The first thing to know in this post is that this was once my home. My small growing family spent three years in the cramped condominiums across Highway 101 from this spot on the Santa Barbara coast near Carpinteria. It was the 1980s shortly after I finished my degree and I was working as a lab teacher at Santa Barbara City College. They were good years, and many may wonder why I moved to a dusty farm town in the Central Valley for my 30 year career. It's a fair question, but I've never regretted it.Be that as it may, Carpinteria turned out to be a nice place to visit 30 years on, and I was pleased that while some things have changed, others have not. When we lived there, it was a pleasant 1/4 mile walk to the Carpinteria Bluffs, a roughly 60-acre tract that had somehow escaped development over the years. Given the level of the land utilization along the coastal terraces from Goleta to Ventura, this stood as some kind of minor miracle. It's also a minor geological miracle that the flatland even exists at all. The Santa Barbara coastline is a prime example of a "geologically active" place.
The fact is that most of coastal Central California is mountainous, and in many places the mountains rise directly from the sea, leaving little or no flat surfaces for either settlement or transportation routes. Flat terraces are prime real estate, and most of these were developed early on. Carpinteria was only the latest of settlements over the last several thousand years. The Chumash had a village noted by Cabrillo in 1541 called Mishopshnow. They were canoe-builders, and the woodworking that was going on there is the reason for the name Carpinteria ("carpentry shop").
I'll never quite know why the Carpinteria Bluffs escaped industrial development during the last century. When we lived there in the 1980s, we heard of ambitious plans for the "barren" terrace, and it seemed a sure thing that this pleasant stretch of coast would disappear soon after we moved away, yet when we returned last month for a visit, I was thrilled to see it remained much as it was. I learned that the 1990s was a contentious period during which the people of Carpinteria fought a pitched battle to keep the bluffs as open space. In 1998, the volunteers managed to raise just short of 4 million dollars to purchase the land to form a permanent nature preserve.
The Santa Ynez Mountains rise dramatically above Carpinteria. They are composed of sandstone, siltstone, and shale layers that were on the bottom of the sea only a few million years ago. |
A section of the beach has been seasonally closed to provide a safe haven for Harbor Seals who use the beach for birthing their pups. Around a hundred of them utilize the area.
When we first moved there, we found another reason that one might avoid walking on this particular beach. At the conclusion of our walks we would find that there was a considerable amount of tar covering our shoes, or worse, our feet. It was hard to get off, and seemed omnipresent. It was easy to blame the offshore oil rigs or the onshore petroleum processing facility just to the west, but the truth was the tar was natural. Which brings us to the other subject of the day concerning Carpinteria: the tar!
The Spanish Language is beautiful. It's been said that reading a grocery list in French sounds sexy, but Spanish is muy bonita. The place names in California attest to this fact. For example in my area alone we have poetic place names like Merced, Madera, Manteca, Los Banos, and Escalon. Merced translates into the equally poetic name "Mercy", but the others are in order "Wood", "Lard", "The Bathrooms", and "Step".
File:Layers of stone and tar at Carpinteria, CA.jpg - Wikimedia Commons |
Tar Pits Park (Carpinteria) - 2021 All You Need to Know BEFORE You Go (with Photos) - Tripadvisor |
Source: California State Parks |
When I worked at SBCC there was no internet, and I was only vaguely aware that there had been tarpits somewhere in the area. So it was that I never realized the value of the irritating pollutant on the beach that ruined a number of pairs of my shoes. If you visit and mess up your own shoes, just remember, it's important history!
The Other California is my long-running series of places to see in our state when you've seen all the places on the postcards!