plant

Castilleja latifoliaThe central rotunda, surrounded by the lagoon.You should reserve tickets *early morning*, but you can access the connecting bridge only.At the bottom of the Filbert Steps.Black-tailed Mule DeerBlack-tailed Mule DeerThe orange, velvety stuff on the tree is green algae. Its orange color comes from carotene, a pigment which also occurs in carrots. The plant does not harm the trees.A.M. Allan and his wife were the owners of Point Lobos whose foresight and decades-long work led to its protection and in 1933 it became part of the new state park system.A smile and a wink for the tourists.Castilleja latifoliaIn fact, the gray stringy thing which hangs from the tree is not a Halloween decoration; it is called Lace Lichen and grows where the climate is cool and humid and where there is little sun.

Lace Lichen does not harm the trees; it is found on the branches that have already died from lack of sunlight. A lichen is combination of a fungus and a green alga. Deer like to eat this lichen, and birds carry it off for nesting materials.The Palace of Fine Arts is a grandiose building wich was originally constructed for the 1915 Panama-Pacific Exposition. This is the only structure of the few surviving ones which is still situated on its original site.

The Palace intended to stand only for the duration of the Exhibition. Although it hadn't been built of durable materials, it was so beloved that it was saved from demolition.

After years of various uses, in 1964 the building was reconstructed in permanent materials. Still in that decade it became home to the Exploratorium (an interactive museum) and the Palace of Fine Arts Theater.Near PF Chang's China BistroIsmene festalisBuilt by Miklós Esterházy the 2ndBlack-tailed Mule DeerBlack-tailed Mule DeersBlack-tailed Mule DeerBlack-tailed Mule DeersAs seen from Point Lobos.As seen from Cannery PointSea otters eat and sleep in this position and seldom come ashore.These cypresses, which formerly extended over a much wider range, withdrew to these fog-shrouded headlands as the climate changed with the close of the Pleistocene epoch 15,000 years ago. The trees mirror the forces of nature and time; they survive the salt spray and wind, with their roots seeking nourishment in cracks and crevices.Rosa EglanteriaMight be the flower of the banana, but not sure.Ephippiorhynchus asiaticusCodiaeum variegatumAsplenium nidus