Inspiration Point Trail (Anacapa)
A short trail ending at one of the best coastal views in the park, on the smallest and closest island.
California · Stamp 52 / 63
Five islands close enough to see from the Los Angeles coast, isolated long enough to evolve their own miniature fox.
Channel Islands sits less than 30 miles from the Los Angeles coast but feels like a different world entirely, five islands isolated long enough that a full quarter of their species are found nowhere else on Earth. The island fox, found only here, evolved to roughly the size of a house cat, a phenomenon called island dwarfism that happens when large mammals adapt to limited island resources over thousands of generations.
There are no roads, no restaurants, and no stores on any of the islands; visitors arrive by ferry or private boat and bring everything they need with them, including water. Santa Cruz Island, the largest and most visited, offers trails, sea caves, and campgrounds, while tiny Anacapa is famous for Inspiration Point, a short walk with one of the best coastal views in Southern California.
Come for the isolation this close to a major city. Stay long enough to spot an island fox, one of the more improbable wildlife encounters in the entire park system. Read the story, book your ferry well ahead, and when you leave, collect the stamp.
Close to the mainland, yet worlds apart.Channel Islands National Park, describing its own unlikely isolation
Six ways to spend your time, once the ferry drops you on an island with no roads and no stores.
The largest and most-visited island, with trails, sea caves, and a campground near Scorpion Anchorage.
The signature trip · book aheadA short trail on the smallest, closest island ending at one of the best coastal viewpoints in the park.
Half day · smaller islandSanta Cruz Island's coastline holds some of the largest sea caves in the world, explorable by guided kayak tour.
Half day · guided tours recommendedFound only on the Channel Islands, evolved to the size of a house cat through island dwarfism.
Everyone · no guaranteeGiant kelp forests surround the islands, among the richest marine ecosystems on the California coast.
Half day · guided trips availableThe mainland visitor center in Ventura, with exhibits and an aquarium before your ferry departure.
Everyone · 45 min, on the mainlandAnswer a few questions right here — we'll map your day, stop by stop, with a route, timings, weather, and a packing checklist grounded in real park data. No account, no leaving this page.
Every trail rated honestly, with distance, climb, and a note on which island each one belongs to.
A short trail ending at one of the best coastal views in the park, on the smallest and closest island.
A loop from Scorpion Anchorage above one of the largest sea caves on any island in the world.
A coastal trail to a scenic overlook above Potato Harbor, one of the more popular day-hike routes on Santa Cruz.
A loop through the canyon behind Scorpion Anchorage, good odds of spotting the island fox.
A long traverse of Santa Cruz Island's north coast, timed to a specific ferry pickup point.
A guided kayak trip through Santa Cruz Island's sea caves, among the largest in the world.
No permit for day hikes · ferry or private boat access required for every trail · free backcountry camping permits for overnight island stays · no food, water, or fuel sold on any island
Tap any animal to learn its story. Soon, the app will let you log what you spot and keep a life list for every park.
Evolved to roughly the size of a house cat through island dwarfism, found nowhere else on Earth, and the apex predator on its home islands.
Breeds on several of the park's islands, with large colonies visible from boats and some shoreline trails.
Nests in large numbers on Anacapa Island, especially dense and vocal during spring and summer breeding season.
The fastest-growing organism on Earth, forming dense underwater forests around the islands that support an entire marine ecosystem.
Passes through the waters around the Channel Islands during seasonal migration, visible on some whale-watching tours.
Reintroduced to the islands after DDT-related population collapse, now breeding successfully across several islands.
A distinct species found only on Santa Cruz Island, nowhere else in the world, including nowhere else in the Channel Islands.
A tree-like sunflower relative that blooms bright yellow each spring, one of the most photographed sights on Anacapa Island.
A species found only on the Channel Islands, part of the broader pattern of unique plant life evolved in this isolation.
Forms dense underwater kelp forests surrounding the islands, among the richest marine habitats on the California coast.
Found only on the islands, part of the roughly 150 plant and animal species unique to this isolated ecosystem.
One of the rarest pine species in North America, found on Santa Rosa Island and one other tiny mainland population.
Found on the islands' drier slopes, part of the varied habitat found across the five-island park.
The Channel Islands are sometimes called California's Galápagos, with roughly 150 plant and animal species found nowhere else on Earth.
The island fox, found only here, evolved to roughly the size of a house cat through a process called island dwarfism.
There are no roads, restaurants, or stores on any of the five islands; visitors must bring everything they need.
Giant kelp, found in dense forests surrounding the islands, is considered the fastest-growing organism on Earth.
Stories, guides, and hard-won tips from the trail. The full Channel Islands deep dive lives on the journal.
Log the visit, keep your story, and watch the map of all sixty-three fill in behind you. Every stamp has a keepsake worth holding.
See the full map and track every stamp you have earned.
View the map → PlanTurn Channel Islands into a trip with a custom, day-by-day itinerary.
Start planning → Go deeperThe long-form guide: every trail, season, and secret, on the journal.
Read it → Explore moreFind your next stamp anywhere in the country.
Browse parks →Offline maps, your passport, and every park in your pocket on the trail.
The printed edition, part atlas, part journal, one story per park.
Field-guide posters, enamel stamps, and the passport book to fill in.