Ossagon Trail

Ossagon Trail

Trails
Last Updated: July 2026

Distance

1.8 mi

Elevation Gain

700 ft

Est. Time

2.5 to 3.5 hours depending on fitness. The descent is tougher on the knees than the climb.

Route Type

Out and back to Gold Bluffs Beach

Dogs Allowed

No

Best Season

Late spring through early fall

Overview

About This Trail

This 1.8-mile trail climbs 700 feet through old-growth redwoods transitioning to Sitka spruce forest, finishing at Gold Bluffs Beach on the Pacific. It's a lung-buster popular with summer hikers seeking genuine workout—steep, relentless climb with minimal switchbacks and shade on upper sections. The payoff: California Coastal Trail connection and ocean views. Winter and spring render sections swampy and muddy, so summer through early fall is your window.

Highlights

Difficulty Level

Strenuous

Trail Highlights

Pacific Ocean connection via California Coastal Trail and Gold Bluffs Beach. Old-growth redwood forest transitions to dramatic coastal Sitka spruce ecosystem. Part of larger 19-mile bike loop.

Insider Tips

• The forest canopy opens dramatically near the coast; the Pacific Ocean appears suddenly in the final 0.3 miles • Don't stop at Gold Bluffs Beach parking area; hike to the actual beach and walk north along the sand for sea stack views • The false summit at Mile 1.2 will deceive you; the coast is closer than it feels • Loop extension: connect to the 19-mile Davison/Streelow Creek Loop for a full-day punishment • Summer weekends = conga line; go weekday morning for solitude

Best Season to Hike

Late spring through early fall

Hiking Tips

  • Start early—parking fills by mid-morning on summer weekends
  • Bring 2L water minimum for steep sections; dehydration is real
  • Waterproof boots essential; trail floods or gets muddy near the coast
  • Stay on marked trail; falling branches and limbs block the path constantly
  • Roosevelt Elk herd on Gold Bluffs Beach—maintain 100-yard distance, never approach
  • Check weather before going; winter/spring = waterlogged nightmare
  • Carry a map; don't rely on cell service (very limited)

Family Info

700 feet of elevation in 1.8 miles is steep for young children; not suitable for toddlers or poor hikers. Falling branches pose injury risk. Roosevelt Elk on the beach—teach children never to approach or feed wildlife.

What Hikers Say

Hikers praise the coastal payoff and old-growth redwoods but warn that 700 feet over 1.8 miles is relentless. Summer crowds can be significant. Winter/spring conditions transform the trail into a muddy swamp; most hikers report it's only viable May through October.

ℹ️ Data Sources
🏞️ National Park Service 📝 YourNPGuide Editorial

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