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gallery - mill valley
Behind the grasses in Hauke Park, a waterway leads to Richardson's Bay and on to the San Francisco Bay. Sold exclusively by Greenwood gallery at 32 Miller in Mill Valley.
2600 ft. Mt. Tamalpais is a State Park, with 6300 acres of redwood groves and oak woodlands...and 200 miles of biking/hiking trails. Mountain Biking was invented on these trails in the 1970s. Sold exclusively by Greenwood gallery at 32 Miller in Mill Valley.
John Thomas Reed built the lumber mill in 1834. He needed a circular saw, so he traded with the Russions at Ft. Ross: giving them 300 elk skins, 20 bear skins, and 200 cattle hides. Sold exclusively by Greenwood gallery at 32 Miller in Mill Valley.

Cascade Creek flows down Mt. Tam, through this park, and on to Richardson Bay, and out the Golden Gate.

The bridge looks elegant, but the real beauty constantly changes with the ebb and flow of the tides in the wetlands.
In 1902, the spirited ladies of the Outdoor Art Club protested to preserve this Redwood grove. Development stopped.

Blithedale Park created for the next generations.

Imagine a ball in the air...because there really is one in the Exhibit Print. The Mill Valley Heat battles the Tiburon Strikers on a field where loose balls go into the Bay.

In 1873, Dr. John Cushing dammed the creek to create a swimming hole for guests at his Health Resort in Blithedale Canyon.


Up close, the water worn creek rocks are smooth and sparkle in the sun.



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