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Foghorn Outdoors California Hiking: The Complete Guide to More Than 1,000 Hikes
 
 
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Foghorn Outdoors California Hiking: The Complete Guide to More Than 1,000 Hikes [Paperback]

Tom Stienstra (Author), Ann Marie Brown (Author)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Foghorn Outdoors February 1, 2005
Covering every worthwhile destination in California, this is the hiker's guide to finding the best hikes in the Golden State. Families, day-trippers, and seasoned hikers looking for a change of pace will all find the perfect trail among the options selected by renowned outdoor enthusiasts Tom Stienstra and Ann Marie Brown. Destinations include hikes close to Los Angeles and San Francisco, or treks through the Sierra Nevadas or up the coast. This guidebook provides updated, easy-to-use region and trail maps, descriptive keynotes for every geographical region, and steepness and skill ratings for each hike. Detailed descriptions let hikers know when a trail visits a waterfall, scenic overlook, or wildflower field. Foghorn Outdoors California Hiking has the details on the best California hiking available.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 880 pages
  • Publisher: Avalon Travel Publishing; 7th edition (February 1, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1566916887
  • ISBN-13: 978-1566916882
  • Product Dimensions: 8.1 x 5.1 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #421,576 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

25 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (25 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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21 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Not quite 1000, but a nice survey nonetheless, April 13, 2005
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This review is from: Foghorn Outdoors California Hiking: The Complete Guide to More Than 1,000 Hikes (Paperback)
Writing a hiking guide for the whole state of California is quite an ambitious task. By and large Ann Marie Brown and Tom Stienstra have succeeded. Over the course of 16 chapters, each covering a broad geographical region of the state, they have provided lists of the best hikes in almost any area that one could visit in California. They also provide nice maps of each region they survey showing the approximate location of each trailhead. For those who like exploring in the golden state, this is an excellent book. I have personally hiked over 200 trails in this book and enjoyed almost every one. I look forward to using this book in the future as well.

Having said that, a few caveats are in order. First, the book does not list "over 1000" hikes. Earlier editions did, but many trails have been dropped from this edition. Gone is the Amos Alonzo Stagg tree, a nice walk to the 7th largest sequoia. Trips to Peppermint Creek and Nobe Young Falls are also absent. Some of these hikes have been replaced by others, but on the whole there are fewer trails listed than in previous editions. Second, the book has a strong bias towards Northern California. Not surprisingly, both authors happen to live there now. Of the 964 hikes in this guide, only 317 are south of the Monterey area. I could add numerous trails from the San Bernardino Mountains alone to this book. Finally, you should not expect trail maps in a book of this scope. The authors do, however, tell you where to obtain maps for each trail listed.

These caveats aside, you should purchase this book. It is a great introduction to hiking in California. Once you begin exploring trails in any region you will undoubtably find others to entice you. Happy trails.
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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The ONE BOOK you need to hike, backpack, or walk California (at any skill level), May 29, 2006
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This review is from: Foghorn Outdoors California Hiking: The Complete Guide to More Than 1,000 Hikes (Paperback)
Even in the age of the Internet, these is no other resource as comprehensive and user-friendly as the Foghorn Outdoors California Hiking guide. In fact, this resource transcends the paper-and-ink category by incorporating indexes and cross-references that beat hyper-links any day. The book is prefaced with a California state map broken out into grids. Chapters of the book correspond to grid locations, and each chapter opens with an expanded map of the grid at hand. If, for example, you were looking at the Lancaster/Palmdale area in Chapter/Grid, and you noted that your area of interest was just north of this particular map, you follow the North arrow out of the map, which points the reader to page 596. If you want general areas for perusal, you can turn to the sections that comprise Northern California, Central California, or Southern California areas. If you know your geographic region of interest, it is a snap to locate it on the main state map and find the corresponding chapter. For those following the Pacific Crest Trail, a special index and symbol tracks the hikes which make up the overall trail, and guidance is provided about the general direction (south to north) that the trail is hiked.

If you have a specific interest and no geographic requirements, there are guides to the best hikes for waterfalls, swimming holes, wild flowers, [...]-kicking workouts, beach walks, redwoods, short backpack trips, and for hiking with children. The index calls out even more categories, such as trails for bear-watching, for interesting geology, or for short hikes.

Within each chapter, trails are listed by either official or informal title, followed by the trail-mileage and round trip time to complete. I've found the authors err on the generous side for the hike time, but all estimates are reasonable when compared to other guides and resources. Trail time ranges from a matter of hours to several days. Two icons appear in the header information for each trail--a sneaker indicating difficulty and a river indicating the overall rating. The sneaker scale ranges from "a stroll" ranking of 1 to "a real [...]-kicker" ranking of 5, and it's a terrific way to skim the book for hikes of interest based on ability level. The second icon ranks each trail "overall," on a scale from 1 to 10, involving factors such as scenic beauty and lack of crowds. This second scale is less useful and more ambiguous. The lowest rating I found throughout the whole book was 6. Most were 8, 9, or 10. I felt that rating flat desert loops at 8, when the famed Mount Baden Powell is a 10, doesn't portray the disparity between these two trails. My only explanation is that these authors like hiking so much that they just couldn't give any experience a less-than-positive rating!

My biggest praise for the book is that the authors have personally experienced each one of these 1,000+ trails, so they can provide invaluable insight about parking, avoiding making wrong turns, the optimal time of year to visit, and alternate routes to the same vista point. All trails have info about which user groups are permitted (hikers, bikers, dogs, horses, mountain bikes, wheelchairs) and cost information. Each entry also references the USGS topographic map which covers the area, as well as additional maps from other sources.

You might be tempted to by a thinner volume that focuses on a specific region of The Golden State. I'd urge you to invest wisely in this guide. Different authors divy up the state in different ways, and "central" is a nebulous term. I'm a Southern CA resident, but many of the Central and Northern sites are well within reason for a day's drive for a weekend camping/hiking trip. This is one book no hiker should be without. We've loaned out copy to dozens of friends as reference material.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Weighty in more ways than one, August 10, 2005
This review is from: Foghorn Outdoors California Hiking: The Complete Guide to More Than 1,000 Hikes (Paperback)
My main problem with this hiking book is how it is crafted and its purpose. I grew up in a town along the coast and have spent my whole life hiking in southern California. The southern hikes listed in Foghorn Outdoors California Hiking are full of holes and what's really puzzling - - - missing maps. Forget about taking it along on the hike, it's as heavy as a bottle of water, and who wants to tear out pages.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Can't decide where to hike this weekend? Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
wheelchair facilities, trail information sheet, most major trailheads, person reservation fee, wilderness kiosk, drive through the entrance kiosk, park visitors stations, free wilderness permit, chosen trailhead, mail for this period, recreation pass, vehicle entrance fee, campfire permit, state park entrance fee, park entrance stations, free trail map, shuttle car waiting, camping reservation fee, trailhead quotas, detailed hiking map, drive six miles west, forest offices, valley shuttle bus, left turnoff, drive one mile
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
User Groups, Yosemite National Park, Forest Offices, Tom Harrison Maps, San Francisco, Lake Tahoe, Mount Shasta, Tahoe National Forest, Inyo National Forest, Santa Barbara, Big Sur, Ridge Trail, Yosemite Valley, Sequoia National Forest, Shasta-Trinity National Forest, Mineral King, Bay Area, Death Valley National Park, Los Padres National Forest, Mammoth Lakes, Pacific Crest Trail, East Bay Regional Parks District, Sequoia National Park, Desolation Wilderness, Klamath National Forest
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