Hollister Ranch
An Amtrak train rolls north with the Gaviota Pier in the background near Hollister Ranch in the Santa Ynez Mountains.
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Swimmers enjoy the waters at Gaviota State Park near the entrance to Hollister Ranch, where owners seek to block a public shoreline access attempt by the California Coastal Commission.
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A young buck scrambles into the hills along Hollister Ranch Road, the only entrance into Hollister Ranch.
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Vehicles often loaded with surfboards drive along Hollister Ranch Road, which has a gatehouse and a guard to ensure that only designated owners and guests enter.
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The sun set over the Santa Ynez Mountains, which form the northern boundary of Hollister Ranch.
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Jeff Kamer, right, of Goleta, shows Debby Kamer, his visiting sister, the view of the ocean at the entrance to Hollister Ranch. Its owners seek to block a public access attempt by the California...
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The Hollister Ranch gatehouse guard ensures that only designated owners and guests enter the secluded Hollister Ranch.
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Hollister Ranch encompasses 14,500 acres of hilly grassland, coastal sage scrub and secluded beaches that look much like they did two centuries ago under Spanish control.
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The view from a kayak along the Hollister Ranch coastline inaccessible to the general public.
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Sand dunes along Cuarto Beach, a surfer's paradise on the Hollister Ranch coastline.
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The Hollister Ranch coastline, probably one of the most pristine stretches of beach in California.
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Mounting public outrage has fueled new efforts by state officials to open a coveted stretch of California coastline in Santa Barbara County.
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