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Limekiln State Park Limekiln State Park 63025 Highway 1, Big Sur, CA 93920 (805) 434-1996 Our Mission The mission of California State Parks is to provide for the health, inspiration and education of the people of California by helping to preserve the state’s extraordinary biological diversity, protecting its most valued natural and cultural resources, and creating opportunities for high-quality outdoor recreation. © 1998 California State Parks (Rev. 2016) CALIFORNIA STATE PARKS P.O. Box 942896 Sacramento, CA 94296-0001 For information call: (800) 777-0369. (916) 653-6995, outside the U.S. 711, TTY relay service www.parks.ca.gov SaveTheRedwoods.org/csp This park is operated in partnership with Parks Management Company: www.campone.com A t dawn, Big Sur’s majesty is almost painful to behold. That same prehistoric look, the look of always, Nature smiling at herself in the mirror of eternity. –Henry Miller, Big Sur and the Oranges of Hieronymus Bosch California State Parks supports equal access. Prior to arrival, visitors with disabilities who need assistance should contact the park at (805) 434-1996. If you need this publication in an alternate format, contact [email protected] .
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  • Limekiln State Park

    Limekiln State Park 63025 Highway 1, Big Sur, CA 93920

    (805) 434-1996

    Our Mission The mission of California State Parks is to provide for the health, inspiration and education of the people of California by helping to preserve the state’s extraordinary biological diversity, protecting its most valued natural and cultural resources, and creating opportunities for high-quality outdoor recreation.

    © 1998 California State Parks (Rev. 2016)

    CALIFORNIA STATE PARKS P.O. Box 942896

    Sacramento, CA 94296-0001 For information call: (800) 777-0369.

    (916) 653-6995, outside the U.S. 711, TTY relay service www.parks.ca.gov

    SaveTheRedwoods.org/csp

    This park is operated in partnership with Parks Management Company: www.campone.com

    A“ t dawn, Big Sur’s majesty is almost painful

    to behold. That same

    prehistoric look, the

    look of always, Nature

    smiling at herself in the

    mirror of eternity.” –Henry Miller, Big Sur and the Oranges of Hieronymus Bosch

    California State Parks supports equal access. Prior to arrival, visitors with disabilities who need assistance should contact the park at (805) 434-1996. If you need this publication in an alternate format, contact [email protected].

    http://SaveTheRedwoods.org/csphttp://www.campone.comhttp://www.parks.ca.gov

  • their lifeways to the area’s climatic and environmental changes. Native groups traveled from the coast to the interior valleys, following the marine and terrestrial resources that sustained them. They gathered fish, shellfish, and various grasses and seeds or hunted small and large game and birds. They traded with other groups for items they could not produce themselves.

    NATURAL HISTORY F rom the redwoods to the sea describes the unique topography of Limekiln State Park. This gem of a park, 52 miles south of Carmel, adjoins the Ventana Wilderness area of the Los Padres National Forest. On the legendary Big Sur coastline where the Santa Lucia Mountains meet the Pacific, the park’s more than 700 acres offer peaceful solitude, a breathtaking waterfall, and seascapes of the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary.

    Watch wildlife from the beach or along fern-lined trails, and picnic among the redwoods. Deep within their forest sanctuary, along the west fork of Limekiln Creek, tower the four enormous kilns from which the creek takes its name.

    The summer climate at this sparsely populated segment of the central coast is typically mild. Morning fog in the summer usually burns off before midday. Temperatures vary from about 50 to 75 degrees. Other seasons can vary from one extreme to another on the same day.

    The park is located in the geologically young (about 2½ million years) Santa Lucia Range, which runs from Monterey southeast to San Luis Obispo. Because its geography creates numerous microclimates, the park is one of the few places on earth where

    fog-loving redwoods thrive not far from drought-tolerant yucca. Young redwoods, oaks, sycamores, and maples flourish in the canyons; chaparral and scrub are

    found at higher elevations.

    The incursion of the Spanish, Mexicans, and Americans brought changes that drastically affected the lives of the people. Taken into the mission system, the people struggled with diseases to which they had no immunity. Pestilence, violence, and broken promises all took their toll; seemingly well-intentioned treaties with the Indians were not sent

    to federal offices for ratification. Within a few generations, the native people’s traditiolands had been taken over by the settlers.

    At the end of the mission era, some of the native people were employed in agriculture, fishing, and other industries. Today, descendants of the Salinan, Esselen, and Ohlone people are working to revive their cultural traditions and to pass them on to the next generations.

    WILDLIFE

    Limekiln Creek’s year-round water supply provides excellent habitat for

    diverse animals, including mountain lions, bobcats, foxes, raccoons, and

    ringtails. Offshore, sea otters play in kelp beds, and female gray whales with

    calves migrate north in early spring. The varied terrain is home to more than 200 bird species, including seabirds such as pelicans and gulls and shorebirds such as willets, oystercatchers, and sandpipers. Some rare and endangered birds, including California condors and peregrine falcons, glide above the canyons.

    Peregrine falcon

    THE LIME KILNS

    Beginning in 1887, the Rockland Lime and Lumber Company extracted, processed, and exported thousands of barrels of lime from Limekiln Canyon. Four stone and iron furnaces were built at the base of a large talus slope eroding from a limestone deposit. Limestone rocks were loaded into

    NATIVE PEOPLE

    Archaeological evidence suggests that the ancestors of today’s Salinan, Esselen, and Ohlone people inhabited the Big Sur coast for thousands of years, adapting Limekiln Creek

    nal

  • Historic lime kiln

    Falls Trail — Hike along Limekiln Creek to the beautiful 100-foot waterfall. The vision of this fan-shaped fall is worth getting your feet wet when crossing the creek.

    Picnicking — A short walk from the parking lot will reveal many picnic spots without tables at the beach or in the redwood groves. Please do not use the campsite tables.

    Limekiln Falls

    DAY USE

    Hiking Limekiln Trail — An easy half-mile walk leads you across three scenic bridges to the enormous furnaces that once supplied lime used for mortar in San Francisco’s brick buildings.

    Fishing — Rough surf conditions can make fishing from the beach difficult and dangerous. Stream fishing is prohibited in the park most of the year.

    Anglers 16 and over must carry valid California fishing licenses. For full regulations, visit www.wildlife.ca.gov.

    Camping About a dozen developed campsites sit among the trees near Limekiln Creek. Several ocean-view sites on the beach are perfect for watching sea birds before the sun goes down over the rolling surf. Hot pay showers are nearby. Make camping reservations well in advance at www.parks.ca.gov or call (800) 444-7275.

    ACCESSIBLE FEATURES

    Accessibility is continually improving. For updates, visit http://access.parks.ca.gov.

    PLEASE REMEMBER

    • DANGER: Coastal cliffs and the walls of Limekiln Canyon are steep and unstable. DO NOT CLIMB.

    • WARNING: Use extreme caution near the ocean; unexpectedly high waves and strong currents can surprise you.

    • Recreational vehicles over 24 feet cannot maneuver in the park. Maximum trailer length is 15 feet.

    • Parking is limited to one or two vehicles per site. See the site limit when reserving.

    • Showers are only for registered campers. • Dogs must be kept on a six-foot leash

    at all times; only service animals are permitted on trails.

    • Fires are permitted only in provided fire rings. Do not gather dead or down wood. Firewood is sold at the entry kiosk.

    • Natural and cultural features are protected by state law and may not be removed or altered.

    • Please help us preserve the natural features of the park by

    the kilns, where very hot wood fires burned for long periods to purify the lime.

    The lime was packed into barrels, hauled by wagon to Rockland Landing on the coast, and loaded onto ships that carried it to northern ports for use in concrete.

    After only three years, the limestone deposit was all but depleted, as was the redwood forest that had been nearly clear-cut to use for lumber and fuel. Today the four kilns, some stone walls, and bridge abutments are the only remains of the once-thriving lime industry.

    In 1994 Save the Redwoods League and the American Land Conservancy sought to protect and restore this coastal redwood forest. California Conservation Corps team members built trails and campgrounds so that people could experience and enjoy this park forever.

    NEARBY STATE PARKS • POISON OAK: • Hearst San Simeon

    State Historical Monument 26 miles south off Hwy. 1 Cambria 93428 (805) 927-2020

    Avoid poison oak’s itchy rash by staying on trails and in designatedcampground areas.• Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park

    12 miles to the north on Hwy. 1 Big Sur 93920 (831) 649-2836

    staying on trails.

    Poison Oak

    http:http://access.parks.ca.govhttp:www.parks.ca.govhttp:www.wildlife.ca.gov

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    © 2008 California State Parks (Rev. 2016)

    L I M E K I L N

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    Limekiln Our Mission NATIVE PEOPLE NATURAL HISTORY WILDLIFETHE LIME KILNS

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    NEARBY STATE PARKS ACCESSIBLE FEATURES PLEASE REMEMBER • POISON OAK: