Harmony Headlands Beach

Harmony Headlands

With a nice long walk and a mile or so of rocky shore, we turned the Harmony Headlands trip into both Beach and Hike a Week.

cairns

The little dots of birds you see in the air are swallows and they were going crazy. They’ve built their mud nests into the cliffs and were darting and swerving and gliding and swerving and darting and charging all over the place.

cairns

The waves were huge, by the way. South swell (Killers seemed packed). We saw five or so guys out just south of the Headlands, too (as well as three walking back the path, coming from the north), but at this spot the waves crash too close to the rocks. We both took a ton of video. I’ll see if anything Steve took turned out. Mine didn’t match the awesomeness of the moment.

Steve taking photos

Harmony Headlands

Harmony Headlands

Harmony Headlands

harmonyheadlandsbeach


Harmony Headlands Hike

Harmony Headlands

Saturday, June 7, 2013. Harmony Headlands is between Cayucos and Cambria, and just two miles south of our county’s smallest town, Harmony (population 18). A 4.5 round trip easy walk, it’s a coastal access point along a desolate, rugged, lovely coastline previously only accessible if you were a rancher, a fisherman, or trespassing surfer.

Harmony Headlands hike

The hike is kind of divided in two: the first part is a well maintained, straight shot of a wide dirt path lined with hemlock, mustard, grasses and shrubbery. And then there are the dead trees. Three on one side (the middle one upturned and showing root) and three on the other (again, middle roots up). You couldn’t plan it better. Beautiful white skeletons holding steady in the fields.

Harmony Headlands hike

Harmony Headlands hike

Harmony Headlands field

Mustard

And then you reach this tree, can glimpse the sea and everything changes.

tree with view to ocean

ocean path

ocean path

ocean path

When we began to head back the sun came out. Perfect ending.

tree

path

I will admit that I thought this was anise. I was close; it’s in the same family as anise, but it’s poison hemlock. Sinister! Don’t go eating thinking you’ll get a licorice taste folks.

anise

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