<h2><SPAN name="topic3" id="topic3"></SPAN>Mountain and Valley</h2>
<p>It is hard for us to leave the falls with all their surrounding
beauty, and with reluctance we take one last look at this
delightful glen planted in the heart of the wilderness, and strike
out on the upward trail.</p>
<p>At a turn in the path, where it seems as if we were about to
walk off into space, we get a glimpse through the trees of Mount
Tamalpais. Towering above us with its seam-scarred sides, rent and
torn by the storms of centuries, it rears its jagged dome amid the
clouds. We can just make out a train of diminutive cars winding a
tortuous course in and out around the curves, the toy engine
fighting every inch of the steep incline, and panting like an
athlete with Herculean efforts to reach the summit. Across the
intervening space a hawk wheels and turns in ever-widening circles.
We watch him through the glass, rising higher and higher with each
successive sweep, until he fades into a mere speck in the distant
blue.</p>
<p>Up we climb, until another view discloses the valley below us
like a panorama. We creep out to the very edge, and for miles in
either direction it stretches away, as if some giant hand had
cleaved for himself a pathway between the mountains. We stand
spellbound, entranced by the wonderful beauty of the scene, and
drink long draughts of the fresh mountain air.</p>
<p>The dazzling splendor of the noonday sun brings out vividly the
variegated colors of the foliage, and banks of white fleecy clouds
floating overhead trail their shadows over the valley and up the
mountainside like ghostly outriders. The pointed tops of the fir
trees, miles below us, look like stunted shrubbery; the buildings
in Mill Valley seem like dolls' houses nestling among the trees;
while far in the distance the blue waters of the bay glisten in the
sunshine, Alcatraz Island rises out of its watery bed, and San
Francisco stands silhouetted against the distant hills.</p>
<p>We are lost in wonder at the grand spectacle spread out before
us; it is a very fairyland of enchantment, as if brought into being
by the genii of Aladdin. For nearly an hour we watch the lights and
shadows flicker over the valley, the high lights in sharp contrast
to the deep dark purples of the cañon.</p>
<p>On the far side of the valley the sloping hills are covered with
that most exquisite flower, the California poppy, its countless
millions of golden blossoms fairly covering the earth. It is a sun
worshiper, for not until the warm sun kisses its golden head does
it wake from its slumbers and throw open its tightly rolled petals.
No wonder the Spanish mariners sailing along the coast and seeing
these golden flowers covering the hills like a yellow carpet called
this "The Land of Fire." This beautiful flower is one of
California's natural wonders—"Copa-de-oro"—cup of gold.
It is as famed in the East as in the West, and thousands come to
California to see it in its prodigal beauty. Steps should quickly
be taken to conserve this wild splendor, and restrictions should be
put upon the vandals, who, not content with picking what they can
use to beautify the home, tear them up by the roots just to see how
large an armful they can gather, scattering their golden petals to
the four winds of heaven when they begin to droop.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN href= "images/027.jpg" target="blank" name="image027" id="image027"> <ANTIMG width-obs="100%" src="images/027.jpg" alt="THE TURN OF THE TRAIL" /></SPAN>THE TURN OF THE TRAIL</div>
<p>An old dead pine, whitened by many storms, its gnarled and
twisted branches pathetic in their shorn splendor, is brought into
prominence by the background of vivid green into which it seems to
shrink, as if to hide its useless naked skeleton.</p>
<p>But the lengthening shadows in the valley warn us to begin our
descent, and as we have no desire to sleep out on the trail without
blankets or other camp comforts, we begin our return trip by
another route. Light wisps of fog begin to gather around the top of
Mount Tamalpais, and we hasten our steps, for to be caught in a fog
at this altitude may mean a forced camp, with all its attending
discomforts.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN href= "images/029.jpg" target="blank" name="image029" id="image029"> <ANTIMG width-obs="100%" src="images/029.jpg" alt="MOUNTAIN AND VALLEY" /></SPAN>MOUNTAIN AND VALLEY</div>
<p>We pause for a moment on the margin of a little lake nestling
amid the hills, its blue waters, unruffled by the wind in its
sheltered nook, reflecting back as in a mirror the trees that
surround it on all sides. But we may not linger to drink in the
beauty of this quiet spot, where the red deer once slaked their
thirst at its quiet margin, standing kneedeep in the rushes and
lilypads.</p>
<p>Ahead of us a blue jay, that tattler of the woods, flashes his
blue coat in and out among the trees; always saucy, impertinent,
and suspicious, bubbling over with something important to tell, and
afraid he will not be the first to tell it. When he discovers us
watching, he sets up his clamorous cry of "Thief! Thief!" and
hurries away to spread the alarm. A mighty borrower of trouble,
this gayly dressed harlequin of the woods, and yet the forest would
not seem complete without his gay blue vestments.</p>
<p>Suddenly we find ourselves in a cul-de-sac; the trail coming to
an abrupt end. We retrace our steps, and after much searching, find
a narrow trail almost hidden by vines and underbrush. Venturing in,
we follow its tortuous and uneven course along the edge of the
cañon, and, as the evening shadows gather, and the stars
come out one by one, tired and dust-covered, we reach the valley,
and enjoy the moonlight ride across the bay to San Francisco.</p>
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<div class="figcenter"><SPAN href= "images/topic04.png" target="blank"><ANTIMG width-obs="100%" src= "images/topic04.png" alt="Cañon and Hillside" /></SPAN></div>
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