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Walking around the amazing Red Wood forest in Muir Woods National Monument near San Francisco, California. This is the loop from entrance to the bridge 4 which is about 2 miles. These red woods are some of the tallest living things on Earth. The tallest one in Muir Woods National Monument reaches to 258 ft and they can live as long as 2000 years. Chapters 00:00:10 Muir Woods National Monument Bronze relief map 00:00:45 Welcome sign and color map 00:01:00 Arriving to Visitor Center 00:01:55 Entering to the bald walking trails 02:50 Arriving to near coffee shop and Bridge 1 00:03:20 Junior Park Ranger show and tell, demo area 00:04:15 Red Wood Tree slice showing birth at 909 AD and fall on 1930 AD 00:04:45 Walking North along Redwood Creek trail 00:07:39 Arriving to Founders Grove 00:11:10 Arriving to the Bridge 2 00:16:11 Bridge 3 00:16:33 Entering the Cathedral Grove silent area 00:32:45 Exposed roots of fallen redwood tree 00:33:17 New growths from the fallen tree trunk 00:33:55 Bootjack and Ben Johnson Trails map sign 00:34:24 Walking on Bridge 4 00:35:54 Ben Johnson Trail sign 00:36:07 Taking Hillside Trail to Park Exit 00:55:25 Hillside trail Sign near Bridge 2 00:55:35 The Bohemian Grove Trail area 00:56:37 Bohemian Grove Area 01:00:47 Fallen redwood tree trunk and slice 01:01:10 Crossing Bridge 1 01:01:40 Walking toward Parking area and exit The forests, chaparral, and grasslands of the Marin Peninsula are the traditional homeland of the Coast Miwok people. For more than 10,000 years, Coast Miwok people have lived along the shorelines of Marin County, and continue to live in the county and beyond today. Stewards of the land, they managed the local watershed where creek and ocean resources were most abundant. They hunted, fished and harvested many of the native plants for food, medicine and other traditional uses https://www.nps.gov/articles/coastmiw... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muir_Wo... Muir Woods National Monument (/mjʊər/ MURE) is a United States National Monument managed by the National Park Service and named after naturalist John Muir. It is located on Mount Tamalpais near the Pacific coast in southwestern Marin County, California. The Monument is part of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area, and is 12 miles (19 km) north of San Francisco. It protects 554 acres (224 ha),[4] of which 240 acres (97 ha) are old growth coast redwood (Sequoia sempervirens) forests, one of a few such stands remaining in the San Francisco Bay Area. One hundred fifty million years ago ancestors of redwood and sequoia trees grew throughout the United States. Today, the Sequoia sempervirens can be found only in a narrow, cool coastal belt from Monterey County, California, in the south to Oregon in the north. Before the logging industry came to California, there were an estimated 2 million acres (8,000 km2) of old growth forest containing redwoods growing in a narrow strip along the coast. By the early 20th century, most of these forests had been cut down. Just north of the San Francisco Bay, one valley named Redwood Canyon remained uncut, mainly due to its relative inaccessibility. This was noticed by William Kent, a rising California politician who would soon be elected to the U.S. Congress. He and his wife, Elizabeth Thacher Kent, purchased 611 acres (247 ha) of land from the Tamalpais Land and Water Company for $45,000 in 1905 with the goal of protecting the redwoods and the mountain above them. The deal was facilitated by banker Lovell White and his activist wife, Laura Lyon White. In 1907, a water company in nearby Sausalito planned to dam Redwood Creek, thereby flooding the valley. When Kent objected to the plan, the water company threatened to use eminent domain and took him to court to attempt to force the project to move ahead. Kent sidestepped the water company's plot by donating 295 acres (119 ha) of the redwood forest to the federal government, thus bypassing the local courts. Music License: The "zero-project" musical works are free under the "Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License". The basis of both licenses is exactly the same: You can copy, distribute, advertise, alter and play a musical work as long as you give credit to the artist. Recommended credits: "zero-project", "www.zero-project.gr" and YouTube Creator Music.