Full at 
http://blog.cheapmotelsandahotplate.org/2010/06/03/down-along-the-coast-part-i/
 
California 1 is an engineering marvel, a highway that hugs the breathtaking 
California coast for hundreds of miles. It doesn’t go from the northern to the 
southern border, but it covers enough of the coast to satisfy you for a long 
time.  US 101 will get you into California from the north, but while it stays 
close to the coast and the ocean comes out of hiding at several points, this 
highway stays east of the Pacific.
     From the border with Oregon and for about seventy miles south, to the 
small fishing town of Trinidad (where we had fresh fish and chips at the 
Seascape restaurant, tucked into a cove with views of fishing boats and large 
rocks in the sea), 101 puts you in redwoods country. In 1850 there were about 
2,000,000 acres of redwood forests in southern Oregon and northern California. 
In an oft-told tale, gold was discovered, this time in the Trinity River. 
Greedy whites came calling. The native peoples—who had managed to live in the 
area for thousands of years in harmony with the great trees, using them in 
daily life but not cutting them down en masse—were killed or booted out and 
left to fend for themselves; what gold there was in the rivers was taken; the 
miners then took up lumbering to feed the wood demand of the cities and towns; 
and before long, 90 percent of the redwoods were gone, forever.
 
michael yates
 
ps the more we travel, the more lost we feel.  there is something so profoundly 
wrong with the country.  you can see
it in the omnipresent environmental degradation and feel it in the anxiety of 
the people.
                                          
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