Edgar McGregor

Edgar McGregor is a climatology senior at San Jose State University. He has collected litter from Eaton Canyon and other natural areas for over 1,400 days. Edgar's climate activist #EarthCleanUp account on Twitter has over 35,000 followers.

10 Astounding Photographic Vantage Points In Eaton Canyon

With the improvement of mobile phone cameras, our ability to capture Eaton Canyon in all its glory has vastly improved. MyEatonCanyon.com maintains a photo gallery of some of the best views we’ve seen in the canyon so far. However, when searching up Eaton Canyon online, there is an overwhelming number of photographs of one single feature; the waterfall. As gorgeous as it is, there is so much more to Eaton Canyon that goes under appreciated.

In this article, we’re sharing the 10 best locations to take unique photographs of Eaton Canyon you might not find anywhere else. In many cases, these vantage points are unremarkable compared to the rest of the canyon for most of the year. However, when the timing, lighting, and colors are right, these spots have repeatedly produced incredible photographs time and again. Summer is typically the best time to get colorful landscape photographs in Eaton Canyon. Without further ado, here are our 10 favorites:

#10: The Fifteen Sisters

Located in Coyote Canyon, the fifteen sisters is a single Western Sycamore tree whose trunk has been buried by debris flows within the canyon. Western Sycamore trees carry the unique ability to turn part of their trunk meant to be above ground into part of the their root system should they be buried by flash floods. Western Sycamores are often only found close to sources of water, and you’d rarely if ever see one on a steep mountain slope. This single western Sycamore has branched into 15 different trunks all of which are roughly the same size. In my opinion, I have not captured the beatify of this tree well enough. The window of opportunity occurs near sunrise in late autumn when the tree is nearing peak color, specifically after a night of heavy rainfall with isolated fog draped over the hills above. Such a combination I’d imagine would produce a stunning photograph, but I have yet to be lucky.

The tree is located at: 34.18415694903343, -118.0975114636475

 

#9 The Colosseum 

Deep in Eaton Canyons’ mountain gorge is area I like the call “The Colosseum.” Here, Eaton Creek makes a full 180° turn just after passing the waterfall. This large bend has carved out a roughly 440 foot tall cliff that towers over the canyon. When approaching the turn from below, the mountain gives you the feeling of being in a colosseum. While the colors here pop best during solar noon, especially in May, June or July, the lack of shadows prevents one from really comprehending the colosseum. 

 

#8 The Canyon Mouth

Eaton Canyon spent quite some time with a rather unphotogenic canyon mouth following the 2005 flood. The flash flood destroyed all the White Alders next to the creek, and repairs to the Mount Wilson Toll road kept the scene from feeling exceptionally natural. However, a new generation of White Alders has since grown up and covered the (in my opinion) ugly parts. Now, the canyon mouth has a small forest at its base with steep, desert cliffs towering overhead. Here, the view is best in the low sun months of November, December, and January, especially when the Western Sycamores are nearing peak color. 

 

#7 The Subtropical Rainforest

Poison Oak is considered a climbing shrub, one that can be both a bush or a vine depending on what its environment will allow. Eaton Canyon is often a very dry place, but during certain times of the decade and in certain areas, the park can look much more like a subtropical rainforest.  Nowhere is this more prevalent than near the intersection of the Meadow Trail and the East Bank Trail within the L.A. County Natural Areas district. Inside a thicket of brush lies one of the largest Western Sycamores in Eaton Canyon wrapped in a huge poison oak vine climbing tens of feet into the air. We’ve seen poison oak climb trees, but nothing like this! This plant is truly reaching for the sky. As a result, the scene looks like something you’d find in the Santa Cruz mountains or the Amazon rainforest, not dry and dusty Eaton Canyon.

 

#6 Mount Markham From Eaton Saddle

Located at the top of the canyon, Mount Markham sticks up like a sore thumb to 5,745′ and serves as only of the only high elevation north-facing slope in Eaton Canyon. A pair of long, narrow rock fields on its northeast flank are a reminder to the trees that sit in rows in-between that they live on borrowed time. With over 100 inches of snow falling per winter, this scene has the potential to create incredible photographic opportunities. 

 

#5 Bigcone Douglas Fir Logs

If you’ve spent any time walking around Eaton Wash, you may have noticed huge tree logs sitting out in the desert far from any other tree. How did they get here? Well, these are Bigcone Douglas Fir logs that washed down during Eaton Canyon’s major flash floods over the past century. They are fantastic proxy data for telling us how large the floods in the canyon can get. There are over 100 of these logs scattered throughout the wash portion of the canyon, many of them making for some incredible photographs. Take a walk through the wash and look for one. Position yourself to add some mountains, rocks, and a nearby Yucca, and you’ve got yourself an incredible desert photograph!

The most impressive, however, are those above the fourth waterwall. These logs are only accessible via mountain climbing gear. Eaton Canyon actually qualifies as a slot canyon in some areas, one of the very few slot canyons in Southern California. These channels are so deep and narrow that Bigcone Douglas Fir logs floating down the canyon during major flood events can get wedged in-between the canyon walls where they remain indefinitely. 

This photograph by William Hunt shows one of those logs suspended 20-25 feet above the canyon floor. Note the people for scale. As I understand it, this log is between waterfalls #4 and #5. 

 

#4 Meteorology

Every now and again, nature puts on an incredible show of weather for visitors to Eaton Canyon. Monsoon thunderstorms, Santa Ana winds, blizzards, flash flooding, wildfires, cloud formations, rain shafts, and even rainbows have made an appearance in the canyon in recent years. Each one has its own unique challenges for photographers, but with a fair bit of luck and the right timing, simply astounding moments can forever be preserved. 

 

#3 Change

There will come a day in the not so distant future where nearly everything in Eaton Canyon is forever changed. The whole park, from the course of the creek to the route of the main trail, will be mixed up and set anew. Aerial imagery and historic photographs of Eaton Canyon show that the wondrous park has always been in a constant state of change, with flash flooding, human encroachment, wildfires, fault lines, and landslides all switching the park into a new version of itself. Nothing is safe from the tides of change. As a result, any photograph of Eaton Canyon that adequately captures it in its present state can serve as a good memory.

 

#2 The Garden Of Eden

Most astounding in July, the Garden of Eden is one of my most favorite locations in Eaton Canyon to photograph. The combination of desert, forest, cliffs, sky, and color all come together to produce a masterpiece. Unlike other photographs, five major color groups are present in this location, with reds, greens, blues, greys, and browns all being prominent. The vantage point is located right on the connector trail between the Midwick Entrance and the Eaton Canyon Trail at 34.18552027558575, -118.10156651797024. 

It embodies Eaton Canyon’s diversity unlike any other location. It is a view that isn’t always pretty, especially when skies are overcast. However, like with many other images on this list, the right time and lighting can make it simply mesmerizing. 

 

#1 The Aquatic World

Unphotographable in a single shot, the aquatic world of Eaton Canyon is the most marvelous yet ignored place in Eaton Canyon. Only visible in late spring after a wetter than average winter, the underwater portion of the canyon offers stunning views of algae, cliffs, waterfalls, miniature mountains, and wildlife. Underwater cameras set to slow motion capture the beauty best, and a certain level of zen can be achieved here too.

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Eaton Canyon Flooded With Tens Of Thousands Of Visitors Over Memorial Day Weekend

Since the debacle in 2020, even the mere thought of Memorial Day Weekend has struck fear in the minds of daily visitors to Eaton Canyon. Each year, this specific weekend sees the highest influx of Angelinos drawn by the holiday, the onset of summer, favorable weather, and high creek flows. The combination of COVID-19 and TikTok has allowed the canyon to surge in popularity across Southern California, with the main waterfall frequently being a top result when one searches “Waterfalls in Los Angeles.” On top of that, Eaton Canyon is one of the most centrally located and accessible waterfalls within Los Angeles County, the most populous county in the United States.

As a consequence to all of this, approximately 35,000 to 50,000 people visited Eaton Canyon between Saturday morning, May 25th and Monday evening, May 27th, 2024. Only Memorial Day weekend 2020 itself was busier.

The mass influx of people into the canyon has led to multiple issues in the area, including excessive trash, graffiti, unlicensed vendors, illegal parking, and loud music. The busy weekend has renewed conversations among locals who want to do something about the Disneyland-type visitation levels, with calls for more sheriffs, more park rangers, a fee for entry, a towing company on stand-by, and even a return to the COVID-era reservation system. The Angeles National Forest does not consider the waterfall trail a real trail, and thus no forest rangers occupy the area.

Hopes are that visitation will drop in the canyon after Big Santa Anita Canyon, which has been closed since August 2020 due to the Bobcat Fire and the 2023 floods, will reopen on June 1st.

Areas in red indicate areas taken up by hikers parking their cars on Monday, May 27, 2024 at approximately 10:30 am

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Record Rainfall Turns Eaton Canyon Lush, Creating The First Ingredient Needed For Catastrophe

Between November 2022 and May 2024, Eaton Canyon has experienced an extraordinary number of rainstorms, including atmospheric rivers, lightning storms, cold fronts, monsoon surges, and even its first landfalling tropical cyclone in 87 years. These remarkable storms have collectively delivered between 75 and 100 inches of rainfall throughout the canyon, marking this the wettest 18-month period in 117 years of recorded weather history. Today, a walk through the canyon reveals an unfamiliar landscape, with moss-covered trees, lush poison oak, and dense vegetation in nearly every direction. In some areas, the scene looks much more like a subtropical rainforest than a semi-arid mediterranean climate. This excess rainfall has also meant relief from our historic megadrought, increased biodiversity, and healthy water levels in Eaton Creek.

During that same 18-month period, however, average temperatures in Eaton Canyon have been 5.37°F above the preindustrial average. This combination of extreme wetness and heat is unprecedented in recorded history and likely unmatched in the past 3,000,000 years since Earth was last this warm.

Despite the current beauty of the canyon, there is a danger hiding in the brush; one that has the potential to destroy everything we know and love.

For many, the photograph above showcases Eaton Canyon’s incredible untamed, natural beauty. The thick brush is full of fungi, lichens, mosses, invertebrates, birds, and even the occasional mammal. However, for those wildfire-cautious among us, the scene above is also rather alarming. Unlike many parts of the word, California experiences an annual summer drought from June through November, during which rainfall is minimal or nonexistent. This lush vegetation is not expected to get any appreciable precipitation for the next 6 months, and it is therefore expected to dry out.

Wildfires need three main ingredients to ignite: oxygen, heat, and dry fuel. California’s wildfires are significantly influenced by the availability of dry fuel, such as dead trees, leaf matter, and chaparral brush. The relationship between wet and dry years plays a crucial role in determining wildfire risk:

  • Wet year followed by a wet year: Abundant fuel that remains too wet to burn explosively.
  • Dry year followed by a wet year: Limited fuel that remains too wet to ignite easily.
  • Wet year followed by a dry year: Abundant fuel that becomes dangerously dry. (see: 2020 California firestorms)
  • Dry year followed by a dry year: Limited fuel that is highly flammable.

Throughout summer and autumn 2024, the vegetation in Eaton Canyon will likely remain too wet to support an explosive wildfire, as both 2023 and 2024 were much wetter than average. However, if winter 2025 is dry, the massive amounts of fuel in the canyon will continue to dry out, posing an extraordinarily dangerous situation come summer and autumn 2025. Radically increasing summer temperatures also increase evaporation which accelerates the drying-out of fuels.

Eaton Canyon will be destroyed by a wildfire again sometime in the future, just like it was in 1978 and 1993. With the area hotter than ever before and thick brush overcrowding the canyon, this time it could be far, far worse.

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