Had slight cupping before preservation (see 2nd photo), and dense pubescence adaxialy and abaxialy. Might be Q. durata x garryana. Date is a little off
In the woods: on the W/SW slope/toe-slope of Walker Mountain. Twigs tomentose, leaf petiole less than 5mm, leaves convex, puberulent, short-hairy abaxially, margin wavy, inrolled, toothed (from Jepson). Does not key from Flora of Oregon, as it isn't Q chrysolepis or vaccinifolia. It reminded of oaks I saw in Lake/Colusa County, CA, so I grabbed a sample. In an area with a 'unique' flora.
There are other observations of felty leaf Q. kelloggii although it is uncommon.
An unusual Q. kelloggii oak near Alta Sierra. I have seen this on iNaturalist one or twice. The last image is the same tree and lacks the dense pubesence but has scattered trichomes. I recall the typical leaf was on a tree branch while the unusual leaves were on a basal sprout..
Santa Cruz, next to sand dollar beach
On 10/3/74 James Griffin vouchered a discovery of Quercus palmeri in the Clear Creek area of San Benito County. At that time this was a new, isolated, northerly station for this unusual species. Griiffin returned about 3 weeks later with his botanist friend and CA oak maven John Tucker, and together they collected a number of additional vouchers. At that time Q. palmeri went by the name Q. dunni (after the remarkable late-1800's naturalist & collector George Dunn, see Jepson's brief bio here). Later Griffin & Tucker published a 1976 Madroño note on the newly discovered station. Motivated by the above, and a prior interest this species, I was eager to look for these Palmer Oaks...and joined Joyce Gross & Alice Abela to search for them, almost 50 years after Griffin & Tucker's voucher collections.
After planning and walking a route with a number of promising point locations suggested by the Madroño note & voucher labels, we seemed to have struck-out on our "best candidate sites" and were becoming somewhat discouraged. But crossing a creek after the road we were on faded out, Joyce came upon a smaller trail following the SW side of the creek, and within a few hundred feet there were 3 or 4 clumps of Palmer Oaks growing on the steep bank above the trail :-). Note that zooming-in on the iNat inset map above, the observation icon appears to the NE of the trail shown there...but that's an artifact of errors in either my camera's GPS reading, the rendering of the trail on the map, or both. The rough location is correct, but the trail follows the SW side of the creek there...and the Palmer Oaks are rooted along the eroding upper edge of the tall bank just SW of the trail.
Palmer Oak is thought to be a relict species that had a more widespread and continuous distribution in Pleistocene and Pliocene times. Except for of a few areas in southern California, northern Baja California, and Arizona (see SEINet map here), nowadays it is usually found in small isolated stands of a few individuals, which are often clonal groupings...and these stands are typically many miles apart (e.g. ten, twenty, or much more!). One particular clonal colony growing high on a granitic summit in the Jurupa Hills of Riverside County, CA has been estimated to be 13,000+ years old in this 2009 paper.
The plants here were growing in 3 or 4 "clumps" of scrub to small tree-like stature — each with one to several small, clustered, multiple trunks. They appeared less clonal in growth form than other Palmer Oak groupings I've seen...but may have been clonal. I have no idea how old these plants currently are, but they may have difficulty persisting for a truly long time into the future at this site — as their roots are being undercut by erosion of the bank above the old jeep road/trail and adjacent creek. This may be exacerbated in part by human impacts...recent motorcycle tracks were apparent, and a large branch had been cut off and was lying by the trail. (Some branches were overhanging the trail...and Palmer Oaks are notoriously rigidly-branched with leaves that are viciously stiff & spine-margined!)
In addition to the Jepson eFlora treatment for Q. palmeri, more info is available on the SEINet page here.