LPFA: For the Trails!


Hi Friends, 

We hope everyone enjoyed a few days off last week, and found the time to get out and explore the forest. Some pristine November days were to be had out there, especially in the Sespe Wilderness. As I’m sure you’re aware by now from the dozens of emails filling your inbox, today is GivingTuesday, a big day for fundraising in the non-profit community. And at LPFA, a HUGE day to support the trails in the Los Padres Forest.

This year, our goal is to raise $15,000 for maintenance and repair of the Condor Trail in Ventura County. We’re halfway there. But we need your help to make it happen. What will this fund exactly? It will fund a full 10-day backcountry Working Vacation on the upper reaches of the Piedra Blanca Trail. An overgrown, washed out, and downed tree-covered trail in need of the LPFA trail maintenance special. It will also fund several smaller volunteer projects above and below this section of trail, to ensure we can gain access to the sections most in need of work. By the end of 2026, you’ll be able to get from Piedra Blanca Trailhead to the top of Pine Mountain without crawling, ducking, or pack-hoisting, but we need support to make that happen!

We say Condor Trail, not Piedra Blanca Trail, because this project is part of a larger mission: to restore the trails of this essential Los Padres route from Lake Piru to Highway 33. This isn’t a one off project, but a multi-year initiative, and we’re in the home stretch. Since 2022, LPFA has maintained the Pothole Trail, Agua Blanca Trail, Alder Creek Trail, Sespe River Trail, Piedra Blanca Trail, Reyes Peak Trail and Boulder Canyon Trail. Over 30 miles of trail restored to standard. 30 miles of trail open and accessible for the public to enjoy. 30 miles of trail free of brush, downed trees and poison oak, and waiting for your footsteps.

This GivingTuesday, please consider supporting the trails that support you. With a gift to LPFA, you will ensure these trails stay maintained, open and accessible for the public to enjoy.

For the trails, 

LPFA 


Los Padres Fire Restrictions Lifted!

Doesn’t get much better than a warm campfire with friends on a cold night in the Los Padres….


Hello Friends,

We bring good news for backcountry travelers: Fire Restrictions have been lifted across the Los Padres Forest. Thanks to the storms last week, backcountry season has arrived earlier than usual this year and campfires are now allowed. Just in time for dropping nighttime temperatures and the long, cold, and star-filled nights that accompany this time of year ~ Hurrah!

Make sure to do your research before planning trips and look out for any superseding orders that disallow campfires (ie the Santa Barbara Frontcountry and West Cuesta Ridge). And please remember to be fire-safe and grab a free campfire permit to keep on you while out in the forest. With all this rain, the forest is looking more like early spring than November right now. Backcountry season is NOW!

LPFA




LPFA volunteer trail crews keep our trails open and ready to enjoy! On the Alder Creek Trail, part of the Ventura County Condor Trail. Photo, Brandy L.

We’re here for the trails. The veins of the Los Padres that transport us from our daily life back to the places that feed our being. Places where life is stiller, clearer and breathtaking. Sespe Creek, Pine Mountain, Alder Creek. Places where water flows, birds sing, and trees older than us stand tall and proud. We need the trails. And they need us. They need care, footsteps, and support. 

At LPFA, we know that trails don’t maintain themselves. We’ve seen too many disappear from lack of vital funding to maintain them. We’ve spent too much time crawling in the brush, following a bear path we thought was the trail, fighting through wild rose, whitethorn ceanothus and poison oak, only to find the next section of trail in worse shape than the last. We’re here to ensure our trails stay open and accessible for all to enjoy. To ensure our trails provide more Type 1 fun, than Type 2 or 3. To ensure these veins of the backcountry keep pumping and providing the pathways for us to return to the forest, time and time again. 

This GivingTuesday, show your support for the trails that support you.



Is in November or February? Here’s to the trails that take us home….

LPFA x Piedra Blanca Trail

Nothing quite like a sun-soaked view down the Piedra Blanca Trail.  photo, Jeri H.


Does a trail get much more inviting than this? Piedra Blanca magic. photo, Jeri H.

A major goal for LPFA in 2026 will be continuing work on the Gene Marshall-Piedra Blanca Trail. This trail is not only part of the Condor Trail, but is one of only two National Recreation Trails (NRT) in the Los Padres Forest and sits high on the short list of the most iconic LP trails. NRTs are designated at the federal level and must demonstrate that they represent their region, support a diverse community, and are one of the best trails in the country. 

You’d be hard pressed to find a trail more representative of the Los Padres than the Piedra Blanca Trail. In just over 16 miles, it passes through a Wild & Scenic River, otherworldly rock formations, rich chaparral diversity, towering mixed conifer forest, and unobstructed panoramic views. But, this trail needs some serious work. The middle section is thick with brush, bramble, and downed trees, as well as several slides and washouts with consequential falls. We’ve been chipping away at the brush over the past few years, and now it’s time to finish the job. With your support this GivingTuesday, LPFA will get this nationally-recognized gem of an LP trail back into hiking shape!





The time to order your 2026 Los Padres Calendar is NOW! Each year, LPFA puts together a calendar featuring all the sights, seasons, and stunning diversity of the Los Padres Forest. It’s a great way to experience the beauty of the Los Padres every single day. And even better, all proceeds from calendar sales go directly toward trail maintenance in the Los Padres Forest. So next time you’re hiking a well-groomed trail, thank yourself for picking that Los Padres calendar for only $20…..


In case you missed it, a recording of LPFA’s Condor Trail Talk is now on the LPFA YouTube page! What a great night this was. Thank you to all our donors and supporters who made it happen. So good to see so many folks come out in support of the Condor Trail. This talk features an hour long, photo-filled slideshow of Addison Jerlow’s FKT thru-hike of the trail in March 2025, followed by a Q&A with Addison and the author of the Condor Trail Guidebook, Brian Sarvis.


LPFA’s fall Working Vacation is right around the corner! Join us December 5 – 14th for a car camping Working Vacation on the Pothole Trail near Lake Piru. This project has been in the works for some time now, and we are absolutely thrilled to be breaking ground on a reroute of the lower Pothole Trail! Come out and help make it happen. Haven’t volunteered before? No problem! We’ll train you on the job. There’s nothing better than workin’ trail all day, then sitting back while LPFA provides some cold drinks and dinner for you and all the new friends you made on the way.


Lots of water flowing in the forest. And it’s only November….

LPFA Working Vacation, GivingTuesday & Seasonal Gates

The Santa Ynez River flowing strong again over the Sage Hill Crossing. photo, Chris O.

Hi Friends,

The Los Padres got a good and early soaking over the last 5 days. So early, in fact, it set the record for the most rainfall the Santa Barbara area has seen in November in recorded history. This storm seemed to focus heavily along the Santa Ynez Range, with rainfall totals in the mountains averaging about 11 inches, and San Marcos Pass (the lightning rod of LP rain accumulation) coming in just below 15 inches. Nordhoff Ridge saw over 10 inches, Cone Peak as well, and much of the backcountry and San Luis County LP got at least 5 inches. All in all a healthy and welcomed start to the season.

As tough as it is to do after a few days stuck inside, the best thing for the health of trails is to give them time to dry after significant rainfall. If your foot sinks down, turn around…. or something like that. With all that precip, we’re likely to see a few issues along the trails over the coming days. When you’re hiking around — after the trails dry out — let us know at INFO@LPForest.org if you come across any downed trees or trail damage and we’ll get out there to fix it up as soon as we can!

LPFA



For GivingTuesday this year, LPFA has our sights set on an epic network of trails through the Sespe Wilderness. We are raising funds to maintain the Ventura County section of the Condor Trail! The CT route through the Ventura backcountry begins at the Pothole Trailhead near Lake Piru, travels through the heart of the Sespe Wilderness, and heads up and over Pine Mountain to Ozena Station on Highway 33. Trails included in this project are: Pothole Trail, Agua Blanca Trail, Bucksnort Trail, Alder Creek Trail, Sespe River Trail, Piedra Blanca Trail, Reyes Peak Trail and Boulder Canyon Trail.

Got a favorite? Our goal is to maintain as many of the most overgrown, washed out and downed tree-covered sections of this route as we can in the next two years. If you use any of these trails, please consider donating to the LPFA 2025 GivingTuesday campaign, and share this fundraiser with your friends and family. Donations like yours are what keep us out in the forest, working hard, and ensuring these trails remain safe and open for all to enjoy.


LPFA has spent a ton of time on the Ventura County Condor Trail the past two years, completing nearly 30 miles of trail maintenance to standard. Help us keep this project going strong! From left: Piedra Blanca Trail, Reyes Peak Trail, Alder Creek Trail with volunteers putting in the good work.



From up on the Pothole Trail….

POTHOLE WORKING VACATION, DEC 5 – 14

The fall LPFA Working Vacation will be from December 5 – 14th on the Pothole Trail! This is a project years in the making and a bit different from our typical Working Vacations. LPFA will be car camping and BUILDING NEW TRAIL by way of a reroute of the first 1.5 miles of the Pothole Trail! If you haven’t joined a Working Vacation in the past, they are an absolute blast. LPFA provides the food, drinks and tools and volunteers come out to work the trail, share some laughs, and have an all around great time.

If you couldn’t tell already, we are absolutely stoked to break ground on this project. Sign on up and let’s get out there!



SEASONAL GATES SWING SHUT

With the first major storm system of the year, many gates in the forest have closed for the season. Some gates are opened/closed on established dates (Grade Valley, Pine Mountain), others are opened/closed around weather events – open during dry times and closed when rain is forecast (West Camino Cielo, First Crossing). At this point, all dirt roads in the forest are likely closed for the season. But, we recommend doing your homework ahead of time. Here are a few resources:

  • The Forest Service has a page dedicated to road and campground closures. It may not be exactly up to date, especially following the shutdown, so give the Ranger Stations a call to confirm. Their phone numbers are also listed on the page.
  • HikeLosPadres.com has a page with status and location of the gates that often provide (or deny) the most access. If you have any updates or would like to see gates added, let us know INFO@LPForest.org.
  • Grade Valley Rd
  • Santa Barbara Canyon Rd
  • Frazier Mountain Rd 
  • Rancho Nuevo Rd
  • Dough Flat Rd
  • Lockwood Creek Rd
  • Scott Russell Rd
  • San Emigdio Rd
  • First Crossing
  • West Camino Cielo (at Winchester Canyon)
  • Sage Hill Crossing
  • Sierra Madre Rd

The Santa Barbara high country after the storm. No snow accumulation, but lots of early season green….

LPFA: It’s Gotta Be #GivingTuesday Somewhere


Lake Fire 
Los Padres Trail Restoration



‘It’s gotta be Tuesday somewhere’

Hello Friends,

#GivingTuesday is just about here and we wanted to remind everyone that the LPFA will be focused this year on raising funds to help repair and reopen the fire damaged and currently closed forest trails within the Lake Fire scar. We’ll share more details on Tuesday but the impacted trails include: 

  • Davy Brown Trail (trailhead shown above)
  • Munch Canyon Trail
  • White Rock Trail
  • Willow Spring Trail
  • Sunset Valley Trail
  • La Jolla Trail
  • Sulphur Spring Trail
  • Zaca Peak Trail
  • and a few other trails that include Connector or Spur in their names….

You’re sure to receive dozens of #GivingTuesday emails and we appreciate your support of the LPFA and our continued efforts to keep the trails passable and open. 

Thanks again everyone and sleep well! See you on #GivingTuesday….. 






  –  UPCOMING VOLUNTEER TRAIL DAYS  –  


December 13: Tunnel Trail, Santa Barbara 

December 5 & 7: Matilija Trail, Ojai 

December 15: Pothole Trail, Lake Piru 

Los Padres LPFA Updates & Lake Fire #GivingTuesday


Lake Fire Los Padres

Trail Restoration


Hello Friends,

25 miles of Los Padres Forest trails, mainly located within the Figueroa Mountain Recreation Area, were burned this past July during the nearly 40,000 acre Lake Fire. These trails are currently closed. The LPFA has been working with the Forest Service on a plan and schedule to restore and reopen these trails. We got some great news earlier this week that the LPFA won a grant from the Santa Barbara Foundation that will go towards the restoration of the trails burned in the Lake Fire. #AwesomeAmazingThankYou! While the actual trail work can’t begin until the spring, we’ll be busy throughout the winter planning and getting ready to roll. 

The past four years we’ve had very successful #GivingTuesday campaigns. We raised money in 2020 to restore over 10 miles of National Recreation Trails within the Los Padres along the Piedra Blanca Trail and Santa Cruz Trail. 2021 was focused on repairing the scary Alder Creek Slide in the Sespe Wilderness. In 2022, #GivingTuesday supported massive storm repairs along the lower Santa Cruz Trail and last year #GivingTuesday helped reopen sections of the Sespe River Trail as well as the Piedra Blanca Trail.  

This year our #GivingTuesday (technically December 3) campaign will go towards helping out the forest trails within the Lake Fire scar. If you’d like to help the trails, please click the link below. We’ll be organizing plenty of volunteer projects in the spring as well. More to come next week, THANK YOU!




Before (2023) and After (2024) images of the western side of the Hurricane Deck Trail showing some great trail work accomplished this year by LPFA volunteers and the LPFA Trail Crew. Questions: email INFO@LPForest.org


FOREST 411 & VOLUNTEER DAYS

• Get it on your calendar! Saturday May 3 is our Open House at Wheeler Gorge Visitor Center outside of Ojai. Games, education, forest fun and a whole lot more…. Get ready! 

• After being closed for nearly 5 years due to Dolan Fire damage, the Nacimiento-Fergusson Road has reopened. This is great news as the road provides crucial access across the forest from the Big Sur Coast out to Fort Hunter Liggett. 

• We wanted to congratulate Santa Lucia Ranger District’s Helen Tarbet for being recognized by the Forest Service for her continued educational contributions across the forest. Helen is probably most known for her regular Figueroa Mountain flower reports but more than that, she embodies the stoke of the forest. If you have kids interested in the forest, make sure they find Helen. Good luck Helen, thank you! 

If you are looking for an excuse to work off some of that Thanksgiving turkey or pumpkin pie, we’ve got you!

Sat Nov 30: Pothole Trail

Sun Dec 1: Matilija Trail

Led by legendary LP Super Volunteer Alan Coles, we’ll be continuing work opening up the lower Agua Blanca Trail and Pothole Trail within the Sespe Wilderness. Plan on meeting at Lake Piru on Saturday morning. To sign up or for more information please email VOLUNTEER@LPForest.org

Rumor has it that Matilija Road may reopen soon and we’re working hard to make sure the trails are ready for when it does. Peter Wilder will once again lead the charge up Matilija this coming Sunday. To sign up or for more information please email VOLUNTEER@LPForest.org.




The 2025 calendars are just about ready and should be waiting for you at your local REI as early as next week. Stay tuned for more….

LPFA Trail Work GivingTuesday

How many #GivingTuesday emails did you receive today?
We’re setting the over/under at 15. How’d you do?

Hi Everyone – Sorry to inundate you with another #GivingTuesday email but we believe in our goal of restoring the Santa Cruz Trail and we believe that you as trail users should believe in it as well. Of course your contributions go to the LPFA but more importantly they go to support the Los Padres Forest, they go directly to the Santa Cruz Trail and they go to help folks like yourself who are out there using the trails. If you use the trails, this is for you!

If you haven’t volunteered with us yet or don’t know about the LPFA, we can almost guarantee you’ve enjoyed the trails we help maintain. We’ve put together a list of 12 trail accomplishments we’re proud of from 2022. If you’ve not enjoyed these trails listed below, please do so, now is the time before they get overgrown again…. trail work in the Los Padres is like painting the Golden Gate Bridge, it never ends!

For 2023 we will be making a big push to continue work on the Santa Cruz Trail and connect the dots between Upper Oso and Santa Cruz Station. We have funding in place for much of this work but not all of it just yet. If you use or have used the Santa Cruz Trail or any of the trails across the Los Padres, please consider supporting our Santa Cruz Trail campaign. Thank you all for your support and see you on the trails…..

– Your Friends at the LPFA


LPFA Accomplishments !


Click here to watch a YouTube of our 2021 #GivingTuesday accomplishments in the Sespe.
Click here to donate for #GivingTuesday 2022 on the Santa Cruz Trail.

Have a great day everyone!

THANK YOU!

Hindsight is 2020

The sun sets early over the Mono Jungle this time of year but we’ve spent many long days of late working the new Cold Spring reroute trail.

Hello Friends,

As we near the end of 2020, the saying ‘Hindsight is 20/20’ has never been more applicable or felicitous. While 2020 will live in infamy for so many reasons (no LPFA Working Vacations – BOO), we sure hope it hasn’t been without at least a few silver linings.  Looking back, COVID hit and we saw record numbers of people visiting the forest. At the time, it was overwhelming and many of the trailheads, camps, creeks and canyons were inundated with people seeking time outside. While the infrastructure wasn’t ready for this onslaught, the silver lining was that people were getting out and enjoying the forest.  Of course, it would have been nice had many of these people known more about Leave No Trace, forest etiquette or been better at dispersing, but at the same time, let’s hope that these people, in particular the forest newbies, were able to establish an appreciation for the outdoors and that they continue to carry that appreciation with them into the future. We can teach the curious, but we can’t teach curiosity. Life will get back to the next newest normal and group activities will commence again, but we have to believe that the world is a better place with as many people appreciating nature as possible. Maybe, if we’re lucky, that will be a positive lasting legacy when looking back, hindsight on 2020.  

— • — • — • —

Thanks to everyone who donated on #GivingTuesday to continue the LPFA trail work on both the Santa Cruz and Piedra Blanca NRT’s.  We got started earlier this month clearing brush and grooming tread on the Santa Cruz Trail (see photos below) but had to stop due to the latest Stay at Home Order. Can’t wait to get back out there, hopefully soon!

LOS PADRES UPDATE

California issued the latest regional COVID Stay at Home Order on December 6 and shortly thereafter the Forest Service released additional forest related regional closures and restrictions. While the forest remains open, all developed campgrounds across the Los Padres will be closed through January 6, 2021.  Here’s a list of the developed Los Padres campgrounds, in general they are the ones you might consider car-campgrounds. That being said, the trails, trailheads, picnic areas, day use areas, OHV routes and dispersed camping remain open for us to enjoy across most of the forest.

The Monterey Ranger District remains closed due to unsafe conditions as a result of the Dolan Fire. This closure is expected to last until the Dolan Fire is 100% contained which is dependent on getting more rain. This is a bit of a conundrum, as more rain should lead to the full containment of the Dolan Fire, but it’s that same rain that causes more unsafe conditions in and around recent burn scars. It’s likely that once the Dolan Fire reaches full containment, the Forest Service will keep the fire scar closed, but reopen other parts of the District. Time will tell and please remain patient. We need rain….

An additional closure was extended for the Pine Ridge Trail which is also within the Monterey Ranger District. This most recent closure lasts through May 21, 2021. A quick little backstory, the Pine Ridge Trail was severely damaged in the 2016 Soberanes Fire and subsequent 2017 storms.  The Ventana Wilderness Alliance has been working with the Forest Service to restore the trail but have had unforeseen 2020 COVID related and fire delays that have pushed the reopening back. From what we hear, the trail is looking great to a certain point but a few more weeks of work is needed. Hang in there…..

And last but not least, the regional fire restrictions remain in place through December 31, 2020 for the Los Padres NF. Again, this means no campfires anywhere and the use of camp stoves only at developed campfire use sites, which are mostly closed due to the above mentioned COVID closures. We have come full circle….  While the northern Los Padres has seen some rain, there has been very little rain across most of the forest. Santa Barbara is currently at 2% of County-Wide Percent-of-Normal Rainfall, whereas historically we should have received around 30% of our rainfall totals by the end of December. That’s a lot of catching up to do – might need a January, February and March miracle this year. Anyway, the fire restrictions should remain in place until the forest receives a couple inches of rain and good news is that there is rain in the forecast….  Fingers crossed and remain safe everyone….

— • — • — • —

Sneak peak at the 2021 Los Padres Calendar, get em while you can!

FOREST 411

• Thanks everyone who has ordered the 2021 Los Padres calendar.  The calendars are set to arrive very soon and we’ll have them shipped out or delivered hopefully in time for Christmas but certainly before the end of the year. We went with a local printer this year and they are looking great! If you’d like one, click here. Happy New Year!

• Quick volunteer update, all non-emergency or non-prioritized work across the Los Padres has been cancelled through January 6 as part of the regional COVID stay at home order. This includes our volunteer projects and Wheeler Gorge Visitor Center. As a result, there’s not much scheduled right now as far as volunteer projects but we’re planning 2021 with the hopes of Working Vacations and regular volunteer trail projects. See below for more…..

• Seems like ancient history already but it was officially released that arson was the cause of the November 25, 2019 Cave Fire.

• Some of the seasonal gates have been closed across the forest while some gates that usually close in November remain open due to the lack of rain. At this point in time, we suggest that if you’re headed into the forest to a place where gate access might be a concern, be sure to contact the local Ranger District ahead of time to see if the gates are open or closed. We do know that Pine Mtn gate closed earlier this month and should remain closed until spring.

• Speaking of roads and gates, the Forest Service was able to repair the severely damaged and rutted section of road just before Thorn Meadow off Grade Valley Road.  Great to see that work accomplished!

• MONOLITH/ˈmänəˌliTH/ a large single upright block of stone, especially one shaped into or serving as a pillar or monument. If you missed the recent monolith craze, it’s worth a Google search and some time while drinking your morning coffee. Interestingly enough, the Los Padres made the news earlier this month when one of the monoliths made a cameo near the summit of Hi Mountain above Arroyo Grande. We found it very interesting that the aliens who planted the Hi Mtn monolith chose to plant it where they did. I guess aliens don’t have the needed FS keys to get to the actual summit either.

• For those of us procrastinators (it’s not a bad thing) who still have some last minute shopping to take care of, remember that you can always use Amazon Smile and choose the LPFA as your charity of choice.  Help the forest and shop at the same time, what could be better – maybe being done with shopping of course. Thanks for choosing to help the LPFA!

• Show of hands, who has sat in a rock art site and been baffled by trying to figure out what is being represented within those amazing lines, colors, curves and images? There might be an answer after a recent study found evidence of psychedelics at a nearby painting site.  It’s amazing how science continues to uncover information about the native people of these lands. Be sure to practice proper etiquette when visiting these sacred sites!

• Momentum continues to grow with the restoration of the Rose Valley Lakes and Sespe Creek Watershed. While still at the conceptual design phase, the idea is to remove fish passage barriers including the three man-made Rose Valley Lakes. For more information check the link here and we’ll keep you posted as more information is available.

“The greatest secrets are always hidden in the most unlikely places” – Roald Dahl

UPCOMING EVENTS

While it’s impossible to predict  or schedule anything right now, we’re really hoping to put together some extended volunteer projects this season. Stay tuned, fingers crossed!

February 2021: Blue Canyon Volunteer Weekends, LPFA
March 2021: Sespe Volunteer Weekends, LPFA
April 2021: Santa Cruz Trail Working Vacation, LPFA
May 2021: Puerto Suelo Dick Smith Working Vacation, LPFA
May 2021: Upper Sisquoc Working Vacation, LPFA
June 2021: Haddock Camp Sespe Working Vacation (GMPB Trail), LPFA