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Scenic Cave Closed At Malibu Creek State Park Over Doors-Inspired Graffiti

LOS ANGELES (CBS/AP) -- As the Doors song goes, this is the end.

Fans of the band who have marked up a scenic cave on the California coast with psychedelic graffiti will have to find another place to spray out their love for frontman Jim Morrison. It has closed indefinitely for cleanup.

Corral Canyon Cave Closure in Malibu
California State Park supervising ranger D. Lindsey Templeton, right, watches fellow ranger Dexter Crowder, center, enter the Corral Canyon Cave. (L.A. Times photo by Allen J. Schaben via Getty Images)

The trend began with a social media myth that the singer wrote songs in Corral Canyon Cave in Malibu Creek State Park.

It was always a popular hiking spot for nature lovers seeking sweeping views of the surrounding scenery and always had some vandalism, but it has spiraled out of control in the past year.

The cave now looks almost tie-dyed with multicolored swirls inside and out. Doors lyrics such as "love me 2 times" and "try to set the night on fire" are scrawled on its walls. There also are declarations like "Use your third eye" and "Try LSD," along with more crude tags.

Corral Canyon Cave Closure in Malibu
Corral Canyon resident Steve Woods, right, listens as California State Park supervising ranger D. Lindsey Templeton, left, explains to hiking guide Adam McLean, of Hollywood, center, that the cave is closed in Malibu. (Allen J. Schaben via Getty Images)

The problem is the combination of tags and hashtags, with people putting pictures of the "Jim Morrison cave" on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook, though he never wrote a known word there.

"It exploded over last summer, and graffiti has been increasing ever since," California State Parks District Superintendent Craig Sap told the Los Angeles Times. "People are posting pictures of the cave 30 or 40 times a day."

Approaching the cave, you can almost expect to catch someone ready to mark it, Supervising Ranger Lindsey Templeton said.

"We come in and we hear shaking cans," Templeton said. "It's like fish in a barrel."

The now-closed cave will be blasted with walnut shells, which will clean off the graffiti without damaging the rock walls. The cleanup will cost $40,000, and there's no word on when hikers can head back to it.

It's a misdemeanor to go to the cave, with a fine of nearly $400, and a felony to spray-paint on it.

© Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed

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