Northern California is famous throughout the world for towering redwood
trees that grow to be hundreds of feet tall. There are other trees in the area, however, that
cannot grow to a height of even 8 feet, or a thickness greater than an inch wide. Indeed,
there are mature, cone-bearing cypress and pine trees there that stand only 6 inches high!
To experience this Lilliputian and Brobdingnagian contrast for yourself, take a trip to
Van Damme State Park’s Pygmy Forest, located off Hwy 1, 3 miles south of Mendocino.
Extremely acidic soil low in nutrients is believed to cause the stunted growth of these cypress
and pine trees, found less than a mile away from huge redwoods. It’s amazing that these
trees can manage to remain alive and grow at all under such adverse conditions. When
some of these tiny trees have been cut down, more than 80 to 100 growth rings have been
carefully counted. If you are in the area and have already been wowed by the remarkable
redwood towers that soar into the heavens, you should also check out the Pygmy Forest and
be astonished by the very existence of these tiny trees.
WHERE: In Van Damme State Park off Hwy 1, 3 miles south of Mendocino.
MORE INFO: 707-937-5804