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Doggin’ Los Angeles: Where To Hike With Your Dog When In The City Of Angels

29 15:54:49

The seeds of one of the world’s great city parks were sown with the arrival of
Colonel Griffith Jenkins Griffith from Wales in 1865 to make a fortune in California
gold mines. In 1882 Griffith came to Los Angeles and purchased 4,071 acres of an
original Spanish land grant, Rancho Los Felix.

In 1896 he gave more than 3,000 acres of California oaks, wild sage and manzanita
to the city as a Christmas present – “a place of relaxation and rest for the masses.”
Today Griffith Park, west of I-5 between Los Feliz Boulevard and Ventura Freeway, is
the largest urban wilderness area in America, including 53 miles of trails, fire roads
and bridle paths. Many of the trails feature views of the famous Hollywood sign –
the 6-mile Mt. Hollywood Trail climbs to the top. Dog-friendly touches include a
dog park adjacent to Ferraro Soccer Field and rides for dogs on the Los Angeles Live
Steamers miniature train.

For even more first-class canine hiking travel 10 minutes west to the Santa Monica
Mountains National Recreation Area. Santa Monica Mountain NRA is an
amalgamation of 150,000 private, city, county, state and federal acres knitted into a
single entity in 1978.

The park stretches 46 miles from east to west, co-existing next to the most densely
populated urban area in the United States – one in every 17 Americans live within an
hour’s drive of the Santa Monica Mountains. The Mediterranean climate in the park –
hot, dry summers mixing with mild, wet winters in a coastal location – is the
rarest in the world. Only four other areas in the world enjoy the same climate, the
fewest acres of any ecosystem.

Santa Monica Mountains NRA is a paradise for canine hikers but not an unfettered
one. Dogs are not allowed on state park trails so you will need to limit your
explorations to national and city park lands.

An easy introduction to the park near the Visitor Center is at Rancho Sierra Vista
(Satwiwa) where a loop trail slips 1.5 miles through grasslands and chaparral-
covered hillsides. The loop begins and ends at the Satwiwa Native American Indian
Culture Center.

Athletic dogs will want to test the many canyon trails at Zuma Canyon, Solstice
Canyon, Franklin Canyon and more. Expect extended ocean views and scenic looks
where the land has been folded into peaks and canyons by shifts along the San
Andreas Fault.

Some of the sportiest canine hiking in the Santa Monica Mountains is at Circle K
Ranch where trails ascend to Sandstone Peak, the highest point in the park at 3,111
feet. One route, the Backbone Trail, will one day stretch 65 miles across the entire
national recreation area. Dog owners may want to skip the downhill hiking on the
Grotto Trail. After going two miles, dogs are not allowed on the final 1/8 mile to
The Grotto.

Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area is confined by US 101 (the
Ventura Highway) to the north and US 1 (the Pacific Coast Highway) to the south.
The Visitor Center is off US 101 in Thousand Oaks.

copyright 2006

Doug Gelbert is the author of over 20 books, including The Canine Hiker’s Bible.
To subscribe to his FREE Newsletter on hiking with your dog and receive a copy
of Rules for Dogs in 100 of the Most Popular National Park Service Lands, visit
http://www.hikewithyourdog.com In the warmer months he leads canine hikes
for hikewithyourdog.com tours, guiding packs of dogs and humans on hiking
adventures. Tours, ranging from one-day trips to multi-day explorations, visit
parks, historical sites and beaches.