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Bathe in a Forest? You can in Humboldt

For a bonus adventure, try the Lost Coastโ€™s Sanctuary Forest

Bathe in a Forest

 

Shinrin yoku, or โ€œforest bathing,โ€ is popular in Japan, but the mindful pastime is becoming more common in the United States. Perhaps the best place to experience it is among the mighty California coastal redwoods, the tallest trees in the world.

In Southern Humboldt County, one of the most experienced licensed  Shinrin yoku guides is Justin Legge, who leads guests on walks on trails along the world famous Avenue of the Giants and the Eel River in the Benbow Valley.

โ€œIn Humboldt County we have thousand-year-old trees and an ecosystem that is older than human history.โ€

Forest bathing is more than a walk in the woods. Itโ€™s a therapeutic method to take in the trees through the senses, to unwind, relax and feel nature in a whole new way.  Time slows down. Sounds and smells become more pronounced. Light and shadow and movement become focal points, whether a gentle wisp of wind, the babbling of a brook, or a tiny insect scuttling across the forest floor.

In his standard introduction, Legge calls to mind childhood memories involving trees, and then returns to the present for the walks, which last for an hour or two.

โ€œIn a world full of hi-ways and skyscrapers, air and noise pollution, a break from the city is less of a want and becoming more of a need for people,โ€ Legge said.

โ€œSomething amazing happens when you are surrounded by nature. Our bodies are innately drawn to sources in nature that produce un-seeable nutrients. Trees producing oxygen and clean carbon dioxide is commonly known, but there are many other benefits nature provides us.โ€

Should you wish to find out more from Legge, contact the Benbow KOA RV Park in Garberville. https://benbowinn.com/destinations/benbow-koa/

A Forest As Sanctuary

 

Whether on a forest bathing excursion or on a traditional hike, another excellent place to ramble in the woods is along the Mattole River on the Lost Coast, part of the King Range National Conservation Area on the Southern Humboldt coast. The wild and scenic river, popular with salmon and trout anglers, meanders along one of the most beautiful valleys and beaches in California.

One frequent destination is โ€œBig Red,โ€ an old growth giant redwood that sparked the creation of Sanctuary Forest in 1987, a local conservation movement dedicated to protecting the land and water ecosystems around the Mattole River watershed.

The community nonprofit periodically organizes and leads thematic hikes, whether to hunt for edible and medicinal plants, identify native plants of the King Range, explore geology and water landscapes, beachomb from Needle Rock to Bear Harbor or find the 2,000-year-old Big Red.

To find out more about the free hikes with the group, which is based in Whitethorn, go to https://sanctuaryforest.org/.

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