AsilomarNatural Dunes Preserve |
Natural Dunes Preserve at Asilomar State Beach (SB) in California. Published by California Department of Parks and Recreation.
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Our Mission
The mission of the California State Parks is
to provide for the health, inspiration and education
of the people of California by helping to preserve
the state’s extraordinary biological diversity,
protecting its most valued natural and cultural
resources, and creating opportunities for
high-quality outdoor recreation.
California State Parks supports equal access.
Prior to arrival, visitors with disibilities who need
assistance should contact the park office.
This publication is available in alternate formats by
request, and is also available in pdf format
on the Asilomar State Beach
and Conference Grounds website:
www. parks.ca.gov/Asilomar
©2016 CA State Parks.
All Photos ©2016 CA State Parks.
Cover photo: P. Nichols
Printed on recycled paper
using vegetable-based ink.
Asilomar
Dunes
Natural Preserve
Asilomar State Beach & Conference Grounds
Aerial view of Asilomar dunes - the last remaining area of undeveloped dunes in Pacific Grove.
A
walk along the Asilomar dune boardwalk will
lead you through a living environment of
a California sand dune landscape. With examples
of native plants and wildlife, the Asilomar dunes
illustrate what can occur when balance is lost and
found once again.
Historic Precedent
The original dune system along the western edge
of the Monterey peninsula spanned 480 acres, from
Point Pinos in Pacific Grove to Point Joe in Pebble
Beach. When Europeans settled in the area, logging
and grazing removed many trees and damaged the
delicate vegetation which held the dunes in place.
Summer baseball in the Asilomar dunes, ca. 1917.
Photo: P. Nichols
Asilomar State Beach & Conference Grounds
A Unit of California State Parks
Non-native Ice Plant (Cape Fig)
As time passed, sand mining, residential, and resort
development reduced the area to the 25 acres that
now remain at Asilomar.
When the Young Women’s Christian Association
(YWCA) founded Asilomar in 1913, they used the
land for a summer camp and conference retreat.
The dunes became an active playground with
tennis courts, swimming pool, basketball court,
and baseball diamond. In 1956, when Asilomar
became a unit of the California State Park System,
Park management continued to allow unrestricted
activities in the sand dunes that broadened the
trampling of the native plants and caused
further erosion.
Efforts to prevent the sand from shifting and
engulfing the conference buildings were started in
the 1960s and 1970s. Non-native plants, particularly
ice plant which is native to South Africa, were
introduced and unwittingly contributed to the
problem. Ice plant provided neither food nor shelter
to native wildlife and invaded the remaining native
plant community. By the mid-1970s, the dunes had
become a virtual wasteland of bare sand and
exotic plants.
Asilomar Dunes with Ice Plant
A New Beginning and Restoration
The State Park staff launched an ambitious project
in 1984 to restore the condition of the dunes to
their “pre- European influence.” Luckily, amidst
the desolation, a few isolated pockets of native
habitat remained. These areas became the model
upon which guidelines were developed for the
restoration project.
In addition, the project’s goal was to allow restricted
public use in the dunes. A boardwalk footpath was
designed to offer the visitor a nature trail through
the dunes habitat which would protect it from
further destruction.
The first phase in the restoration was to acquire
a seed inventory. Most of the native plant seeds
were collected from the dunes, utilizing the few