Friday, April 27, 2018

Jenkinson Lake ( Sly Park Reservoir) - El Dorado County, California


Visited on 4/27/2018, Jeff and I loaded up our two chocolate Labradors, Summer and Skye and we traveled in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada in El Dorado County to visit a few lakes on a nice spring day.  Our second stop was Jenkinson Lake located near Pollock Pines, California at an elevation of 3,400 feet above sea level.  This 677 acre lake has two main parts, the upper and lower lake. The lower lake is about eight times larger than the upper lake, which is to the northeast of its partner. The lower lake is more of a rounded body, while the upper is more narrow.  In the upper eastern area of the upper lake lies a large inlet, which can be traced to a waterfall.  The Sly Park Dam can be found to the southern part of the lake, and an auxiliary dam can be found to the southeast.  Sly Park, noted for its beautiful surroundings, has always been a favorite stopping place. Before Jenkinson Lake came to be, the area was a large, flower covered meadow with spring fed streams. The Maidu and Miwok people came there in the summer and fall to hunt and gather food. The women ground the acorns from the black oak trees found in abundance there. They chose the south facing slope overlooking the meadow and creek. The large rock outcroppings were in a perfect location and are now pockmarked from the years of grinding. Hundreds of grinding holes can be seen when the water is low.





Why the fence? Well this is the sight where a young man got too close to the Water Treatment intake and was sucked down the pipe and drowned a couple of months ago. They found his body submerged against the intake screen. Keep out, if it says stay away!

Some interesting history about this area:  In 1848 the Mormon Battalion, who had served in California as a peacetime force during the Mexican War, were called back to Salt Lake City by Brigham Young. While waiting for the snow to melt, they worked for John Sutter at the Coloma saw mill and at his flour mill down river. When gold was discovered, they decided to try their hand on their days off. They had some luck at the flour mill location, and it became known as Mormon Island. When spring came, they chose a spot in the El Dorado foothills to wait for the wagons to assemble for the trip to Salt Lake. They called this place Pleasant Valley. While waiting there, three men decided to scout ahead for a pass through the snow covered peaks to the east. This was the pass explored by Kit Carson and John Fremont on their expedition in 1844.

On July 2, 1848, the group of 45 men, 1 woman (a sergeant’s wife), 17 wagons, 150 horses and 150 cattle began to move up the divide between the American and Cosumnes rivers. The company stopped after a couple of days in a lush green valley, “which we called Sly’s Park after one of our men who found it, and there built a couple of corrals.” (This is taken from Bigler’s Chronicles of the West.)

At that point they sent out 10 men to explore the anticipated route and to look for the three men from whom they had received no word. The others waited and grazed their stock in the rich meadow grasses for about 9 days.
The scouting party returned, having seen nothing of the three men, but they had discovered a pass that would have to be cleared. The company cut brush and rolled rock, traveling about eight miles a day. The first night out of Sly’s Park, they camped at what they called Camp Creek. The second night was spent at Leek Springs, named for the many leeks about it.

Five of the men went on ahead to cut the road. They came across a place by a large spring where it appeared their three advance scouts had camped. Nearby was a fresh grave, and here they found the three men murdered and buried in a common grave. This place they called Tragedy Springs. Many of the place names of the Sly Park area can be attributed to that Mormon trek. James Calvin Sly returned to Sacramento from Salt Lake City over the same road about a year later as a guide for a train of wagons. They stopped at Sly’s Park for two days prospecting for gold, according to his journal.
The earliest known settlers in Sly Park were Hiram O. Bryant and William Stonebreaker, who on June 24, 1853, each claimed 160 acres of adjoining land (just east of the present main dam) for agriculture and grazing. They built houses and outhouses and the place became known as Sly Park Ranch. The Stonebreakers and Bryants sold the ranch and settled just east of Sly Park.

Luther C. Cutler and two partners bought Sly Park Ranch in November of 1857. Cutler bought out his partners and continued to buy parcels of land in the meadow. Mr. Cutler built a sawmill there and sold one half interest in the sawmill to Louis Lepettit in 1863. The mill was on Sly Park Creek on the east side of the road to Stonebreaker. There was a ditch and a flume to provide water to run the mill. On June 4, 1875, Luther Cutler bought Hazel Valley Ranch from Sam Kyburz for $100; bounded north and west by Cutler’s property, south by Sly Park Creek, and east by vacant land.
The meadow was a favorite stopping place for ranchers driving their stock to the upper mountain ranges to graze for the summer and fall. About 20,000 head of cattle and 10,000 head of sheep might be driven through Sly Park Valley in a year. The industrious Mr. Cutler established a two story frame hotel with 15 rooms, a dormitory to accommodate 15 to 20 men, a dining room and a bar. A small post office building adjoined the hotel on the east. The cattlemen as well as teamsters and other travelers all were accommodated at the hotel. There were two large dance platforms where dances were held nearly every Saturday night. George Holcomb played the violin, and Robert Carmichael played the banjo and harmonica at the same time.


Henry Alfred Stark was adopted by Mr. Cutler, according to Stark’s son Park. The man who built Stark’s Road was an uncle to Henry Stark. Henry was born in Mud Springs (now called Diamond Springs). He owned some property and mining rights in that area in the 1870’s.

Luther C. Cutler died on January 17, 1882, in Alameda County, although he was a resident of El Dorado County. He had no wife or children and left his estate to his two brothers and one sister and Henry A. Stark. The ranch in Sly Park he left to Henry Stark with the condition that he could use and occupy it throughout his lifetime, but could never sell it or any part of it. If Henry Stark married, the land would go to the children of that marriage at the time of Henry Stark’s death, to share and share alike. If he had no children, the property would then go the siblings of Luther Cutler or their heirs. Henry Stark was also left other land, but the rest of the estate was sold and divided equally between Henry Stark, Cutler’s brothers, Thomas and Sanford, and Cutler’s sister, Hannah G. Ford. This amounted to nearly $2000 each.
In 1882, Henry Alfred Stark married Mary M. Carmichael, who was born in Smith Flat. They moved to Sly Park and had three children; Park Cutler Stark, Henry Elmer Stark, and Hazel Alma Stark. The Starks operated the ranch, dairy, hotel, and later a store, most of their lives. Park was 12 years old when his Father died in 1898, leaving Sly Park Ranch to Mary Stark and the three children. The will stated, “Work horses, Barney, Eva, Craly, and Gray Mare, 4 colts, 7 cows, 10 calves, 4 hogs, 1 spring wagon, 1 plow, 1 mowing machine, 2 harnesses, a 4 bedroom residence, dining room and kitchen furniture, 1 sewing machine, and accounts due. The property was sold to E. I. D. on July 13, 1927.

Henry Schneider was a pioneer of the Pleasant Valley area. He had a butcher shop there and drove a two horse butcher wagon every day from Pleasant Valley to the various saw mills east of Sly Park. He would go down to Camp Creek, cut a willow pole, and catch about 150 trout in about 2 hours, according to Park Stark. Perhaps this is the Schneider that rented the Sly Park Ranch from El Dorado Irrigation District. The Schneiders would use it as a stopover when taking the cattle to Silver Lake. They had about 1000 head and would bring them to the Stark ranch. They took one bunch up to Silver Lake, then come back to get the second bunch. Sly Park Ranch at this time consisted of a 2 story house, a milk house, and a barn. There was a root cellar dug into the hillside behind the house. A spring also was located behind the house. The foundation of the house can still be seen when the water is low. The Carbines would stay in the house and look after the place off and on.
In September of 1889 Charles and Mary Farette sold 2 pieces of property to the Sly Park School District for $10. This property was located just west of where the lake now narrows. Due to the many mills in the area, there was need for a school there for many years. The school property was sold in 1927, but Sly Park School District had a school at Fresh Pond until the school district merged with the Pollock Pines School District.

Stumpy Meadows Reservoir - El Dorado County, California


Visited on 4/27/2018, Jeff and I loaded up our two chocolate Labradors, Summer and Skye and we traveled in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada in El Dorado County to visit a few lakes on a nice spring day.  Our fourth and final stop was Stumpy Meadows Reservoir Lake located east of Georgetown, California at an elevation of 4,260 feet above sea level.  This 315 acre lake is in the El Dorado National Forest and is the drinking water source for the Georgetown area.  Visitors can experience the thrill of flat water paddling at this remote mountain reservoir and if you want to paddle in a secluded area with breathtaking scenery, Stumpy Meadows Reservoir is the place to go.  The 5 m.p.h. boat speed limit on the entire reservoir provides superb paddling conditions. This gorgeous natural reservoir nestled in a mountain setting has only one boat launch located on the western shore.  When we visited the Lake was completely full and overflowing into the dam release.  Once I get my kayak I am bringing it to this lake for a test spin!  Great campgrounds are located on the northwestern side of the lake.


Monday, April 16, 2018

O'Neill Forebay - Merced County, California


Visited on 4/16/2018 while traveling back from the Central Coast of California for a work assignment and a weekend trip to Avila Beach with Jeff and the dogs, we stopped off Interstate 5 to visit O’Neill Forebay on our way home.  O’Neill Forebay is a 2,250 acre lake with 14 miles of shoreline located at the base of San Luis Reservoir.  The lake is at an elevation of 38 feet above sea level.  O'Neill Forebay is a forebay to the San Luis Reservoir created by the construction of O'Neill Dam across San Luis Creek approximately 12 miles west of Los Banos, California, United States, on the eastern slopes of the Pacific Coast Ranges of Merced County.

Roughly 2.5 miles downstream from the San Luis Dam, O'Neill Forebay collects irregular water releases from the San Luis Dam and William R. Gianelli Powerplant in its basin. A morning-glory type spillway lies at the left bank of the reservoir. The reservoir is fed by the California Aqueduct and the Delta–Mendota Canal. Water from the Delta–Mendota Canal is lifted a vertical distance of 8 ft into a channel running 2,200 feet into the forebay.
O'Neill Dam, constructed from 1963 to 1967, is an 87.5 feet, earthfill and rockfill dam, stretching over 3 miles across the valley of San Luis Creek. With a maximum reservoir depth of 57 feet, peak inflow to the forebay is 15,600 cubic feet per second, from both the San Luis Dam and the Delta–Mendota Canal. Drainage area of the reservoir downstream of the San Luis Dam is only 18 acres.
The California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA) has developed an advisory for O'Neill Forebay because of mercury and PCBs found in fish caught from this water body. The advisory[3] provides safe eating advice for multiple fish species. Notably, the largest striped bass caught in California was caught in the O’Neill Forebay it was over 67 pounds!


The largest striped bass caught in California was caught in the O’Neill Forebay it was over 67 pounds!

Los Banos Reservoir - Merced County, California


Visited on 4/16/2018 while traveling back from the Central Coast of California for a work assignment and a weekend trip to Avila Beach with Jeff and the dogs, we stopped off Interstate 5 to visit Los Banos Creek Reservoir on our way home.  Los Banos Creek Reservoir is at an elevation of 328 feet above sea level.  The Los Banos Dam and Reservoir are on Los Banos Creek above the San Luis Canal, near Los Banos, California. The dam and reservoir are features on the Central Valley Project - San Luis Unit. The reservoir has 410 water surface acres and 12 miles of shoreline. There are several planted trees around the campgrounds along with shade ramadas.  Los Banos Creek Reservoir is under the jurisdiction of the Four Rivers District of the California Parks and Recreation Department.  This facility is primarily used as a warm water fishery, and swimming is also popular.  The recreation area offers trails following the Path of the Padres, a boat and hiking trail. The Path leads to the baths used by the padres of early California. During the spring, guided interpretive tours are provided on the trail. The reservoir offers day use facilities for picnic and family activities. A horse camp is available and there are equestrian trails for the horse enthusiast.
Los Baños Creek or Los Banos Creek, originally El Arroyo de los Baños, is a tributary stream of the San Joaquin River. Its source drains the slopes of the Diablo Range within the Central Valley of California, United States. Los Baños Creek has its source at the confluence of North Fork Los Banos Creek and South Fork Los Banos Creek. It flows northeast to the west edge of Los Banos and then north to Mud Slough 2.5 miles upstream from its confluence with the San Joaquin River.

Los Baños Creek is reported to have taken its name from the pools, near its head, called Los Baños de Padre Arroyo for Padre Felipe Arroyo de la Cuesta, who was at Mission San Juan Bautista from 1808 to 1833 and conducted proselytizing missions into the San Joaquin Valley. El Arroyo de los Baños was a watering place on El Camino Viejo in the San Joaquin Valley between Arroyo de Quinto and Arroyo de San Luis Gonzaga.



Jeff and I in our "camping hair" at Los Banos Creek Reservoir.  The campground was nice, we liked camping spot #4 right on the lake and the dogs, shown in the background were enjoying a quick dip in the nice cool water.  This location was a little windy the day we were there.


This picture of Los Banos Creek Reservoir looks like and resembles a Rattlesnake.  Which ironically the campground had signs warning of rattlesnakes in the area.

Atasadero Lake - San Luis Obispo County, California


Visited on 4/16/2018 while traveling back from the Central Coast of California for a work assignment and a weekend trip to Avila Beach with Jeff and the dogs, we stopped at Atasadero Lake on our way home.  Atasadero Lake is a small 30 acre lake within a beautiful neighborhood park in the middle of the town of Atasadero at an elevation of 919 feet above sea level. One of the reasons the U.S. Army was interested in the J.H. Henry rancho for a training camp was because of the small natural lake in the middle of the Mexican land grant. The lake was at the base of the Santa Lucia Mountains. One government report suggested that the existing lake would provide a reliable water source for all the mules and horses.

The lake was kept filled by runoff from the nearby hills. It was never a part of Atascadero Creek, although years later a pipeline was run from the lake all the way to the Three Bridges section of Morro Road (Highway 41) about a mile away.
When E.G. Lewis bought the ranch, he saw a value in the lake and enhanced it slightly, enlarging the dam. In fact, when I moved to Atascadero in 1966 Marchant Avenue went right across the dam and through the park. The lake has always been an attraction and for almost three decades the site of a spectacular fireworks show on the Fourth of July. Atascadero Lake was our swimming hole. I have sailed my 14-foot sailboat on its waters and most recently (until this summer) run a radio-controlled sailboat there.

Swimming in the lake, and the Independence Day celebration with fireworks, was stopped by the City Council shortly after voters approved cityhood in 1979. Thousands of people crowded in and around the lake, and nearby hillsides, to watch the fireworks.  The large crowds were a liability the city didn’t want to have. There have been a number of drownings by children and adults in that lake over the years.  Again, a liability the city wanted to prevent.  So since the mid-1970s, no swimming in the lake.
On a warm summer night in 1917, for a Fourth of July celebration, a giant sailing ship was constructed on the edge of the lake to serve as the stage for a production of Gilbert and Sullivan’s “HMS Pinafore.” A scaled-down windmill and a lighthouse stood at the lake’s edge in the 1920s and '30s.



Lopez Lake - San Luis Obispo County, California


Visited on 4/15/2018 while traveling to the Central Coast of California for a work assignment, Jeff and dogs joined me for a weekend of beachfront camping at Avila Beach.  We took a drive up to this nice lake at an elevation of 560 feet above sea level, Lopez Lake is a 950 acre reservoir near the city of Arroyo Grande in San Luis Obispo County, California. The lake is formed by Lopez Dam on Arroyo Grande Creek, 9 miles upstream from the Pacific Ocean. The creek drains about 60 square miles above the dam and 90 square miles below. The dam was built in 1969 and is operated by the San Luis Obispo County Flood Control and Water Conservation District. The earth-fill dam was retrofitted to protect against earthquakes between 2001 and 2003.

Lopez Lake provides drinking water for Arroyo Grande, Grover Beach, Pismo Beach, Oceano and Avila Beach. It also provides groundwater recharge, water for irrigation and flood control. Unlike most municipal water supplies, human contact with the water is permitted. Sailing, wind surfing, water skiing, swimming, fishing and camping are popular activities. There is also a waterslide next to the lake. To prevent contamination of the drinking water, water from the lake is piped 3 miles to a terminal reservoir, where it remains to allow particles to settle out and pathogens to die off. The water then goes through flocculation, filtration and chlorination at the Lopez Water Treatment Plant.
The recreation area consists of 4,200 acres of open space, trails and camping areas. A network of equestrian, bike and hiking trails criss-cross the park which is primarily oak woodland and coastal sage scrub. The area is frequented by black bears, mountain lions, mule deer and a number of other small mammals.

Several special events are held at the park yearly such as the Lopez Lake Trout Derby held in May, the California Polytechnic University Triathlon and the Scott Tinley Dirty Adventures Triathlon.




 
Jeff walked over to the end of San Luis Pier and got this two pound live crab for our dinner on Saturday.  It was yummy.
 
 
Jeff and I walked the length of Ole Port Beach with our dogs several times during our stay.  It is the best beach ever!  The only Dogs can be off the leash and run and play freely beach!  Summer and Skye love run and catching their ball and Frisbee in the waves of the Pacific Ocean.
 


Twitchell Reservoir - San Luis Obispo & Santa Barbara Counties, California


Visited on 4/15/2018 while traveling to the Central Coast of California for a work assignment, Jeff and dogs joined me for a weekend of beachfront camping at Avila Beach.  On my way to Avila Beach to our camping spot on the Pacific Ocean, I took a drive by this nice lake at an elevation of 692 feet above sea level, Twitchell Reservoir is off Highway 166 just east in the hills of Santa Maria, California.  This 3,700 acre reservoir was not even close to capacity and it straddles two counties, a portion of the lake is in San Luis Obispo County and the southern part of the lake is located in Santa Barbara County.

Twitchell Reservoir is a reservoir in southern San Luis Obispo County and northern Santa Barbara County in California. The reservoir is formed by Twitchell Dam on the Cuyama River about 66 miles from its headwaters in the Chumash Wilderness Area and about 6 miles from its confluence with the Sisquoc River, where they form the Santa Maria River. Twitchell Dam was built by the United States Bureau of Reclamation between 1956 and 1958. The original names were Vacquero Dam and Vacquero Reservoir, but they were changed to honor T. A. Twitchell of Santa Maria, a proponent of the project.
The dam and reservoir provide flood control and water conservation. The Central Coast of California only receives significant amounts of rainfall during the winter, this area averaging 14 inches per year. The water is stored in the reservoir during big winter storms and released as quickly as possible while still allowing it to percolate into the soil and recharge the groundwater. This means that the reservoir is usually far from full. It is estimated that the project increases recharge by 20,000 acrefeet annually. Sedimentation is a problem for the reservoir, as the reservoir is being filled 70 percent faster than expected. This reduces its capacity and blocks the water inlet to the control gates. Some sediment has been removed by flushing it out during releases, but much of it is simply deposited immediately downstream, interfering with flows.
There is no public access to the dam or reservoir, so I could only take pictures from the outlook area on the north side of the Lake on Highway 166.




Cachuma Lake - Santa Barbara County, California


Visited on 4/12/2018 while traveling to Southern California for a work assignment, Cachuma Lake is a reservoir located at 753 feet above sea level in the Santa Ynez Valley of central Santa Barbara County, California on the Santa Ynez River adjoining the north side of California State Route 154. Solvang, California is approximately 10.5 miles to the west of Lake Cachuma. The town of Santa Ynez, California is approximately 7.25 miles to the west of Bradbury Dam.  The artificial lake was created by the construction of Bradbury Dam, a 201 foot earth-fill structure built by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation in 1953. Its surface area covers 3,100 acre, but the Bureau is currently limiting the capacity to 50.5% due to sediment accumulation and as of April 5, 2017.
Built by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation in 1953, the name "Cachuma" comes from a Chumash village that the Spanish spelled "Aquitsumu", from the Barbareno Chumash word aqitsu'm, meaning "sign". Body contact activities such as swimming, wading, or water skiing in Lake Cachuma have been restricted since the park opened in the 1950s, reasoning that the lake was a reservoir people depend upon for drinking water. In May 2011, the no body contact regulation was revised to allow human-powered recreational watercraft such as kayaks and canoes on the lake as well as allow dogs on boats and eliminate "incidental body contact" with the water as a punishable offense.

In September, 2016, the lake approached low levels not seen since the construction of the Bradbury Dam. The actual water level sank to 647 feet, more than 100 feet below spillway level.  Actual water content fell to approximately an alarming 7.5% of capacity.

Santa Barbara County Parks has cabin and yurt rentals, as well as RV, tent, and group camping. Gasoline and groceries are available at the general store. There is a full boat and kayak rental facility with a bait and tackle shop where fishing licenses can be purchased. The lake is stocked with rainbow trout throughout the winter season, and fishing is open all year from shore or boat. There are five miles of hiking trails within the park, and Los Padres National Forest trails close by.
A large campsite on the south shore of Cachuma Lake is administered by the Santa Barbara County Park's division of the Community Services Department.
The University of California, Santa Barbara rowing team regularly practices and races at Lake Cachuma and erected a permanent boathouse there just prior to the 1982-1983 school year. The lake is also a popular destination for viewing bald eagles from seasonal tour boats.



Casitas Lake - Ventura County, California


Visited on 4/12/2018 while traveling to Southern California for a work assignment, Lake Casitas is a man-made lake in Ventura County, California, created by the construction of Casitas Dam on Coyote Creek, two miles before it joins the Ventura River. Santa Ana Creek and North Fork Coyote Creek also flow into the lake. The dam was constructed of earth-fill and was completed in 1959.  It is 279 feet and was built by the United States Bureau of Reclamation. The lake is 1,100 acre feet and sits at 338 feet above sea level.   The dam was built as part of the Ventura River Project and was strengthened in JuneDecember 2000 as a seismic improvement to help withstand earthquakes greater than 6.5. The project provides drinking water and water for irrigation. A secondary benefit is flood control. In the center of Lake Casitas is large Main Island, whose peak rises more than 500 feet from the lake surface.

Human contact with the water is prohibited by the Board of Directors at the Casitas Municipal Water District. The board states that since the Lake is used for drinking water, body contact with water is not allowed, but fishing, boating, rowing and camping are permitted. During the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, Lake Casitas hosted the canoeing and rowing events. The lake was used as the site for filming the scenes of Camp Greenlake in the 19th century. The lake featured in the 2003 film Holes.

The "no body contact with water" lake policy was established by The Casitas Municipal Water District in the 1950s and 1960s because the lake did not have a filtration system in place. In the 1990s a multimillion-dollar filtration system upgrade was made to the Lake Casitas facility. The US Department of the Interior conducted a 10-year study on the lake where allowing body contact with water was explored. The study reported, "The capabilities of the current water filtration system to handle the additional burden of body contact were called into question. The system was shown to exceed current regulatory standards, and would “probably” be sufficient to mitigate body contact pollution as well. The Casitas Municipal Water District has not significantly changed the "no body contact with water" regulations in response to the facilities upgrade.



Springtime flowers such as these California poppies were in full bloom alone the 1/2 mile to the Lake through the campgrounds at Lake Casitas Recreation Area.

Lake Piru - Ventura County, California


Visited on 4/12/2018 while traveling to Southern California for a work assignment, Lake Piru is a 1,240 acre reservoir located in Los Padres National Forest and Topatopa Mountains of Ventura County, California, created by the construction in 1955 of the Santa Felicia Dam on Piru Creek, which is a tributary of the Santa Clara River. 
The elevation of the reservoir is 1,043 feet above sea level, and the elevation of the dam spillway is 1,055 feet.  The dam is owned and operated by the United Water Conservation District based in nearby Santa Paula, California. The district is a multi-service district providing flood control, recreation services, surface and groundwater conservation, groundwater replenishment, and wholesale water for agriculture and urban uses to the Santa Clara River Valley and Oxnard Plain. Formed on December 5, 1950, under the Water Conservation Act of 1931, it owns approximately 2,200-acre around and including the lake and dam.


Nestled in the hills above Fillmore, California among horse ranches and crop fields is this beautiful lake.

Quail Lake - Los Angeles County, California


Visited on 4/12/2018 while traveling to Southern California for a work assignment, Quail Lake is located 70 miles northwest of Los Angeles and 30 miles from Santa Clarita at the junction of Highway 138 and  Interstate 5 in the Los Padres National Forest.  Quail Lake is an artificial lake in Los Angeles County, California. Situated in the San Andreas Rift Zone along the north side of State Route 138, it is a regulatory storage body for the West Branch California Aqueduct.  This 120 acre lake is located at 3,337 feet above sea level and is the first body of water for the of the West Branch California Aqueduct, which is a part of the California State Water Project.  Quail Lake, located in the Tejon Ranch area of the western Antelope Valley, is one of the 29 storage facilities of the State Water Project. Maintained and operated by the Department of Water Resources, Quail Lake — a pond created by a cataclysmic movement of the San Andres Fault ages ago — was enlarged to move water safely across the infamous fault.  As part of the West Branch of the State Water Project, the lake provides regulatory water storage for power generation at Warne Powerplant during peak demand periods. When water is released from the lake, it flows from the lake through the Lower Quail Canal and enters the Peace Valley Pipeline. The pipeline then takes the water over five miles to the Warne Powerplant for electric energy production.  Before European settlers arrived, Native Americans camped on the banks of what is now Quail Lake. Still visible are bedrock mortars used by the early inhabitants to grind nuts and berries. The Spaniards led by Captain Pedro Fages came later, leaving present-day names like Tejon (Badger) and La Canada de las Uvas (Grapevine Pass). It was not until 1846 that General Jose Maria Flores formed La Liebre Ranch with a land grant from Pio Pico, California’s last Mexican governor. Another general, Edward F. Beale, bought the property in 1855, shaping it into a 297,000-acre ranch still known today as Tejon Ranch.




Pyramid Lake - Los Angeles County, California


Visited on 4/12/2018 while traveling to Southern California for a work assignment, Pyramid Lake is located 65 miles northwest of Los Angeles and 25 miles from Santa Clarita off of Interstate 5 in the Los Padres National Forest.  Pyramid Lake is a reservoir formed by Pyramid Dam on Piru Creek in the eastern San Emigdio Mountains, near Castaic, Southern California. This reservoir lies on the border between the Angeles National Forest in the northwestern portion of Los Angeles County. It is to the west of Interstate 5 (I-5) south of Tejon Pass. The former alignment of US 99 is below the waters here, replaced by I-5.   It is a part of the West Branch California Aqueduct, which is a part of the California State Water Project. Its water is fed by the system after being pumped up from the San Joaquin Valley and through the Tehachapi Mountains.  This 1,360 acre lake is at an elevation of 2,579 feet above sea level.
In 1843, gold was discovered near what is now Pyramid Lake, in the Santa Feliciana Canyon, just south of what is now Pyramid Dam. The small find failed to trigger a rush to the mountainous countryside. Only Francisco Lopes, owner of Rancho Temescal, a Mexican land grant, and a handful of ranchers attempted to settle the region.
This lake was created in 1972, and completed in 1973, as a holding reservoir for the California State Water Project. The lake was named after a pyramid-shaped rock carved out by engineers building U.S. Route 99. Travelers between Los Angeles and Bakersfield christened the landmark “Pyramid Rock,” which still stands just adjacent to the dam.
Pyramid Lake is the deepest lake in the California Water Project system, built up along the steep canyon walls surrounding Piru Creek.
Just below the dam, Piru Creek returns to its natural state as it winds down through the Topatopa Mountains to feed into the Lake Piru reservoir and later the Santa Clara River. Pumps carry water from Pyramid Lake to Castaic Lake, which is the terminus of the west branch of the aqueduct. Pyramid and Castaic act as the upper and lower reservoirs for a 1,495-megawatt pumped storage hydroelectric plant.
The 387 foot earth and rock dam was built by the California Department of Water Resources and was completed in 1973. Pyramid Lake is part of the California Aqueduct, which is part of the California State Water Project. Outflow goes downstream to Castaic Lake, which is the terminus of this West Branch aqueduct line.
 

The Department of Water Resources has a wonderful Visitors Center and Museum called Vista Del Lago explaining the construction of the Nation's largest water project in the California Aqueduct at Pyramid Lake Lake.  It is a wonderful, free to the public museum.  Check it out if you are driving to Los Angeles on Interstate 5.
 


Elderberry Forebay - Los Angeles County, California


Visited on 4/12/2018 while traveling to Southern California for a work assignment, Elderberry Forebay bisects the lower portion of Castiac Lake.  It is located at the upper end of the larger Castaic Lake and is separated from the lake by Elderberry Forebay Dam at its southern edge. Castaic Creek flows into this forebay and it is located  in the Sierra Pelona Mountains of northwestern Los Angeles County, California, near the town of Castaic.  This 450 acre forebay has a surface elevation of approximately 1,500 feet above sea level is the terminus of the West Branch California Aqueduct, though some comes from the 154 square miles Castaic Creek watershed above the dam. The aqueduct water comes from Pyramid Lake through the Angeles Tunnel and is used to power Castaic Power Plant, a pumped-storage hydroelectric facility on the northern end of the forebay. Water is mostly powering the turbines, rather than being pumped by them.  Elderberry Forebay is a small reservoir in Los Angeles County, California, which serves as the pumping forebay of the Castaic Power Plant. Entering the northern end of the forebay is the west branch of the California Aqueduct, which connects the forebay to Pyramid Lake through the Angeles Tunnel.

A component of the California State Water Project, the reservoir was partitioned from Castaic Lake in 1974 to store water for pumped-storage hydroelectricity generation. During on-peak energy-demand hours, water flows 7.5 miles from Pyramid Lake through the Angeles Tunnel and then on to the turbines of the Castaic Power Plant, producing electricity. From there, the water flows into Elderberry Forebay. During off-peak hours (including nighttime and Sundays), water is pumped from the forebay, back through the tunnel and into Pyramid Lake.


Castaic Lake - Los Angeles County, California


Visited on 4/12/2018 while traveling to Southern California for a work assignment, Castiac Lake is a reservoir formed by Castaic Dam on Castaic Creek, in the Sierra Pelona Mountains of northwestern Los Angeles County, California, near the town of Castaic.  This 2,235 acre lake with a surface elevation of approximately 1,500 feet above sea level is the terminus of the West Branch California Aqueduct, though some comes from the 154 square miles Castaic Creek watershed above the dam. Castaic Lake is bisected by the Elderberry Forebay Dam, which creates the adjacent Elderberry Forebay. The aqueduct water comes from Pyramid Lake through the Angeles Tunnel and is used to power Castaic Power Plant, a pumped-storage hydroelectric facility on the northern end of the forebay. Water is mostly powering the turbines, rather than being pumped by them.

Castaic Lake is part of the Castaic Lake State Recreation Area. Primary access is via Interstate 5 at the town of Castaic.  This lake is located 40 miles northwest of Los Angeles and 12 miles north of Santa Clarita, California.  Water from the lake is distributed throughout the northern portion of the Greater Los Angeles Area. Some water is released into Castaic Lagoon below the dam, which drains into Castaic Creek. The creek flows south until it meets the Santa Clara River, a few miles west of Santa Clarita.  Castaic Lake was one of the main filming locations for the Mighty Morphin Power Rangers series. Many of the action scenes were recorded here.  Castaic Lake was the starting point for The Amazing Race 26 on November 12, 2014. NBC's Fear Factor was shot there, too.