"in the middle of nowhere" as it is tucked in the middle of endless, silent woods. It is part of a kooky tourist-oriented complex called "Trees of Mystery" that includes a restaurant (closed for the season) and a whole complex of wacky roadside attractions. I have a thing for kitchy tourist traps, so I was very excited to go. Trees of Mystery had the perfect combination of kookyness and actual educational/entertainment value and we loved spending Thanksgiving morning there.
Our motel was a classic roadside number, but updated with this cool giant photo wallpaper mural and a few other hip touches.





Our first stop was the Family Tree, which is a great example of one of the unique features of the redwoods' growth pattern: reiteration. Some of the largest trees have horizontal branches that are so thick and strong, new vertical trunks grow from them. These secondary trunks would be huge trees on their own, and together they form an entire forest canopy from one trunk. In the second photo below, you can probably make out some of these secondary trunks in the "family tree."


Here's me with a pretty big tree.

Finally, we reached the gondola and got on board. It was a beautiful ride up through the top of the trees to an observation platform in the mountains, where we used binoculars to look out at waves crashing on the far away shore on one side and up into bigger hills of great trees the other way.





If you'd like to learn more about the amazing redwoods, check out this Ted talk video: http://www.ted.com/talks/richard_preston_on_the_giant_trees.html
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