Democrat Dawn Addis 260 In the United States House of Representatives Big Sur is in California s 19th congressional district represented by Democrat Jimmy Panetta 261 In popular culture editIn literature edit In 1962 famous Beat author Jack Kerouac released the novel Big Sur which prominently features the location throughout the narrative It became one of Kerouc s most prolific works 262 In 1995 prominent environmentalist David Brower published Not Man Apart Photographs of the Big Sur Coast featuring Jeffers poetry and photography of the Big Sur coast In the posthumously published 2002 book Stones of the Sur Carmel landscape photographer Morley Baer combined his classical black and white photographs of Big Sur with some of Jeffers poetry 263 264 In film edit The area s increasing popularity and reputation for beauty have attracted the attention of movie and television personalities and producers Orson Welles and his wife at the time Rita Hayworth bought a Big Sur cabin on impulse during a trip down the coast in 1944 The couple never spent a single night there and the property is now the location of a restaurant A number of well known films are set in Big Sur including The Sandpiper 1965 starring Elizabeth Taylor Richard Burton Eva Marie Saint and Charles Bronson The 1974 film Zandy s Bride starring Gene Hackman and Liv Ullmann was also based in the region 265 In 2013 Jack Kerouac s novel Big Sur was adapted into a film of the same name starring Kate Bosworth and directed by the actress husband Michael Polish As of 2017 update 19 movies had been filmed in the Big Sur region beginning with Suspicion in 1941 266 In music edit California Saga California 1973 a single on The Beach Boys album Holland depicts the rugged wilderness in the area and the culture of its inhabitants 267 Going Back to Big Sur was written by Johnny Rivers who sang it on his 1968 album Realization 268 The closing stanzas Guess I ll drive up Highway One Did the ocean kiss the setting sun The stars dancing in the sky Sort of puts you on a natural high Going back to Big Sur This time I might just stay I m going back and straighten out my head Just south of Monterey And that girl The song Big Sur Moon from Buckethead s album Colma is named after the area 269 The song Bixby Canyon Bridge from Death Cab for Cutie s album Narrow Stairs explores the narrator s visit to Big Sur waiting for an epiphany that never comes 270 The Dharma at Big Sur by John Adams for electric violin and orchestra was composed in 2003 for the opening of Disney Hall in Los Angeles 271 Alanis Morissette released the song Big Sur as her ode to Big Sur with all its majesty as exclusive bonus track on the Target edition of her 2012 Havoc and Bright Lights album 272 The song was released as single in 2014 In computing edit Apple s desktop operating system macOS Big Sur announced on June 22 2020 during WWDC is named after this region 273 See also editBig Sur Land TrustReferences edit a b Marvinney Craig A 1984 Land Use Policy Along the Big Sur Coast of California What Role for the Federal Government UCLA Journal of Environmental Law amp Policy Regents of the University of California 4 doi 10 5070 L541018694 Accessed 22 August 2016 a b Lindsey Robert January 28 1986 Plan for Big Sur Severely Restricts Development New York Times Archived from the original on August 28 2016 Retrieved August 14 2016 a b Big times in Big Sur Washington Times July 7 2006 Archived from the original on August 26 2016 Retrieved August 23 2016 Thomas Gregory December 30 2020 Big Sur is fed up with selfie tourism Here s its new plan to transform travel in the region San Francisco Chronicle Archived from the original on April 25 2022 Retrieved May 31 2022 a b c Initiatives Community Association of Big Sur Archived from the original on July 26 2020 Retrieved April 20 2020 a b c Guidelines for Corridor Aesthetic PDF Highway 1 Big Sur Coast Highway Management Plan California Department of Transportation Archived PDF from the original on March 3 2017 Retrieved January 11 2018 a b Road trip on the Pacific Coast Highway LosApos Losapos com Archived from the original on September 23 2016 a b Our response to California State Parks Preferred Alternative Big Sur Land Trust Archived from the original on November 7 2017 Retrieved January 6 2018 a b Top 10 Tourist Destinations in the United States WorldAtlas com August 1 2017 Archived from the original on May 20 2022 Retrieved May 31 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Henson Paul Donald J Usner 1993 The Natural History of Big Sur PDF University Of California Press Archived from the original PDF on June 17 2010 Retrieved August 12 2016 a b c d Surfer Magazine February 21 2006 Surfer Magazine s Guide to Northern and Central California Surf Spots Chronicle Books p 97 ISBN 978 0 8118 4998 2 Archived from the original on November 16 2017 Retrieved January 13 2011 a b c d e f Chatfield Michael May 5 2014 Big Sur Magic Carmel Magazine Carmel Magazine Archived from the original on April 28 2017 Retrieved December 14 2016 a b Agha Laith The Long Road to Work voicesofmontereybay org Archived from the original on September 14 2018 Retrieved September 14 2018 a b Letter from Karin Strasser Kauffman The Big Sur Local Coastal Program Defense Committee April 4 2015 Archived from the original on September 16 2016 Retrieved August 14 2016 a b Barnett Mary March 1981 Big Sur LCP Adopted by County Planners PDF Big Sur Gazette Archived from the original PDF on August 20 2014 a b Diehl Martha V May 15 2006 Land Use in Big Sur In Search of Sustainable Balance between Community Needs and Resource Protection PDF California State University Monterey Bay Archived PDF from the original on April 14 2016 Retrieved August 22 2016 a b Walton John 2007 The Land of Big Sur Conservation on the California Coast PDF California History 85 1 Archived from the original PDF on August 22 2016 Retrieved August 14 2016 Station and Equipment Big Sur Volunteer Fire Brigade Archived from the original on September 24 2016 Retrieved September 16 2016 a b c d e f g Woolfenden John 1981 Big Sur A Battle for the Wilderness 1869 1981 Pacific Grove California The Boxwood Press p 72 a b c d e f Norman Jeff 2004 Big Sur Charleston S C Arcadia Pub ISBN 0 7385 2913 3 a b c Gudde Erwin Gustav 1998 California Place Names The Origin and Etymology of Current Geographical Names Bright William fourth rev and enl ed Berkeley University of California Press p 379 ISBN 9780520266193 OCLC 37854320 Archived from the original on January 9 2018 Introduction to Big Sur jrabold net Archived from the original on March 14 2017 Retrieved December 10 2020 Lucia California Big Sur Coast Seecalifornia com Archived from the original on February 21 2020 Retrieved April 17 2020 The Big Sur Community Big Sur International Marathon Archived from the original on August 22 2016 Retrieved August 10 2016 Thompson Hunter S 1997 The Proud Highway Saga of a Desperate Southern Gentleman 1955 1967 Brinkley Douglas first ed New York Villard ISBN 9780345377968 OCLC 36011636 Plaskett Mabel Dolan Creek Named After Early Coast Homesteader Plaskett family Archived from the original on January 22 2021 Retrieved December 8 2020 Big Sur Trilogy Part I The Stranger Amazon com Archived from the original on April 17 2015 Retrieved December 8 2020 a b c Bolton Herbert E 1927 Fray Juan Crespi Missionary Explorer on the Pacific Coast 1769 1774 HathiTrust Digital Library Archived from the original on March 22 2014 History of Big Sur California bigsurcalifornia org Archived from the original on August 1 2016 Retrieved September 6 2016 a b Jensen Jamie Road Trip USA Cross Country Adventures on America s Two Lane Highways Archived 2016 11 30 at the Wayback Machine page 146 Diseno del parage llamado el Sud y solicitado por Juan Bauta Alvarado Rancho El Sur Calif United States District Court California Southern District Archived from the original on February 9 2018 Retrieved February 8 2018 Bir Sur Pioneers cdnc ucr edu Vol 142 no 63 Oakland Tribune March 4 1945 p 19 Archived from the original on February 16 2022 Retrieved February 16 2022 Plaskett Mabel Post Summit Named for One Of Early Big Sur Settlers Plaskett family Archived from the original on February 14 2022 Retrieved February 16 2022 Change Arbolado Postoffice Name Archived February 16 2022 at the Wayback Machine Monterey Daily Cypress and Monterey American Monterey California May 15 1915 page 3 Lindsey Robert January 28 1982 Plan For Big Sur Severely Restricts Development The New York Times New York Times Archived from the original on August 28 2016 The 10 Most Famous Streets in the World Conde Nast Traveler Archived from the original on May 23 2017 Retrieved January 8 2018 Hansen Kristine January 7 2020 Log Cabin in Big Sur With Serious Design Pedigree Is Listed for 2 8M SFGATE Archived from the original on March 17 2022 Retrieved March 17 2022 Jensen Jamie March 31 2009 Road Trip USA Pacific Coast Highway Avalon Publishing p 98 ISBN 9781598802047 a b Gold Herbert January 29 1984 To And In Big Sur The Way is Clear The New York Times Archived from the original on March 12 2016 Retrieved August 23 2016 Thomas Amelia Driving California s Big Sur Archived from the original on August 27 2016 Retrieved August 11 2016 Top 5 Best Driving Roads in America Buick Archived from the original on August 15 2016 Retrieved August 11 2016 Pacific Coast Highway Dangerousroads org Archived from the original on June 27 2017 Retrieved December 6 2017 Trip Advisor Crowns Monterey County With Three 2008 Travelers Choice Destination Awards Monterey County Convention amp Visitors Bureau Archived from the original on December 23 2008 Cadd Brian Shultis Dennis Route 1 Scenic Highway Dot ca gov Archived from the original on December 23 2016 Retrieved December 6 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link California Highways State Highway Types Cahighways org Archived from the original on September 18 2017 Retrieved December 6 2017 a b c Pavlik Robert C November 1996 Historical Overview of the Carmel to San Simeon Highway PDF Historic Resource Evaluation Report on the Rock Retaining Walls Parapets Culvert Headwalls and Drinking Fountains along the Carmel to San Simeon Highway California Department of Transportation Archived PDF from the original on 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Machine Public Resources Code Division 20 California Big Sur Land Use Plan May 12 2015 Archived from the original on September 16 2016 Congested Areas Big Sur Visitor Guide Archived from the original on January 6 2018 Retrieved January 6 2018 Vincent David June 20 2009 To Sur With Love Archived from the original on March 5 2016 Retrieved August 22 2016 DISCOVERY CENTER Ventana Wildlife Society Ventanaws org Archived from the original on July 1 2017 Retrieved December 20 2017 Ghan Patel Henry Miller Memorial Library henrymiller org Archived from the original on October 4 2016 Retrieved September 6 2016 Henry Miller Memorial Library September 25 2014 Archived from the original on October 11 2016 Retrieved August 30 2016 Big Sur May 2011 Archived from the original on December 22 2017 Retrieved December 20 2017 Big Sur Big Sur amp the South Coast Pacific Overlander Archived from the original on July 26 2020 Retrieved January 6 2020 a b A modern traveler s guide to the magic of old Big Sur 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original on August 14 2016 Retrieved August 30 2016 Benyo Richard Henderson Joe 2002 B BAA to Bush George W Running Encyclopedia The Ultimate Source for Today s Runner Champaign Illinois Human Kinetics ISBN 978 0 7360 3734 1 Retrieved September 6 2016 Race Weekend 36th Annual Big Sur River Run January 3 2017 Archived from the original on January 3 2017 Retrieved January 5 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Big Sur River Run cancelled due to storm damage will return in 2018 The Mercury News September 21 2017 Archived from the original on January 5 2018 Retrieved January 5 2018 Baez Joan Chronology Archived from the original on August 17 2016 Retrieved August 30 2016 Looking Back at Monterey County November 2014 Archived from the original on August 6 2016 Retrieved August 30 2016 Scott Peter Gray Where The Road Begins Hiking in Big Sur Oak Grove Trail Loop HikingInBigSur com Archived from the original on 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on February 24 2017 Retrieved January 10 2018 Landsel David April 15 2014 14 Things You Need To Know Before Driving California s Big Sur Huffington Post Archived from the original on September 6 2017 Retrieved January 6 2018 Zhang Linda Castillo Brandon June 2 2017 Chinese tourists crash into tree in Big Sur one woman dies KION Archived from the original on June 30 2017 Retrieved January 6 2018 Why can t I go to Sykes The State of the Pine Ridge Trail in Big Sur Wild Ventana Archived from the original on August 29 2018 Retrieved August 28 2018 Sinclair Ward October 15 1980 Big Sur Coastline Caught Up in a Riptide on Potomac The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Archived from the original on November 7 2017 Retrieved October 30 2017 Yosemite National Park Visitors 2016 Statistic Statista Archived from the original on June 11 2017 Retrieved January 4 2018 Monterey Ranger District Archived from the original on August 29 2018 Retrieved August 28 2018 a b c d Schmalz David July 20 2017 Highway 1 transformed Big Sur and opened its coastline to the world That has been both a blessing and a curse Monterey County Weekly Archived from the original on September 9 2017 Retrieved January 3 2018 a b c Alden Brooks Shelley November 21 2017 Big Sur The Making of a Prized California Landscape Oakland California ISBN 9780520294424 OCLC 976253271 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Is Overcrowding at Sykes Camp Getting Worse Xasauan Today November 19 2013 Archived from the original on August 29 2018 Retrieved August 28 2018 a b Schmalz David May 31 2018 A shuttle launch in Big Sur seeks to alleviate the crush of tourist traffic to Pfeiffer Beach Archived from the original on November 15 2019 Retrieved June 2 2018 Yosemite National Park January 2013 Parking and Traffic Circulation PDF Archived PDF from the original on May 10 2017 Retrieved January 10 2018 Big Sur Officials look at shuttle service to Pfeiffer Beach 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vegetation cover to extreme drought on the Big Sur coast of California Journal of Applied Remote Sensing 12 2 026031 Bibcode 2018JARS 12b6031P doi 10 1117 1 JRS 12 026031 S2CID 126122750 Concepts of Biology Introduction to the Chaparral Archived from the original on August 24 2016 Retrieved August 22 2016 Vale Thomas R ed 2002 Fire Native Peoples and the Natural Landscape Washington D C Island Press ISBN 9781559638890 a b c Griffin James R 1978 The Marble Cone Fire Ten Months Later PDF Fremontia California Native Plant Society 6 8 14 Archived PDF from the original on February 9 2018 Retrieved February 8 2018 Schmalz David December 13 2018 Stan Harlan Monterey County Weekly Archived from the original on March 1 2022 Retrieved March 1 2022 Rogers David 2002 History of the Monterey Ranger District Part I Ventana Wilderness Association Archived from the original on May 29 2016 Retrieved August 22 2016 Rogers David The Big Sur Fire of 1906 Double Cone Quarterly Archived from the original on 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