
The Backbone Trail in the Santa Monica Mountains Welcomes Back Hikers
The dramatic pathway closed following last year’s devastating wildfire.
-
CategoryExperiences, Outdoor Adventure
A 67-mile trail in the Santa Monica Mountain ravaged by the Woolsey Fire has fully reopened. The last six miles of the Backbone Trail are now open to hikers eight months after the wildfire blasted the region.
According to the Los Angeles Times, “The Backbone Trail was completed in 2016 after a 40-year effort to acquire a tract of land that traverses one of Southern California’s largest undeveloped areas. The trail stretches from Point Mugu State Park to Will Rogers State Historic Park and was established with public funding and private donations from the likes of former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and fitness pioneer Betty Weider.
“The Backbone Trail is important because it puts the Santa Monica Mountains on the map,” Ron Webster, one of the trail builders, said in 2016. “We may not have the biggest waterfalls or the biggest trees, but we do have the biggest ocean.”
You can read more about the trail and other rebuilding projects here.
Are These the Best Beaches in California?
A curated list of sand meets surf from one end of the California coastline to the other.
Navigating California’s Three Cannabis Regulatory Bodies
Due to COVID-10, the long-awaited consolidation is on the back burner.
Friday Finds: Romantic Rendezvous
Set hearts aflutter with these California-inspired date ideas for your Valentine.