Balancing Rock at the D.L. Bliss State Park, located on the California side of Lake Tahoe, is a marvel.
The giant pair of boulders is exactly what its name indicates — one huge irregularly-shaped stone precariously balanced on top of the other. The big one on top, however, also resembles a huge human nose with an open nostril.
A giant nose-shaped rock, however, isn’t all that Bliss State Park has to offer. Located 17 miles south of Tahoe City on State Route 89, Bliss encompasses some 1,200 acres of pristine, forested land overlooking Lake Tahoe.
The park is named for Duane LeRoy Bliss, one of the 19th century lumber barons that nearly chopped down every tree at Lake Tahoe. Fortunately, they grew back.
At one time, Bliss owned nearly 75 percent of Tahoe’s shoreline as well as the local steamboat line, the train system, and a variety of other businesses. In the 1930s, his family donated about 800 acres of lakefront property to the state of California for a park (the state later acquired additional land).
The result is a fine park that boasts several miles of pristine lakeside property including two white-sand beaches. At the north end of the park is Rubicon Point, which is adjacent to one of the deepest parts of Lake Tahoe.
The park is only open seasonally, from late May to mid-to-late September.
One of the park’s landmarks is the Rubicon Point Lighthouse, erected in about 1918. This is not one of those big, round lighthouses like you see in the movies but rather was a small, square wooden structure that sat about 200 feet above the lake and helped serve as a navigational beacon.
The lighthouse, which kind of looks like an old pump house, was abandoned in the 1920s. For the next 80 years, it was largely ignored and left to decay. In 1997, however, the state stabilized the building, which ensured it wouldn’t disintegrate into the surrounding forest.
A short (3/4 of a mile) but very steep hiking trail leads to the lighthouse. Along the way, hikers can enjoy some of the best views of Lake Tahoe and Sierra Nevada.
Additionally, visitors can drive to one of several beaches where they can either enjoy the sun or splash around in the lake’s waters.
A large part of the reason we wanted to visit Bliss was that we had heard about the famous Balancing Rock. We asked the park ranger where it was located, and she gave us directions to the Balancing Rock Nature Trail.
A brochure at the trailhead noted that the walk was a little under a half mile. Markers that corresponded to numbers in the brochure indicated the flora, fauna and geology of the area.
Reading the brochure, we discovered that we were walking in shallow, granitic soil and that the vegetation along the way includes Huckleberry oak shrubs as well as white, red and yellow fir trees.
We meandered on the dirt trail for less than a quarter mile before finally seeing Balancing Rock. The massive football-shaped upper rock weighs some 130 tons and is balanced above a second boulder with a thin membrane of stone connecting the two.
We circled the delicately balanced granite sculpture, admiring how nature had created just the right set of circumstances to result in this monolith. The brochure pointed out that, “the precarious remnant will certainly fall when enough material has eroded away to break the equilibrium between the two pedestals.”
We hoped that wouldn’t happen for at least a little while.
For information about D.L. Bliss State Park go to parks.ca.gov/?page_id=505.