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Travel> Ridge
Route
It's
still there!
The wonders
of Southern California's Historic Ridge
Route.
By Jeffrey the
Barak, In Los Angeles.
Published July 2000
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Realigned.
Photo courtesy of Mike Ballard
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It began with an intriguing map tumbling
out of the Los Angeles Times in October
1997. Like a map to hidden pirate treasure,
it showed the way to an adventure that would
become one of my most memorable days.
It took until April 2000 for me to finally
set my wheels upon the route, but after
two and a half years of procrastination
and planning, I can finally say, I
drove the Ridge Route. But its
more than that, I drove it sixty seven-years
after it was effectively abandoned.
So whats so special about a narrow
road tracing the mountain ridges between
Castaic in the South, and Gorman in the
North? The Interstate 5 can cover the distance
in a matter of minutes, why would anyone
want to average eight miles-per-hour and
twist around in circles for half a day,
just to cover the same distance?
The fact that its a road thats
hardly been used since the days of wooden
wheels and solid tires is enough. But the
unexpected solitude and beauty to be found
up there in the twenty-first century, as
history unravels beneath your tires makes
the route really magic.
I will refer to reference sources later
in this article, which contain expertise
that I cannot hope to rival. But it is my
own experience up on the ridges that will
always stay in my memory.
In the early part of the twentieth century,
there was a lot of talk about dividing California
into two states. The division would have
been North of Los Angeles. It was extremely
time consuming to travel from the Antelope
Valley in the North, to Newhall and then
to San Fernando in the South. Detours had
to be made way out to the East. Western
California was essentially two worlds.
Because of the swift rise of the numbers
of cars and trucks, it was decided that
a shorter vehicle route between the North
and South should be built. Technology at
the time really wasnt up to blasting
and tunneling too much earth away, so roads
had to do what horses and wagons did, they
followed the contour of the land in order
to avoid extreme gradients. This meant twists
and turns and narrow ridges atop steep cliffs.
What finally resulted was a wild low-speed
ride as thrilling as any roller coaster
of the day. Oiled and graded in 1915, and
later surfaced with reinforced concrete
in 1919, a narrow strip of concrete twisting
across the mountaintops. And, mostly because
of the existence of this new road, California
remained as one State, from Oregon to Mexico.
I cannot do justice to the fascinating
history of this road, but I will provide
links at the end of this article that, if
followed, will haunt your imagination until
you finally get yourself up there and experience
this magical road.
Only one of my friends shared my interest
in tackling the route, and after a couple
of years we finally did it. We wanted to
wait until after a long dry spell, because
we knew that rain could make the road extremely
dangerous, and that any kind of car problem
could lead to a life-threatening situation.
My friend Michael (seen in my pictures)
called the Ridge Route Museum in early April
2000, and a helpful Ridgerouter
explained that the recent rain had deposited
snow up on the route, but within a few days,
the high temperatures had melted it all
away. This un-named man re-assured us that
he drove the route often, in a Saturn sedan,
so we wouldnt have to go and rent
that four-wheel-drive truck after all. I
drove my 1995 Neon.
A Neon, an Englishman and a New Yorker.
With temperatures in the nineties, we pulled
off the 5 North, armed with print outs from
Mike Ballards web-site and Ridgeroute.com
(links to follow.) Passing through Castaic,
the road signs proclaimed that we were on
Ridge Route Road, our pathway to Avalon.
We crossed Lake Hughes Road and wound through
the brand new houses, aware that those very
houses had diverted us from the authentic
alignment of the old road. The detour took
us up a hill so steep that the front drive
wheels of the Neon began to slip, and we
were barely out of town! Straight away,
though, the views began to present themselves.
This was Southern California, wild and beautiful.
So far, the old concrete we had longed to
see for so long was well buried beneath
the asphalt, and there was not a sign in
sight to re-assure us we were actually on
the Ridge Route.
And
then suddenly we passed the boundary of
County road maintenance. Here, just an inch
underneath the crumbling asphalt was the
winding strip of narrow concrete we had
so longed to see, with the insides of the
curves filled in for safer views around
the bends. Up we climbed with Castaic Lake
making an appearance far below off the right
side of the road. It was hot and silent.
When I turned off the engine for a photo
stop, there was no sound in my ears except
for my own bloodstream and the occasional
flying insect. And then the concrete reappeared.
A surface poured by roadway pioneers. The
Neon bounced along admirably in low gear
at speeds ranging from three to ten miles
per hour.
Crossing Templin Highway, the signs ahead
proclaimed No Through Road.
We considered that we might not be able
to complete the mission. We might get almost
all the way through and have to turn around
and come all the way back! Onward stout
Neon.
We knew we were passing the foundations
of places that no longer existed without
a hope of noticing them, but it was easy
not to miss the steps to an old gas station
called the National Forest Inn. How excited
we were so see these steps. Ordinary concrete
steps in the middle of nowhere! But we could
feel something, they were significant because
we had seen them in the pictures from the
web sites, and now we could climb up them.
Man made historical features in the wilderness.
If not for the Ridge Route, humans might
never have placed a foot on this spot, but
thousands did between 1915 and 1933. They
bought gasoline and coffee here. They even
spent the night in clapboard cabins on this
spot.
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We failed to identify any more foundations
for miles, but we did spot a few we could
not attach names to. There were a handful
of people around in trucks, working on gas
pipelines and power cables and transmission
towers, but for the most part we were just
driving alone through ancient postcard vistas.
The only ugliness in all of this beauty
was due to gas and power. Pipes stretch
over and under the twisting road with no
consideration for their appearance. Colored
painted symbols desecrated the very historic
concrete, pointing technicians to various
piles and wires. But the sheer natural beauty
of the place and the sculpture of the road
itself easily overwhelmed this ugliness.
I had to swerve in slow motion past boulders
that traveled 2 miles per hour slower than
my car, (they werent moving, and I
drove at 2MPH.) At one stage a huge landslide
had almost completely blocked the road and
I had to put my right wheels up it and crawl
past at snail speed and a thirty-degree
list. Forces of nature are powerful, especially
the force of water over long period of time.
In places where water naturally crossed
the road, the original concrete and the
subsequent repairs had succumbed and the
Neon had to gingerly stumble over the resulting
gaps. It brought to mind the clichéd rope
bridge over the Amazon gorge. Fedora wearing
explorers falling through the planks and
almost slipping away into thin air.
When
we reached the section nicknamed Serpentine
Drive we found the smoothest remaining concrete
on the route. The concrete was banked into
the curves, which meant that it had better
drainage, which in turn meant that water
had less chance to erode it. Here I allowed
the car to speed up to 15MPH for a moment,
and felt what it must have been like to
use the road when it was in its prime. Climbing
up to the next section and looking back
down to Serpentine Drive, we were able to
match the view with the image from one of
the ancient postcards.
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| Photo
Courtesy Mike Ballard. |
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| Serpentine
Postcard image from ridgeroute.com |
The
next treat was Swedes Cut, a cutting
through soft rock, which has always produced
rockslides. Michael was a little nervous
as we drove slowly through the debris field
and stopped for photographs. At any moment,
another man-sized rock could decide to join
us down on the roadway.
In many places on the Ridge Route, I observed
that the bumpiness, which makes it so difficult
to drive on, is caused not by the state
of the original 1919 concrete, but by the
eroded softer asphalt, which had been used
to improve it. Wherever it was visible,
the original concrete surface was in better
shape than the sections that had been re-surfaced.
We stopped at the easily recognizable foundations
of the Tumble Inn and re-read the history
of the establishment from our notes. Shotgun
cartridges littered the foundation. The
cartridges were in every color of the plastic
rainbow. Winding down to Sandbergs,
we squinted to imagine the fine structure,
which had once stood there.
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| Tumble
Inn in April 2000 |
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| Sandberg's
Postcard image from ridgeroute.com |
And then the concrete slid below smooth
blacktop again as we re-entered the county
maintained section of road. Spectacular
views of the Antelope Valley lay ahead.
Jumping west to the 5, we covered the same
distance southbound in a few minutes that
had taken hours northbound on the Ridge
Route. We shot down the hill at eighty-five
miles an hour and were passed by a giant
cat doing a hundred. It was the Meow-Mix
truck. We had done it. Thirty months and
a few hours were all it took to change our
outlook on Southern California.
Michael is seeking original postcards of
the Ridge Route for his collection.
The Admirable
Historian.
Historian
Mike Ballard created a web site that really
is a
virtual tour of the Ridge Route. If
you are not able to experience the Ridge
Route in person, this site is the next best
thing.
Must-see
Postcards.
The official
site is equally excellent, and contains
a stories link with three must-read articles.
The article from The California Historian
is particularly interesting. Pictures of
many old postcards can be seen on the various
pages on this site, and it is these postcards
which offer us a glimpse of what it must
have looked like when this road was the
only direct way to get from North to South.
http://www.ridgeroute.com/
Surf to every page!
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