Reverence and Reflection on a Sunday Morning Hike
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“Everybody
needs beauty as well as bread, places to play in and pray in where
nature may heal and cheer and give strength to the body and soul.”
~ John Muir
Just
up the street from our home in California we have discovered a quiet
little wilderness area called Canyon Park. Nestled in the San Gabriel
Mountains just minutes from the 210 freeway and a bustling city it is an
eighty-acre refuge offering hiking trails, a nature center, places to
enjoy a picnic and the waterfall that was our destination this morning.
The park literature explains how volunteers opened the park in 1911 but I
couldn’t help imagining what it must have been like for the visitors
who happened upon the canyon in the 1800’s.
The serene peacefulness of a Sunday morning seemed like the perfect time for
us to explore this cathedral of nature located in our own backyard.
Right after breakfast we made our way up the hill and into the canyon.
The ranger who greeted us at the gate provided us with a map, a parking pass and
trailhead information.
We walked
to the trailhead in the dappled sunlight breathing in the sweet scents of the forest, smiling and holding hands, happy to have found this sanctuary. It quickly became evident how well loved and well known
this community park is. We shared the trail with families, couples, dogs and visitors from as far
away as England and Asia, all cheerily greeting one another with hellos and well wishes as we navigated the path.
The
one-mile trail to the waterfall is just one part of a much bigger
trail, a portion of which is closed to hikers as a result of a fire. I
enjoy hiking but, I would put myself in the beginner to intermediate
classification and I pick my trails accordingly. This was what I would
consider an easy trail. The trip to the falls is mostly uphill on a
grade. It was a good workout but I had no difficulties with the rise in
elevation or crossing the water on the stones nestled in the streambed.
Before
too long we had arrived at the thirty-foot spring fed waterfall. A
small crowd milled around taking photos and enjoying the sight and sound
of the water as it pooled at our feet. The water was as clear as any
I’d seen and our fellow hikers hopped back and forth across the rocks in
the sparkling streambed balancing children, puppies and cameras. I knew
at that moment we were all sharing in the wonder of this beautiful
little waterfall tucked away in a small corner of Los Angeles County.
We
completed the hike in about an hour and fifteen minutes, which included
several stops along the way for photographs. We could have continued
along the trail past the waterfall if time had allowed but unfortunately
today it did not.
As
I walked along the trail I thought it fitting to spend Sunday Morning
in this spectacular forest. I was a member of the congregation in God’s
own cathedral. Wherever I travel I’m always humbled and moved by the
beauty of our natural spaces. It is my hope that we all will in the midst of
our busy hectic lives pause and seek out similar places of refuge and
renewal in our own backyards.
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