I doing research for our book, The Memory Keeper, I found photos of a statue called “The Hide Drogher.” Drogher is a word for the slow, clumsy coastal ships, which stopped in Dana Point to trade foreign-made goods for hides. The statue shows a sailor tossing a hide. I remembered seeing the statue many years ago, but when we were doing our research, I couldn’t find it.
I looked it up and discovered it was on the top of the bluff along the Bluff Top Trail. It used to be visible from the road along the bluff, but now, large homes have been built there.
The view was gorgeous from the gazebo-structure at the end of the road.
To call this
a “trail” is a real misnomer. It is a concrete path with series of stairs, all
with handrails.
Not far along the trail, we saw the arches from the 1930 construction of the original Dana Point Hotel, which was never completed because of the stock market crash and the Great Depression.
A plaque
describes the wall and the circumstances.
The plaque
describes the statue.
The trail
was lined with rock walls, some of which can be spotted below the new trail.
We took some
photos with Larry’s phone, but they didn’t come out well. So, we went back and
retraced our steps later on. Two hikes in one day! What a gorgeous time to
enjoy our hometown!
Now that we know where the statue is, we may visit it more often.