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Wednesday, March 28, 2018

El Capitán State Beach - Wikipedia
src: upload.wikimedia.org

El Capitán State Beach (meaning "the captain" in Spanish) is a protected beach in the state park system of California. It is located about 20 miles (32 km) west of downtown Santa Barbara. The beach is named after José Francisco Ortega, who retired from the Spanish Army in 1795 with the rank of captain and received the Rancho Nuestra Señora del Refugio as a land grant.


Video El Capitán State Beach



Features

El Capitán has a day-use beach as well as a campground with 131 sites -- 6 of which are RV only -- and 5 group sites. There are tide pools on the beach and sycamore and oak trees in the campground area. Monarch butterflies congregate at El Capitán in autumn to breed.


Maps El Capitán State Beach



History

The Refugio oil spill occurred just north of nearby Refugio State Beach in 2015 when a pipeline ruptured. The spill went into a culvert that ran under the U.S. 101 and into the ocean. The spill spread over 7-mile of coastline (11 km) including this park and Refugio State Beach. The parks were closed for much of the summer during the clean-up including the typically busy Memorial Day Weekend. The water system was destroyed in 2016 when the Sherpa Fire swept through a canyon near the main campgrounds. The park had already closed due to the smoke and fire danger.


El Capitan Canyon - Venue - Santa Barbara, CA - WeddingWire
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Gallery


El Capitan - Wikipedia
src: upload.wikimedia.org


See also

  • List of California state parks

RV Crazy?: March 2014
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References


Go Glamping at El Capitan Canyon
src: www.visitcalifornia.com


External links

  • El Capitán State Beach

Source of article : Wikipedia