North Table Mountain Ecological Reserve

Topics covering photography and videography of the flora, fauna and landscape of the Sierra Nevada mountains. Show off your talent. Post your photos and videos here!
Post Reply
User avatar
SSSdave
Topix Addict
Posts: 3523
Joined: Thu Nov 17, 2005 11:18 pm
Experience: N/A
Location: Silicon Valley
Contact:

North Table Mountain Ecological Reserve

Post by SSSdave »

Most on this board focus on the higher parts of the Sierra Nevada however as a photographer there is much to enjoy about some of its lower elevations too. Especially during spring when wildflowers bloom in the foothills and lower canyons. My Gallery B webpage certainly has a collection of subjects from those areas. I posted the below on another site today that will work here too. Three weekends ago visited the lower Merced Canyon which always has some fine spring green and wildflowers.

---------------------------------
On Saturday April 5, I visited one of the crown jewels of California wildflower locations in the Sacramento Valley, North Table Mountain Ecological Reserve, that is near the minor town of Oroville. A community most well known for adjacent Lake Oroville, the state's second largest water storage reservoir and hydro power project that dams our Feather River. It is a location I'd visited a couple times in the past, missing peak blooms. Many peak spring low elevation wildflower blooms in the state occur all within the mid March through April period and one can only be in one place at a time. This is different than most of the Eastern US where the saying my Mom used to love chiming "April showers bring May flowers" is true. Here in California it is more correctly "February and March showers bring April flowers". And the same is true in Texas, our other state with spectacular spring flowers. Good summary news feature on the reserve:

http://www.dfg.ca.gov/lands/articles/notablemt00.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

For most people in the state who seek scenic flowery places, much less out of state folks, timing a visit to coincide with our blooms is rather difficult because peaks blooms are brief from a couple weeks to just days and it varies from year to year depending on precipitation and weather. Most of the best world class areas are in arid and or desert areas of Southern California where there may only be worthwhile blooms once every 3 to 5 years. Worse many of the most well known places can often be notoriously unpleasantly windy and the Antelope Valley Poppy State Reserve would certainly be on the top of that list. Before this Internet World Wide Web era, many of the best places were only known to a small number of people, often either in botany groups or serious photographers. With the advent of web communities and the explosion of this digitial camera era, that has all changed so today there are wildflower hotlines, local web communities, and many people in the southern part of the state, especially DSLR toting photographers, driving around much like is the situation during the fall for those seeking fall leaf color.

In Northern California most of the better wildflower display are not as spectacular as those in the south but there are 3 that can hold their own. One is along the lower Merced River below Yosemite, for example the Hite Cove Trail. Another is an area I won't explicitly devulge on Northern California seacoast bluffs. And the best is North Table Mountain Ecological Reserve though not particularly well known outside it's local region. This was the first time my visit was at the peak though this was a relatively dry year despite late rains. Best displays have been during some wet El Nino winters.

The reserve that only recently passed into the public domain in 1990, is at the edge of the great valley sticking up like a sore thumb. It is about 5 square miles atop a several dozen million year old basalt lava flow. Actually the plateau is maybe 3 times as large as the public lands since most is still private cattle grazing land. Old decaying barbed wire fences in the reserve are mostly fallen down so cattle from private lands readily enter and graze in the public lands. In fact in my opinion, maybe several times as many cattle as at a minimum I'd prefer to see though it works both ways since people venture aka trespass into some of the private lands especially where there are waterfalls. In any case these are public lands sorely in need of expansion by buying up grazing lands and adding more of the below plateau surrounding oak woodlands. The present infrastructure is primitive consisting of a small crude parking lot and a row of Port-a Potties. During my visit about 150 vehicles jammed the parking lot overflowing down the sides of a small paved country road. The cattle issue is somewhat controversial with ranchers promoting a position on many state public park lands that grazing catttle reduce rival alien European grasses. Although that is quite true in some of our California parks where such grasses are thick, that is not the case on these rocky thin soil volcanic table lands. Mid day cattle congregate beneath the shade of the few trees in plateau areas making bare soil disgusting cowpie styes. And hooves from the massive beasts plus juicy cowpies make a foul mess of the delicate tiny stream channels and vernal pools. Thus the state needs to wake up and spend money constructing modern barbed wire fences on this precious place.

The dark igneous rock on the somewhat gently sloping rocky plateau is generally impervious to water so everywhere it pools and or slowly drains off leaving many small streams and vernal pools. The edges of the basalt flow tend to be vertical cliffs up to 200 feet high and as a result are numbers of small seasonal waterfalls. Although there is one short trail, which 90% of visitors restrict their visit's too, over the rest of the lands one simply strikes off across the mostly treeless landscape. The landscape is not actually level but rather has continuous small undulating water courses and hollows plus sizeable deep ravines that divide up the walkable zones. Wherever one crosses rocky areas, there are small baseball to grapefruit sized irregularly shaped cobbles that are a wee awkward to walk on and tend to roll around. Thus one reason the majority stick to the one trail. The ravine bottoms where rains drain into tend to have dense oak woodlands often with poison oak that keeps people away.

From my April 5 visit, 9 each 4x5 transparencies have returned from my Colorado film development lab and have crudely flatbed scanned and Photoshop CS6 processed 4 downsized images onto my Gallery_B website page. See bottom of that page, that is gallery row 31 then mouse select any image.

http://www.davidsenesac.com/Gallery_B/gallery_b.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
User avatar
maverick
Forums Moderator
Forums Moderator
Posts: 11812
Joined: Thu Apr 06, 2006 5:54 pm
Experience: Level 4 Explorer

Re: North Table Mountain Ecological Reserve

Post by maverick »

Hi Dave,

Nice. Almost made the drive up this past weekend but saw some shots from a fellow
photographer/friend who went up during the week and decided to wait till next year.
There is supposed to be a huge El Nino buiding and should bring a very wet winter
which hopefully will make this area and Carrizo Plains worth the drive. Hopefully they
get the forecast right, its been a long time, especially for CP.
Professional Sierra Landscape Photographer

I don't give out specific route information, my belief is that it takes away from the whole adventure spirit of a trip, if you need every inch planned out, you'll have to get that from someone else.

Have a safer backcountry experience by using the HST ReConn Form 2.0, named after Larry Conn, a HST member: http://reconn.org
User avatar
mello
Topix Acquainted
Posts: 30
Joined: Sat Jan 19, 2013 1:49 pm
Experience: Level 3 Backpacker
Location: Valencia, CA

Re: North Table Mountain Ecological Reserve

Post by mello »

Those are beautiful! Thanks for sharing.

I have to say your gallery has some absolutely gorgeous photographs!
Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 3 guests