Travel Guide to California

2015 Travel Guide to California

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Heritage & Culture Native American tribes such as the Yurok and Hoopa lived along the North Coast for centuries before the arrival of fur trap- pers—both Russians working their way down from Alaska and American moun- tain men such as Jedediah Smith coming overland. For more than two centuries, resource extraction—primarily logging— was the region's economic engine. As dwindling forests and stricter environ- mental laws took their tolls starting in the 1970s, the North Coast has transitioned to tourism as its mainstay. Family Fun Young children might have trouble fully appreciating the timelessness of an ancient redwood tree, but they'll enjoy a gondola ride through the silent forest canopy and a chance to have their picture taken with four- story-high statues of Paul Bunyan and Babe the Blue Ox. Look for it at Trees of Mystery, near the town of Klamath. INSIDER'S TIP » To satisfy a lumberjack-sized appetite, drive across Humboldt Bay on the Samoa Bridge to the SAMOA COOKHOUSE for colossal, all-you-can-eat portions served family style. The last surviving cookhouse of its kind in the U.S., it's been serving hungry mill workers, longshoremen and tourists since 1890. samoacookhouse.com BIKERS HUG the curves on Highway 1, top; grapes on the vine show the morning dew, Mendocino County, below; BaXery Point Lighthouse in Crescent City, boXom.

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