As we are still catering to my mule's healing hind hoof, today's route was a circular one, primarily following a dirt road on the Western plateau of the Mission property that circumscribes a large loop.
First stop, a portrait of each rider with the Mission Padre sign:
What a treat that Woody the quarterhorse/paint was brought out of retirement for an easy stroll, to the delight of C C Beaudette-Wellman. CC cares for many elderly horses who can no longer be ridden, and Woody did his best to prove he was NOT that old quite yet! Bring on the horse cookies and he will have stamina !Mosca the Appendix Thoroughbred is always ready to go, and Jamie Buse is up to the challenge of keeping her on course. She usually gives the impression she'd rather run the trail and we can catch up with her later, but this is a team effort.
Miss Kitty is the nice quarterhorse girl who genuinely seems pleased to be invited along and does her best to be no trouble at all for Kim Farro. Sometimes she spooks at nothing! But she's got the team to protect her so she regains her composure quickly.And of course there's TobeMule and Pat Fish, so pleased to have compadres on the adventure. No competition here, just a nice walk with pleasant friends and landscape to see and horizons to gaze upon. The absolute antidote and opposite of the daily job of tattooing indoors under bright lights. The relaxation of passage through nature, at 2.2mph.First up on the day's obstacle course, an employee on a very loud machine was scraping the trails.We waved and he waved back.... finally he stopped long enough for us to go past and then scurry off on the trail he was also heading down.To reach our intended route we needed to get to the central loop, then go West up an access road. That meant going past the first buildings and then to the main trail.
We do not have the option of going through the historic buildings. We obey the rules! Although, as I must always insist, Tobe is not a horse.
The
California State Parks website says "The only California mission not
organized around a quadrangle, Mission
La Purísima was built in a linear fashion. The mission leaders choose
the linear layout to avoid flooding patterns and because the mission
leaders felt the docile Chumash did not need to be contained within the
typical fortress like quadrangle."
I am forbidden access while astride, so I cannot document that part of the property. But Googling provides this historic perspective:
It is now part of the California State Parks system, and is the only example in California of a complete Spanish Catholic mission complex. Well worth a field trip!
People in foot can duck inside the adobe buildings and see recreations of their uses.
This building is labeled as the Blacksmith's workshop.
All we on equines care about is that some eager tourist's child doesn't come plunging out of the doorway at high speed.
One of the buildings had this mountain lion warning sign posted.
Years ago I was riding here and Tobe kept sniffing the ground like a tracking hound, and acting concerned. After my ride I was told by a park employee that there had been numerous mountain lion sightings that week.
But we were not worried. As much as these ladies like to chatter I have no doubt that we'd never come upon a puma unawares. They'd definitely hear us coming.The trail system is nicely marked, but I confess that, as always, I rely on my and Tobe's sense of direction and only care about the map afterwards, to show where we have been.
The Cuclillo de Tierra Trail seemed to have been the whole loop we rode.
We did make one wrong turn, and went up a side trail (visible as a spur off the track in the map) where we came to a water trough. Too slimy for Tobe's taste.
But on a hot summer day it might have been more welcomed. That error in route DID bring us to this wonderful view:With the agricultural fields in the near valley and the coastal mountains in the distance.We backtracked to the main trail and passed by many healthy stands of opuntia cactus covered in fruit.And on the sides of the road the trees had wonderful displays of lace lichen.I always wish for scratch-and-sniff, so that people looking at these pictures could be enveloped in the scents of coastal sage brush scrub. They will just need to go for a hike!The reward is both the near detail and the far perspective. This view shows the water treatment plant below, which we often follow a trail on the edge of.I wasn't quick enough to snap the bunny that hopped across the trail right here...Nor was I fast enough to capture the family of quail running across here.
We often hear quail more than we see them. They chatter in the bushes, discussing us as we go by. Then sometimes they burst forth and scurry in a line across the road ahead of us.
We had a good laugh about it.And then we descended back to the parking area to strip the tack off the creatures and leave them to their lunch while we had ours at the picnic table.And another trail explored becomes a memory, commemorated and shared in these blogs.
“You should always be taking pictures,
if not with a camera then with your mind.
Memories you capture on purpose
are always more vivid than the ones you pick up by accident.”
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