August 11, 2020
We spent the final day of our Great Tree Adventure Trip in Sequoia National Park. To give some perspective on where it is located, on the map below the black circle on the left is Fresno, the red circle is Sequoia National Park, the yellow circle is Mt. Whitney (located inside the national forest), and the blue circle is Death Valley.
Sequoia National Park was created on September 25, 1890, to protect 404,064 acres of forest. These days, 2.2 million acres are part of the park. Yellowstone was the first national park, created in 1872, but Sequoia was the second national park, beating out #3, Yosemite, by five days. Its elevation varies from 1,370 feet to 14,494 feet (the Mt. Whitney summit). The largest living things in the world live within its boundaries.
The National Park Service arrowhead features a sequoia silhouette, and embossed sequoia cones, like the ones on the sign below, decorate the belts and hatbands of park rangers nationwide.
The obvious difference between Redwood and Sequoia National Parks is that being on the coast, Redwood National Park has a much more lush environment. For the novice, however, it is hard to see the difference between the redwood and sequoia trees themselves.
Perhaps the most significant difference for a lay person like me is that the giant sequoia has a huge trunk that tapers slightly as it rises, and the redwood, though it generally taller than the sequoia, has a more slender trunk. These are sequoias: