Follow Me, I Won't Get You Lost!
This form does not yet contain any fields.
    Take A Look Around...
    1 Day Hiking Mt. Whitney 10 Essentials 2Solar Eclipse 2012 Adventure Stories Aguereberry Camp Angel Share Angel's Landing Angel's Landing Trail Ansel Adams Anza Borrego Anza Borrego Desert Anza Borrego State Park Anza-Borrego Desert Arizona Arroyo Tapiado Arroyo Tapiado Mud Caves Ashford Mill Backcountry Skiing San Jacinto Backpacking Badwater Banshee Canyon Beardpocalypse 2010 Beards Beards Make One Hot Beaver Creek Benson Big Sur Black Mountain Black Mountain Community Ranch Park Black Mountains Blimps Blue Sun Cave Borrego Springs Borrego Springs Dinosaurs Borrego Springs Metal Creatures Borrego Springs Pre-Historic Creatures Bright Angel Trail Bump-And-Grind Trail Bump-N-Grind Trail CA Desert App Cabazon Cabazon Dinosaurs California Highway 1 California Horned Lizard Camping Food Canyon Loop Trail Cardiac Hill Cardiff State Beach Carlsbad Carlsbad 5000 Caverns Caving Cedar Fire Cedar Ridge Changing tires Chapel of the Holy Dove Charcoal Kilns Charcoal Kilns Death Valley Cinder Cone Natural Area Cloud's Rest Coachella Valley Cold War Consultation Lake Corte Madera Mountain Cowles Mountain Crampons Crane Flat Crest Canyon Crest Canyon Del Mar Cross Country Skiing Cross Country Skiing Yosemite Cross Country Skiing Yosemite Valley Current Trail Conditions Mt. Whitney Curtis Howe Springer Cuyamaca Lake Cuyamaca Rancho State Park Cuyamaca State Park Dantes BM Dantes Peak Death Valley Death Valley Charcoal Kilns Death Valley Driving Fail Death Valley National Park Deer Del Mar Airport Del Mar Blimps Desert Devil's Golf Course Dinny the Dinosaur Dominator Shipwreck Don't Stare at the Sun you will go blind Dos Cabezas Dos Cabezas Siding Dripping Springs Driving Fail East Side Trail Eastern Approach Woodson Mountain Eastern Sierra Interagency Vistor Center Echo Canyon Eclipse Glasses Emerald Pool Encinitas Eureka Dunes Eureka Mine Father Junipero Serra Museum Flagstaff Folly Peak Foster's Point Four Mile Trail foursquare Garnet Peak Geminid Meteor Shower Geminid Meteor Shower 2011 Geminids George Van Tassel Ghost Towns Giant Sequoia Giant Sloths Gin Flat Loop Golden Canyon Good Mountaineering Karma Goodan Ranch Gowalla Gower Gulch Grand Canyon Grand Canyon National Park Green Valley Grizzly Giant Guillermo Pino Half Beards Half Dome Happy Isles Harper's Creek Harrisburg Ghost Town Hearst Castle Hi Fi Killers Hidden Canyon Highway 120 Highway 41 Highway 67 Highway 67 Sycamore Canyon Staging Area Hiking Hole-in-the-Wall Hole-in-the-Wall Petroglyphs Horseshoe Mesa Ice Axe Indian Hill Ink Spots Inspiration Point Inyo National Forest iPhone iPhone Apps Iron Mountain Jeffrey Pine John Muir Trail Julia Pfieffer Burns State Park June Climbing Mt. Whitney Kartchner Caverns Kartchner Caverns State Park Kelbaker Road Kelso Kelso Dunes Kendrick Park Kubla Kahn La Jolla La Orilla Trail Ladders Laguna National Forest Lake Las Vegas Xterra Trail Run Lake Manly Landers Leonard Knight Little Yosemite Valley Living With the iPhone Lone Pine Long Valley Los Penasquitos Lagoon Lunar Eclipse Lunar Eclipse 2011 Lunar Eclipse December 2011 Lusardi Loop Trail Maar Volcanos MAD Mahogany Flat Malibu Creek State Park Manly Beacon Man's Best Media Mariposa Grove Merced River Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes Meteor Showers 2012 Missile Silo Mission Hills Mission Trails Regional Park Mist Trail Mog Mogfest Mogfest 2010 Mojave Desert Mojave Desert Tortoise Mojave Desert Tortoise App Mojave National Preserve Montezuma's Castle Montezuma's Castle National Monument Mosaic Breccia Mosaic Canyon Mr. Rex Mt. Badly Skiing Mt. Hoffman Mt. Laguna Mt. Lawson Mt. San Jacinto Mt. San Jacinto State Park Mt. Whitney Mt. Whitney Conditions Mt. Whitney Gear Mt. Whitney Hiking Mt. Whitney Permits Mt. Whitney summit Mt. Whitney Trail Mt. Whitney Trail Crest Mt. Woodson Mud Caves Nevada Fall Niland North Ponto Beach Nothing is the same Obselida Observation Point Oceanside Ooh-Ahh-Point Outpost Camp Painters Path Trail Palm Desert Palm Springs Tram Panamint Mountains Partial Solar Eclipse 2012 Partington Cove Trail Paso Picacho Campground PCT Penny Pines Perris Jurassic Park Petroglyphs Pima Air and Space Museum Plushgun Presidio Park Pupfish Quadrantid Quadrantid Meteor Shower Ranchita Ranchita Yeti Ranchos Palos Verdes Ravens Red Cathedral Red Tide Refrigerator Canyon Ridge Trail Ring Loop Trail Rings Climb Rogers Peak Round Valley Saber-Tooth Tigers Sahuarita Saline Pool Death Valley SALT Salt Creek Interpretive Trail Salt Pool Death Valley Salvation Mountain San Diego County Hiking San Diego Hiking Clubs San Diego Red Tide San Diego Urban Legends San Dieguito Lagoon San Eliijo Lagoon San Elijo Ecological Reserve San Gorgonio San Gorgonio Wilderness San Jacinto San Jacinto Hiking San Jacinto Summit San Jacinto Trail Scotty's Castle Scout's Lookout Sentinel Dome Sentinel Dome Parking Area Sentinel Dome Trail Sentinel Dome Yosemite National Park Sequoia National Park Sinagua People Tuzigoot Skeleton Point Slab City Snow Conditions San Jacinto Snowshoeing Solana Beach Solar Eclipse Solar Eclipse 2012 South Kaibab Trail South Ponto Beach Spelunking Sphinx Moth SS Dominator START Steampunk Stonewall Peak Stovepipe Wells Village Stowe Summer Solstice Sweetwater River Sycamore Canyon Preserve Taft Point Tarantulas Tatooine Telescope Peak Tenaya Canyon That's What She Said The Beanery The DC The Grandview Trail The Hermit Trail The Integratron The Specials Tioga Road Titan Missile Titan Missile Museum TNF Trailhead Torrey Pines State Beach Torrey Pines State Park Torrey Pines State Reserve Torrey Pines State Reserve Extension Total Lunar Eclipse Townsends Long Eared Bats Trail Camp Trail Running Trailside Meadows Transit of Venus Trona Tunnel View Yosemite Tuzigoot Tuzigoot National Monument Ubehebe Crater Unimog Utah Valley Loop Trail Venusians Verde Valley Vernal Fall Vernal Falls Virgin River Vivian Creek Vivian Creek Trail Vivian Creek Trail Mileage Wag Bag Wag Bags Wagbag Walter's Wiggles Wawona Tunnel Wawona Tunnel Emergency Access What not to do Death Valley Wheel of Kama Wheel of War Where to view the 2012 Solar Eclipse White Deer of Mission Hills Whitewater Preserve Whitney Portal Whitney Portal Message Boards Whitney Portal Store Whitney Portal Trail Wildrose Peak Winchester Mystery House Woodson Mountain Woolly Mammoths Wreck of the Dominator Xanadu Xterra Black Mountain Trail Run Xterra Malibu Trail Run Xterra Mission Gorge Trail Run Yeti Yosemite Yosemite National Park Yosemite Valley YYosemite National Park Zabriskie Point Zion Canyon Zion National Park Zzyzx

    Entries in Ranchos Palos Verdes (1)

    Wednesday
    Oct272010

    How to reach the wreck of the Dominator: Ranchos Palos Verdes, California

    All roads lead to the sea...

    I stepped off the slick rock I was standing on, and hopped onto a large rusted panel that was wedged between rocks and tidepools. After steadying myself, I took a cautious second step, and then a third step to satisfy myself that it wasn’t going to collapse under my weight; which, if it occurred, would no doubt drive shards of rusty metal into my lower legs and ankles in a painful tetanus inducing manner. Only then, after watching my feet for the last forty-five minutes, did I look up and survey the wreckage around this portion of the shoreline. In the sudden low tide silence that followed my stop, I heard the clear clattering of a myriad of crustacean legs running over other pieces of metal. At that point, I allowed myself a rueful grin and wondered for the first time if heading out to the wreck of the Dominator had been a good idea.

    I had not been phased by getting mildly lost on the streets of Rancho Palos Verdes, nor by the difficulties I had experienced in finding the trail down to the wreck, nor the cobblestone covered beach, rogue waves, rotting seaweed, squatters shacks, or the aforementioned rusty bits that could poke and jab exposed flesh and deliver all sorts of disease. But, the idea of being attacked by a horde of angry crabs made me pause for a split second before I started laughing at the ridiculousness of the idea. I took two more steps, and found myself at the base of the main remaining section of the wreck, which was now broken up into three large components. In 1961, the then SS Dominator, a Greek freighter ran aground in heavy fog, and since that point in time, the remains of the ship have been slowly disappearing into the sea. (http://laist.com/2008/07/05/laistory_the_wreck_of_the_dominator.php).

    Captain Hook would be proud!

    After hearing about the wreck from a friend of mine, I was curious to see how much of the ship was left; and was curious to see if I could even find the wreck. From what I had read prior to leaving on my weekend adventure, either some or none of the ship was left, after fifty years of weathering from the Pacific Ocean and scavenging from various tourists, and that it was near impossible to traverse the beach to get to the wreck. However, like a lot of urban legends, I quickly found that both assertions were incorrect. While I had technically been seeing portions of the wreck from the moment I made it down to the beach in small bits and pieces, broken gears and rusted beams; I had found three large sections of the wreck clumped together about a mile from where I had descended.

    The first section, which I was standing beneath after my brush with the potential crab army, appeared to be the ruined section of a tractor, or large hoisting device for the ship. As I circled around the rusted and partially seaweed covered remains, I marveled at how the gears of the device had swollen into place, but still retained their distinctive forms and markings in many circumstances. After examining the gears and a large hook, I moved a short ways down to what were clearly two former sections of the hull which had turned a burnished orange over the last decade. As I looked around at the different pieces of the wreck which remained around these sections, up at the base of the cliff, and down at the tideline accompanied by only the silence of the tiny low tide waves and the wind, I thought of the fleeting nature of the works of man as compared to the timelessness of the planet, and universe. Then, on a less serious note, I thought about how the wreck reminded me of the end scene of the original version of the Planet of the Apes. But, before I could spend much more time thinking about serious or non-serious thoughts, I saw a group of thirty hikers heading up the shore toward me, and I decided to take my thoughts elsewhere while they explored the wreck on their own.

    How to Get There: The best directions I found to the wreck (which I used) were as follows: park at the intersection of Cloyden and Paseo Del Mar. There is ample street parking. Immediately to the West of Cloyden, a foot trail exists between two houses. The trail descends down a large drainage pipe toward the beach. The area around the pipe is paved and gradually sloping, which is easily traversable, and in my opinion, substantially easier and safer than attempting to descend down any other area of the surrounding sandstone cliffs. From the base of the pipe, it is approximately a mile walk South to the main portion of the wreckage described and pictured above.

    I went at low tide, and I would recommend that if you are to attempt this hike, you do the same, because the beach is very narrow and full of large cobbled stones. It is my opinion that at high tide, there would be no beach, and you would be forced to navigate the base of the cliffs, which would be a tricky proposition. Prior to attempting this hike, I read many accounts about how the beach was too difficult to traverse. The truth regarding the beach is as follows: the beach is chock full of cobbled stones to boulders. Yes, you will have to watch your footing. No, it is not impossible, or untraverseable. It’s an adventure!

    There also may be large swathes of seaweed at low tide that you may have to cross, which is a little gross, but again, it’s nothing that can’t be handled easily. Sadly, there is a fair amount of new trash along the beach (cans, and other items that have washed up), but if you feel inspired to fix this problem, you can pick up a couple pieces on your return trip to throw away later. In terms of time, it took me two and one half hours to explore the wreck leisurely and return to my car. I’d imagine the hike could be done in an hour to an hour and a half, if people were in a rush, but take your time, have some fun exploring, and enjoy the remains of the wreck while it lasts.