From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Location of the Dick Smith Wilderness in Santa Barbara and Ventura
Counties, California.
The Dick Smith Wilderness is a wilderness area
in the mountains of eastern Santa Barbara
County, California, USA, with a portion in Ventura County. It is
completely contained within the Los Padres National Forest,
and is northeast of the city of Santa Barbara and north of
the city of Ojai. It is most easily accessible
from two trailheads off State Route 33, which runs north from Ojai.
It is adjacent to the large San Rafael Wilderness on the west
and the Matilija Wilderness on the south. Across Highway 33 to the
east, and also in the Los Padres National Forest, is the large
Sespe Wilderness.
The wilderness is named after Santa Barbaran Dick Smith, who was
a reporter, photographer, historian and pioneer in environmental
journalism for the Santa Barbara News-Press.
Smith spent more times in these remote regions of Santa Barbara
County than anyone, covering the area on horseback and accompanied
by his dog. In recognition of Dick's personal pursuit to preserve
the wild back country the area was named in his honor, and the U.S.
Congress created the wilderness in 1984 as part of the California
Wilderness Act.[1]
Geography
The wilderness is in the Transverse Ranges, east of the
junction of the San Rafael Mountains and Sierra Madre Mountains at Big Pine
Mountain. Madulce Peak, at 6,541 feet, is the highest mountain
completely within the wilderness, and the lowest point is 3,700
feet where Santa Barbara Creek exits to the north. The wilderness
contains the divide between two watersheds: the Cuyama River to the
north, and the Santa Ynez River to the south. The
major streams carrying runoff to those two rivers are Santa Barbara
Creek and Mono Creek, respectively.
The Big Pine Fault cuts through the wilderness from west to
east, trending northeast after exiting the wilderness, in the
direction of the nearby San Andreas Fault, which is only
about 12 miles from the wilderness boundary. The Pine Mountain
Fault splits off from the Big Pine; it is visible along the
southern slope of nearby Reyes Peak. Most rocks in the wilderness
are Eocene marine sediments,
with some scattered outcrops of Pliocene, Miocene, and Oligocene sediments, especially immediately
to the south of the Pine Mountain Fault (the contact between these
rock units and the Eocene sediments defines the Big Pine
Fault).[2]
Climate
The climate of the wilderness is Mediterranean, but modified by
distance from the ocean. Since much of the wilderness is separated
from the ocean by a mountain divide, and is at fairly high
altitude, freezes are common in the winter, as is occasional snow.
Summers at lower elevations are hot and dry; rain is extremely rare
between April and October, and dry lightning from the occasional
thunderstorms can start fires.
Vegetation and wildlife
Vegetation in the wilderness is predominantly chaparral,
although there are regions of conifers, including big cone Douglas
fir, especially on north-facing slopes, such as the northern
exposure of Madulce Peak.[3] Streams
contain riparian vegetation, and there are some stands of oak
trees. A relict population of great basin sagebrush (Artemisia
tridentata) is visible along Highway 33 at the Bear Canyon
trailhead; several populations of this species are left over from
the last glacial epoch, when it was more widespread due to the
cooler climate then.
Wildlife that may be encountered in the wilderness includes coyotes, black bears, and mountain lions. The
California
Condor can occasionally be seen, since the endangered bird was
released back into the wild in 1992, and the wilderness is
positioned between the two major Southern California condor
sanctuaries, the Sisquoc (in the San Rafael Wilderness to the
northwest) and the Sespe (in the Sespe wilderness to the
southeast).
History
The region has been continuously inhabited by humans for over
10,000 years. Rock art by the resident Chumash Indians is
scattered across the region; locations of rock paintings are
generally not made public for fear of vandalism.
Almost all of the wilderness was burned in 2007 by the Zaca Fire.
References
- Gagnon, Dennis R. Hiking the Santa Barbara
Backcountry. The Ward Ritchie Press, Pasadena, California,
1974. ISBN 0378-03542-8
- Charles W. Jennings and Rudolph G. Strand. Geologic Map of
California, Los Angeles Sheet. State of California, Division
of Mines and Geology. 1969.
Notes
- ^
From the Dick Smith Wilderness description page at the Los Padres
National Forest web site [1]
- ^
Jennings/Strand, Geologic Map of California, Los Angeles Sheet
(1:250,000 scale).
- ^
From the Dick Smith Wilderness description page at the Los Padres
National Forest web site [2]
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