Showing posts with label live fire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label live fire. Show all posts

Sunday, November 25, 2012

Over the Mountains... (Part 4 of 7): Driving Through The Live Fire Range...

by Steve Reiss (Dalmdad Landscape Photography - www.dalmdad.com and https://www.facebook.com/Dalmdad.)

FHL has many live fire ranges.  One of the ranges is visible from the public Jolon Road, just north of the the Lockwood Store, south on Jolon Road from the fort's main gate. Inside the Lockwood Store there are pictures of Mel Gibson hanging on the wall from during the filming of We Were Soldiers (2002) at FHL.

Lockwood Store: From http://chiefio.files.wordpress.com/

For whatever reason, I never took pictures of the Lockwood-area firing range, despite it being visible from the shoulder of Jolon Road.  However, you can see pictures of it here and below:


Photo From SFGate
Overhead view of Lockwood-area Firing Range

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Back at the main part of the fort, closer to the Jolon main gate, you can drive directly through a live-fire area, when no live fire is going on.  From the main fort area and Mission Road, the main road through the fort, you turn to the west onto Nacimiento-Fergusson Road (more on NFR in a later post), which begins here.  Then, its over the simple truss bridge spanning the typically dry San Antonio River.


 
As can be seen on the map, you will curve through some heavy forest, loop around some hills and then reach the wide open Stoney Valley.


Here, the signs of the live fire range are obvious.









Videos of live-fire activities being carried out at FHL can be seen here, here, and here.
 
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Sunday, November 11, 2012

Over the Mountains... (Part 2 of 7): Visiting Fort Hunter Liggett

by Steve Reiss (Dalmdad Landscape Photography - www.dalmdad.com and https://www.facebook.com/Dalmdad.)

Disclaimer: This visit was in 2007...fort security procedures may have changed since then...

Jolon (see part 1 of this series) is the main gateway to Fort Hunter Liggett (FHL).  Indeed, technically, Jolon's few remaining structures are on ground owned by FHL, though outside the security gate.

FHL (named after General Hunter Liggett), is primarily used as a training facility, where activities such as field maneuvers and live fire exercises are performed (see part 4 of this series for more detail). 

The fort is on land sold to the government by William Randolph Hearst in 1940, including  Jolon's ruins, and roughly midway between the northern and southern ends of Jolon Road.  The base is quiet and almost appears deserted unless training is going on.  You will need a driver’s license, insurance card, and vehicle registration to get through the Fort’s gate. Don't let the look of the main gate frighten you, security is a breeze (at least of the late 2000's).  The gate shown below was only added around 2005.


Picture of FHL's Jolon Main Gate (From Magicvalley.com)
On the fort grounds, there is a historic hotel known as The Hacienda (Milpitas Ranchhouse) which serves the general public and can be used as guest housing by military personnel. Julia Morgan, the designer of the hotel, designed over 700 buildings in California. Morgan's best known for her work on Hearst Castle in San Simeon, California


Although during the years I was exploring this area, I saw fairly good reviews of the Hacienda's food, I had never eaten there.  During an October, 2007 visit, which I am pretty sure was my last, I was ready to give the restaurant a try, but the restaurant portion was closed for business; though the hotel portion was openThe restaurant was still reportedly closed as recently as 2011.


Portion of Mission Revival Style Hacienda Hotel (including arched entries and arcade to the left)


Portion of Hacienda Hotel (detail)


Public Domain Panorama of Hacienda Hotel
With the restaurant closed, I wound up thinking I would not be eating lunch that day because of the limited services in the Jolon area. I continued exploring the base when the strong smell of a charcoal flame caught my nose.  A very simple and fairly priced hamburger, chips, and drink lunch combination was offered at the fort's bowling alley.  I ate out on a covered patio with a fantastic view of Junipero Serra Peak, Mission San Antonio (see part 3 of this series) and the rest of the Santa Lucia Mountains.


Lunch View of Junipero Sera Peak Rising Above Mission San Antonio
The fort is known for the herd of huntable deer and tule elk that roam the grounds, especially near the fence lines.  Here are some of them just hanging out and waiting to be cross-bowed or shot using non-lead ammunitionHunting and fishing rules and available target species are listed hereHere is a video about tule elk hunting on the fort.



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