BAY NATURE
BAY NATURE July-September 2007

July-September 2007


FEATURES

The Many Lives of a Picnic Area

Paddling on the Wild Side

SPECIAL SECTION: HIGHWAY TO THE FLYWAY

The Road to Restoration

Napa-Sonoma Marshes

Sears Point

Visiting the Baylands

Baylands Resources


ON THE TRAIL

Mount Madonna

ELSEWHERE...

North Bay:
Salt Point

East Bay:
Contra Loma

Peninsula:
Pescadero Creek


DEPARTMENTS

Bay View

Letters

Ear to the Ground

Signs of the Season:
Water Bugs

Conservation in Action:
Mount Sutro

First Person:
Barbara Salzman

Families Afield:
Seedy Stories

Ask the Naturalist


WEB EXTRAS

Kayak Resources

Your Local Gopher

The Cattle Baron and the Elk


Coming Next Issue

Special Section, July-September 2007

Visiting the San Pablo Baylands

 A flock of dowitchers feeds in the seasonal wetlands that form in winter in the agricultural fields below Sears Point. Photo by Stephen Joseph for Sonoma Land Trust, 2004.

A flock of dowitchers feeds in the seasonal wetlands that form in winter in the agricultural fields below Sears Point. Photo by Stephen Joseph for Sonoma Land Trust, 2004.

by David Carroll

Despite covering a large area that has abundant wildlife, the San Pablo Baylands offer few public access points, among them the following sites (listed roughly from east to west):

Ponds 1/1a: These former salt evaporation ponds are now owned and operated by the state Department of Fish and Game. Native vegetation has begun to return to the edges of the ponds, attracting large numbers of wading birds and dabbling ducks during fall and winter. A parking turnout from west Highway 37 provides access to a two-mile road along the top of an old levee separating Pond 1 from Cullinan Ranch.

Hudeman Slough: A public boat ramp on Skaggs Island Road provides access to much of the Napa-Sonoma Marsh complex. (Access requires key issued in advance by Sonoma County Parks Department; $15 deposit). Free parking.

Ringstrom Bay: DFG’s Ringstrom Bay Unit is a good place to see ducks, raptors, beavers, and even the occasional river otter. The parking lot by the hay barn on Ramal Road (south of Highway 12/121) provides public access for wildlife dependent activities on the unit’s 400+ acres.

Tolay Creek/Tubbs Island: This unit of the San Pablo Bay NWR has a healthy population of endangered California clapper rails. The nine-mile (out and back, including loop at the end) section of the Bay Trail here runs on levees along Tolay Creek from Highway 37 out to the Bay, passing several types of wetlands. Parking and trailhead just east of Sears Point.

Sonoma Baylands: Since a dike breach in 1996, this wetland-in-transition has hosted large numbers of shorebirds as it evolves into a healthy tidal marsh. From parking on the Port Sonoma Marina access road off Highway 37 (just east of the Petaluma River), you can hike along 3.5 miles of trail, mostly on levee tops, including a recently-dedicated section of the Bay Trail.

Bahia: From the end of Bahia Drive in Novato, take the unmarked trail north. From here the path splits; head east for more than a mile along the edge of Bahia Lagoon, or continue north and west along the blue oak woodland toward Rush Creek.

Rush Creek Open Space Preserve: Five miles of trails for hikers and horses (and bikes on some segments), including a one-mile loop along the western edge of Bahia Lagoon. Pinheiro Fire Road starts at Armstrong Avenue, near the Atherton Avenue exit from 101, and intersects the Rush Creek Trail.

Deer Island Open Space Preserve: A two-mile loop around the hill that was once Deer Island offers views of the marshes between Novato and Black Point. Wildflowers such as ground iris and shooting stars are common in spring. Access from the turnout on Deer Island Lane, off Olive Avenue in Novato.


San Francisco resident David Carroll grew up exploring the Bay Area’s open spaces.


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