Here’s our growing guide to essential California adventures, easy to edgy. We’ll be adding to it daily all year. And we won’t suggest an adventure unless one of the Travel section’s staffers and contributors have tried it.
Tell us what’s on your California bucket list. Email travel@latimes.com and put California Bucket List in the subject line.
Why : A Monarch butterfly is as brilliant and delicate as anything in biology. And at this place in winter, you can see 15,000 of them at a time.
What: The Pismo Beach Monarch Butterfly Grove, just a short stroll from the the sandy shore, is an unprepossessing cluster of eucalyptus and cypress trees that may befuddle you at first, especially if it’s a cloudy day. Where, you’ll wonder, are the butterflies? But look a little more closely at those overhead clumps of dead and dying leaves. They’re…. not… leaves. They’re wings. When the sun comes out, their orange hues blaze. And even if the sun doesn’t come out, the docents usually have a telescope or two trained upon the biggest clumps of butterflies, and you’ll see scattered monarchs fluttering down to lower branches and the forest floor now and again.
“It’s a male,” said 9-year docent Peggy Coon one chilly January day, inspecting a butterfly on the ground. “He has two little spots on his lower [hind] wings. Those are pheromone spots.”
The Monarch season at this grove usually runs late October through Februaray. There are other monarch groves in Goleta and Pacific Grove .
Where: 400 S. Dolliver St., Pismo Beach, 183 miles northwest of downtown L.A. (That’s actually the address of Pismo State Beach’s North Beach Campground next door; the monarch grove has no street address.)
How much: Free.
Info: Pismo Beach Monarch Butterfly Grove.
Our editors found this article on this site using Google and regenerated it for our readers.