Yes, & if you get up before daylight you might see a few roaming around just outside the cave entrances .
@mike any chance we'd still see any during the afternoon?
In the 1940's, H. Douglas Brown began building a 50-foot, metal-framed, concrete-plastered brontosaurus. The brontosaurus was big enough to be seen from the two-lane Pacific Coast Highway and was intended to lure curious passerbys to Brown's souvenir, lapidary, and bait shop and adjoining "Caves of Mystery" attraction. Brown relocated the cave entrance to the brontosaurus’s tail where visitors paid 25¢ to enter a spectacular 230-foot-long sea cave, filled with colorful Pleistocene sandstone and lit by natural “skylights.” Up to 50-feet-wide and 30-feet-deep, the caves were only a few feet short of being the largest caves on the entire California coast. Brown added a few local stones, bones, “gems,” and shells to the caves for tourists to ogle. Cave clean-up and general maintenance was hired out to local boys.
I wouldn't doubt it
Thanks! Your answer is awaiting moderation.