Along Route 28 on the Nevada side of Lake Tahoe, not far from Carson City, there are pristine beaches and photogenic look-out points. The lake is vast, majestic, and more than a little awe-inspiring. Here, amidst such humbling beauty, a rocky spot on the shore offers a chance to celebrate something that, while simple, feels truly magical.
High up in the Sierra Nevada Mountains, Lake Tahoe is huge, azure blue, and clear as a swimming pool. The lake is so deep — the second deepest in the United States — you could drop a 150-story building in it, straight down. Halfway between Hidden Beach and Sand Harbor is a large boulder with four small trees growing out of a crevice at the top. It’s known as Bonsai Rock.
The spot is easy to get to from the road, which has helped make Bonsai Rock a magnet for nature photographers. With each image captured, the little guys have proven themselves an iconic symbol of the lake, at the same time evoking the spirit of bonsai artistry. The tradition of deliberately stunted trees maintained in finite containers goes back at least a thousand years, maybe even thousands more, before it was taken up by Japanese masters. Unlike the deliberate fine tuning and precise pruning required for container-grown bonsai, these trees have been pruned by a greater force, defying the odds of survival living off a diet sucked from such a nutrient-deficient natural container.
In Roughing It, Mark Twain’s account of his travels in the Wild West, about Lake Tahoe he wrote “The air up there in the clouds is very pure and fine, bracing and delicious. And why shouldn't it be? — it is the same the angels breathe.”