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Landing
at San Miguel Island
requires Real Player 
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Cuyler's
Harbor
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Harris
Point
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The
Caliche Forest
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San
Miguel Island
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San
Miguel Island (9,325 acres). Fifty-five
miles off the coast from Ventura, San Miguel Island is the
farthest west of the Channel Islands. Because of its location
in the open ocean, it is subject to high winds and lots of
fog. The island is a tableland of lush grasses and wildflowers,
with 27 miles of jagged, rocky coastline dotted with sandy
white beaches. The westernmost of these beaches, Point Bennett,
is the only place in the world where up to six different species
of pinnipeds (seals and sea lions) can be found.
What to see: San Miguel is famous worldwide for its
pinniped show. In the winter, as many as 20,000 individual
seals and sea lions can be seen at one time on Point Bennett,
where they breed and where the pups are born. Other wildlife
includes the island fox, a species that is found only on the
Channel Islands. Spring
and summer the skies are filled with sea and land birds. Fossil
bones of the Pleistocene pygmy mammoth, archeological
sites of human habitation more than
10,000 years old, and a memorial
to Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo, the European
discoverer of California, are all found
on the island. A geologic feature called the
caliche forest attracts many people. This ghost forest was
formed by caliche sand castings of plant roots and trunks.
Today the plants are long gone, leaving behind the eerie stone
replicas. San Miguel wildflowers are spectacular, due to the
abundance of fog and moisture.
What to do: Boating, snorkeling, SCUBA diving, swimming,
kayaking, hiking, camping, wildlife watching, naturalist-led
hiking, and discovering wildflowers are favorite activities
on San Miguel.
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