Morro Rock

 

 

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Morro Rock (aka “The Gibraltar of the Pacific”) is a landmark feature on the central California coast. Formed around 23 million years ago as the plug of a now extinct volcano, it rises 581 feet from sea level. In 1542 Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo, a Portuguese explorer, named the rock as ‘El Morro’, which means ‘the crown shaped hill’ in Spanish. The rock was an important navigational aid for mariners for over 300 years, and at least two tribes consider it a sacred site. Today it stands guard over the entrance to the sheltered bay of it’s namesake city, Morro Bay (pop. 14,950). Morro Rock was designated a California Historical Landmark in 1968.

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Montana de Oro Sunset

Montana de Oro is a park located on the central California coast starting at the southern end of the small city of Los Osos. After walking the paths while watching whales spout and breach, seals swimming south a ways out from the shore, and porpoises gliding thru the water, it was then proven to me that you don’t have to go to Jamaica for a great sunset. At the rate things were going, I would not have been at all surprised to have seen the green flash thrown in as part of the sundown finale.

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