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Big sur waterfall map
Big sur waterfall map






big sur waterfall map
  1. #Big sur waterfall map for free#
  2. #Big sur waterfall map free#

#Big sur waterfall map free#

The pass entitles you to a free vehicle day-use permit for one passenger vehicle. With your California library card, you can check out a California State Library Parks Pass to borrow for an allotted number of days to use during your trip. Just be sure to keep your receipt and show it when parking at the other parks as long as it’s on the same day.Īnother option is to check out a California State Library Parks Pass. However, if you would like a safer parking spot, there is a Day Use Permit Fee of $10 (be sure to bring cash!) to park in the Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park parking lot.īut that Day Use Fee Permit can allegedly then be used at some of the other parks in the area, although I cannot find this specifically written on any official website, but a few old Trip Advisor recommendations from 6-9 years ago state that four of the state parks in the Big Sur area have a reciprocal agreement and your day use parking fee is good at Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park, Pfeiffer-Big Sur State Park, Point Lobos State Natural Reserve, and Andrew Molera State Park. Technically no, you do not have to pay to see McWay Falls if you park along the Pacific Coast Highway. If you park in the parking lot, you’ll need to walk down a few stairs to get to the trail that leads to a tunnel that goes under Highway 1 and leads you to the falls viewing area.

#Big sur waterfall map for free#

You can either park along PCH for free or pay the $10 Day Use Fee Permit and park in the Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park parking lot. The walk to get to the falls viewing area is a short 0.6 mile round trip along a trail. From the north, you can take US Hwy 101 south to CA Hwy 156 west at Prunedale. If you’re approaching from the south, you’ll need to exit US Hwy 101 at San Luis Obispo and then follow CA Hwy 1 north on through Morro Bay. There’s only one way to get to Big Sur and that’s via your own mode of transport on Highway One. McWay Falls is located in Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park in Big Sur, California.

big sur waterfall map

If you want to see the tidefall, go at high tide. So, if you want to see the waterfall fall onto the beach, go at low tide. While McWay Falls is a tidefall during high tide, meaning it falls directly into the ocean, at low tide, the falls splash directly onto the beach. For years, the little waterfall always fell directly into the ocean, but thanks to the massive amount of rains in 1983 which caused mudslides north of the park, the ocean and waves later transported the debris and formed a sandy beach in McWay Cove. McWay Falls is actually a tidefall meaning it falls into the ocean at high tide and onto the beach at low tide.īut McWay Falls has not always splashed onto a beach, even at low tide. You can see a few photos of the house here before it was demolished. The viewing area has a sign with photos and just know that the terrace you’re standing on to view the waterfall used to be a bedroom with a view of the falls. Thus, when the museum could not be finished, the Waterfall House was bulldozed in 1965. Hélène Brown gifted the land to the state of California with the requirement that the house be used as “museum for the custody and display of indigenous Indian relics, flora and fauna of the California coastal area, and historical objects pertaining to the Big Sur country”, or if not, be demolished. They replaced the cabin in 1940 with a modern, two-story home that they named Waterfall House. Named after Christopher McWay, a homesteader who owned the land in the early 1900s, the land was then purchased by Lathrop and Hélène Brown who built a redwood cabin across from the falls (where the viewing area is today).

big sur waterfall map

Visiting Big Sur and thinking about stopping by McWay Falls? Keep reading and learn what to know about McWay Falls BEFORE you go! History of McWay Falls








Big sur waterfall map