Sunday, April 28, 2019

Loch Lomond Reservoir - Santa Cruz County, California


Visited on 3/29/2019 while on a weekend camping trip adventure to the South Bay Area, we camped at Coyote Lake near Gilroy.  Jeff and our two Chocolate Labs, Summer and Skye joined us on our adventure of several lakes in the area.  Loch Lomond is nestled in the Santa Cruz Mountains near Lompico, California and is located 574 feet above sea level.  This 175 acre reservoir is part of the Santa Cruz Water Department system, it was created by building the Newell Creek Dam across Newell Creek - a tributary of the San Lorenzo River. The dam is an earth-fill barricade, measuring 190 feet by 750 feet. It was financed by bond issuance, and completed in the Fall of 1960; impounded water first ran over the spillway in March 1963. It is 2.5 miles long, 0.25 miles wide.  It provides a portion of the drinking water supply for the city of Santa Cruz, California and other nearby County areas. Boating, fishing, picnicking and hiking take place at the reservoir. No daily private boat launching is permitted. No swimming is allowed. The reservoir has a boat rental and nice little snack shop which has great ice cream treats.






Jeff and I stopped in the town of Felton and visited this historic old covered bridge which was built back in 1892.  The Felton Covered Bridge is a covered bridge over the San Lorenzo River in Felton, Santa Cruz County in the U.S. state of California. The bridge employs a Brown truss structural system and is approximately 80 feet long. The bridge became a California Historical Landmark in 1957, was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973, and had a major restoration in 1987 after being damaged in storms in the winter of 1982.

Felton Covered Bridge is considered to be the tallest covered bridge in the United States, and was the main entry point for Felton for 45 years.  The bridge is no longer used on the roadway, but is accessible to pedestrians visiting the Felton Covered Bridge Park.

To cap off the long day of visiting many lakes in the area we decided to reward our patient and water loving Chocolate Labs for visiting several lakes without putting their paws in the water.  We treated them to a off-leash beach visit to Santa Cruz at the Lighthouse Dog Beach.  They chased the ball into the ocean and became friends with several other dogs having fun along the coast.

Lake Elsman - Santa Clara County, California



Visited on 3/29/2019 during a weekend camping trip with Jeff and our two Chocolate labs, Summer and Skye.  Lake Elsman is a reservoir, created by an earthen dam called Austrian Dam on Los Gatos Creek in the Santa Cruz Mountains of California.   At several points it is over 140' deep and its normal surface area is 96 acres.   It provides 12% of San Jose Water Works’ total water capacity in some years.  The lake is located at 1,119 feet above sea level and dam is owned by the San Jose Water Company.  Restricted access is strictly enforced by the Water Company and private lands surrounding the lake.

In 1988 and 1989, two earthquakes 5.3 and 5.4 respectively occurred at Lake Elsman that transferred stress that led to the 1989 6.9 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake.
Construction of the Austrian Dam was completed in 1950.  Beneath the reservoir are the remains of the settlements of Austrian Gulch and Germantown.  The dam is more than 900 feet long and 180 feet high.  The dam was damaged in the Loma Prieta quake.   The performance of Austrian Dam during that earthquake reinforces concerns about damage to the tops of earth dams by earthquakes.



Driving around the hills trying to find access to Lake Elmans, we drove along this creek that exits the dam along the west side of the lake.  Nice sounds of the water trickling over the rocks.

Lexington Reservoir - Santa Clara County, California


Visited on 3/29/2019 while on a weekend camping trip adventure to the South Bay Area, we camped at Coyote Lake near Gilroy.  Jeff and our two Chocolate Labs, Summer and Skye joined us on our adventure of several lakes in the area.  Located along the canyon on Highway 17 southwest of the town of Los Gatos is the 450 acre Lexington Reservoir.  The reservoir and James J. Lenihan Dam are located at an elevation of 645 feet above sea level.  Jeff and I walked across the dam with our dogs.  The dam was constructed in 1952. Initially, the dam was referred to by different names, primarily "Windy Point Dam," because the location of the proposed dam was near an obscure spur known as Windy Point. In 1947, water district directors decided to name the dam and reservoir for Lexington, a small nearby community that was sacrificed when the reservoir was built. In 1996, Lexington Dam was renamed for James J. Lenihan, the Santa Clara Valley Water District's longest-serving director with 37 years of service.

The 2.5-miles-long reservoir is the second-largest water district reservoir.   In 1943, because of the rapid expansion of orchards in the county, the Santa Clara Valley Water District determined that the well water in the Santa Clara Valley was being diminished rapidly and a dam was needed on Los Gatos Creek, with one goal being to percolate the water into the ground and ultimately increase the amount of well water available.  After rerouting State Route 17 near Windy Point, which is a mile south of Los Gatos, the District began dam construction in the spring of 1952, completing it that fall.
The reservoir covered the towns of Lexington and Alma. Alma and Lexington reached their peak population in the mid-19th century, when about 200 people lived in each. Each of the towns had a post office, hotel, saloons, blacksmith shops, and half a dozen redwood sawmills. Lexington was the halfway stop for stagecoaches running between San Jose and Santa Cruz. The town served as a place to switch from four horses to six horses to get over the mountains. Lexington declined after 1880 when the narrow gauge railroad from Los Gatos to Santa Cruz bypassed it, while Alma declined when Highway 17 bypassed it in 1940. The railroad ceased operations in 1940. By 1950, only about 100 people lived in the two communities.


Lexington gained national attention in 1883, when a Los Gatos saloon keeper, Lloyd Majors, hired two thugs to rob an elderly Lexington man who kept $20,000 in gold in his cabin. They burned him with turpentine-soaked rags and beat him with pistols, killing him, and then fled with the gold. Their sensational trial in San Jose drew national attention similar to that accorded to the Lizzie Borden ax murders nine years later. Majors and one of the thugs were hanged. The other spent 15 years in prison.




Stevens Creek Reservoir - Santa Clara County, California


Visited on 3/29/2019 while on a weekend camping trip adventure to the South Bay Area, we camped at Coyote Lake near Gilroy.  Jeff and our two Chocolate Labs, Summer and Skye joined us on our adventure of several lakes in the area.  Stevens Creek Reservoir is located 365 feet above sea level along a creek that bares it’s name and is about two miles southwest of town of Cupertino.   Stevens Creek is a 92 acre reservoir which was originally known as Arroyo de San José Cupertino. The stream now bears the name of an early settler, Captain Elishia Stephens, a South Carolinian, who led the first successful passage of wagons over the Sierra Nevada in 1844. Stevens Creek dam and reservoir is one of six original systems approved for construction by voters in 1934. It was completed in 1935. In 1985, an additional 231,000 cubic yards of material was added to the dam, raising it 10 feet. 




Vasona Lake - Santa Clara County, California


Visited on 3/29/2019 while on a weekend camping trip adventure to the South Bay Area, we camped at Coyote Lake near Gilroy.  Jeff and our two Chocolate Labs, Summer and Skye joined us on our adventure of several lakes in the area.  Vasona Lake is a 58 acre urban lake and recreation park in the City of Los Gatos at an elevation of 185 feet above sea level.   This County park has many large group picnic areas and a walking trail around the lake.  Lots of locals were out walking and enjoying this spring time day around the lake.  Adjacent to Vasona Lake County Park is the Town of Los Gatos' Oak Meadow Park. Here, visitors can ride a carousel, picnic, play informal sports, or enjoy the playground. Miniature train rides on the Billy Jones Wildcat Railroad originates in Oak Meadow and run through Vasona Lake County Park.



Almaden Reservoir - Santa Clara County, California


Visited on 3/29/2019 while on a weekend camping trip adventure to the South Bay Area, we camped at Coyote Lake near Gilroy.  Jeff and our two Chocolate Labs, Summer and Skye joined us on our adventure of several lakes in the area.  On our way to this 62 acre reservoir we explored the small and charming town of New Almaden.  The history of this small mining community and the structures that still remain from the mid-1800’s make for a fascinating auto tour.  We visited many of the well-marked red and white informational signs explaining about the area.  Almaden Reservoir is one of Santa Clara County's six original reservoirs, built in 1935, and is one of 10 current reservoirs operated by the Santa Clara Valley Water District. Able to store 1,590-acre feet of water, the reservoir, located 12 mile south of San Jose, produces about 4 percent of the district's local water supply and also provides water for groundwater recharge.

Its accompanying earth fill dam stands 110-feet tall with a crest of about 500-feet. Subject to safety regulations by the State Division of Safety and Dams (DSOD), Almaden Dam is currently considered a high-hazard dam due to the number of people who live in the potential flood zone downstream and the extensive amount of damage that a flood could cause in case of a dam breach.

The town of New Almaden was a company owned community owned and the quicksilver mine located in the Capitancillas range, is the oldest and most productive quicksilver (i.e., mercury) mine in the United States.   The site was known to the indigenous Ohlone Indians for its cinnabar long before a Mexican settler became aware of the ores in 1820. By the time they were identified as mercury, the mine was perfectly timed to supply the California Gold Rush. The mine ran intermittently through 1927 and eventually closed.  It was purchased by the county and is now part of Almaden Quicksilver County Park.






Calero Reservoir - Santa Clara County, California


Visited on 3/29/2019 during a weekend camping trip with Jeff and our two Chocolate labs, Summer and Skye.   The Santa Clara Valley Water District built the Calero Dam forming this 349 acre lake at an elevation of 365 feet above sea level.  The dam was built during the Great Depression, completing it in 1935 after acquiring land as the Santa Clara Valley Water Conservation District. The dam and reservoir is one of the six original reservoirs approved for construction by voters in May 1934.

Both dam and reservoir are located on Calero Creek. The 2.2-miles-long reservoir can store 9,934 acre-feet of water.  Calero Reservoir provides water directly to drinking water treatment plants, which treat and test it for safety. The district then distributes the water to water retailers to sell to the county’s 1.8 million residents. Calero also captures and stores winter runoff to recharge groundwater basins, helps store water from the nearby Almaden Reservoir watershed and accepts imported water.

The water district is currently in the midst of a seismic retrofit of the Calero Dam.









Chesbro Reservoir - Santa Clara County, California


Visited on 3/29/2019 during a weekend camping trip with Jeff and our two Chocolate labs, Summer and Skye.  Chesbro Reservoir is located three miles west of Morgan Hill, California at an elevation of 531 feet above sea level.  This 283 acre reservoir was named after Elmer J. Chesbro who was the president of the South Santa Clara Valley Water Conservation District at the time of the construction of Chesbro dam and reservoir in 1955. Chesbro dam and reservoir are located on Llagas Creek.



Saturday, April 27, 2019

Uvas Reservoir - Santa Clara County, California


Visited on 3/29/2019 during a weekend camping trip to the south bay area.  We camped at Coyote Lake just east of Gilroy, California for a nice three day weekend camping trip with Jeff and our two Chocolate Labs, Summer and Skye.  Uvas dam and reservoir are located on Uvas Creek about two miles upstream from the intersection of Watsonville and Uvas roads in southern Santa Clara County. The Spanish name for grapes, "uvas," is preserved in a number of place names, all apparently referring to the abundance of wild grapes. Uvas Creek got its name from the land grant Cañada de las Uvas (grape ravine) dated June 14, 1842. Uvas Dam was a part of the South Santa Clara Valley Water Conservation District. It was completed in 1957. The reservoir's capacity is 9,835 acre-feet of water. The surface area is 288 acres and it at an elevation of 440 feet above sea level.  We arrived early morning and the water was still and only a couple of fisherman were casting their lines from the dam.  We strolled across the dam and took in the wonderful view of this lake in this canyon.









Thursday, April 18, 2019

Anderson Lake - Santa Clara County, California


Visited on 3/29/2019 during a weekend camping trip with Jeff and our two Chocolate labs, Summer and Skye.   We camped at the southern neighbor Coyote Lake – Harvey Bear Ranch County Park, Campsite #35 in the Lakeview Campground.  Anderson Reservoir is the largest of the 10 water district reservoirs and provides a reliable supply of water to Santa Clara County.  It has a surface acreage size of 980 at an elevation of 637 feet above sea level.   Anderson Dam was built in 1950 and named after the key founder and first president of the water district, Leroy Anderson. A long, deep natural gorge located three miles east of U.S. 101 in Morgan Hill provided a suitable dam site.

The reservoir was created in 1950 by the construction of the Anderson Dam across Coyote Creek in foothills of the Diablo Mountains east of Morgan Hill. The reservoir and dam were named after Leroy Anderson, a key founder and first president of the Santa Clara Valley Water District. It is the largest reservoir owned by the district.

The 235 feet high earthen dam measures 1,430 feet long by 900 feet wide and sits along the Coyote Creek Fault on Coyote Road, east of Morgan Hill.   The reservoir itself is situated parallel to the Calaveras Fault, which runs from Hollister to Milpitas.   It holds over 90,000 acre feet of water when full, more than the other nine reservoirs in the county combined.

The 4,275-acre Anderson Lake County Park is managed by the Santa Clara County Parks and Recreation Department. Features in addition to the county's largest reservoir are the Coyote Creek Parkway multiple use trails, the Jackson Ranch historic park site, the Moses L. Rosendin Park, the Burnett Park area, and Anderson Lake Visitors Center. Coyote Creek Parkway, a paved trail along Coyote Creek that heads 15 miles north to Hellyer County Park, is used for hiking, jogging, bicycling, horseback riding, and skating.




Tuesday, April 16, 2019

Coyote Lake - Santa Clara County, California


Visited on 3/29/2019 during a weekend camping trip with Jeff and our two Chocolate labs, Summer and Skye.   We camped at Coyote Lake – Harvey Bear Ranch County Park, Campsite #35 in the Lakeview Campground.  The Lake is located in the hills just east of Gilroy, California where we decided to enjoy a nice warm spring weekend exploring the landscape. Coyote Lake is a 635 surface area reservoir located 7 miles east of Gilroy, California at an elevation of 744 feet above sea level.  Many geographic features in California were named directly or indirectly after the coyote. The Spanish explorer Juan Bautista de Anza named the river Arroyo del Coyote after coyotes seen during his journey. The Coyote Reservoir is located on the former Rancho San Ysidro, a cattle ranch that belonged to Ygnacio Ortega in the early 1800s. Coyote Dam and Reservoir is one of original six reservoirs approved for construction by voters in May 1934. The reservoir is impounded by Coyote Dam, a 140-foot high, 980-foot long, earth and rock dam built in 1936.




 



Wednesday, April 3, 2019

San Felipe Lake - San Benito County, California


Visited 3/29/19, while on a three day weekend camping trip to the South San Francisco Bay area.  While camping at Coyote Lake Campground in the hills above Gilroy, California  we visited several lakes in the area.  Located 13 miles southeast of Gilroy along Highway 152 I visited San Felipe Lake.  This lake which is a shallow, turbid lake that is a natural sag pond formed by the Calaveras Fault Zone. Two tributaries enter San Felipe Lake from the east, Tesquisquita slough from San Benito county and Pacheco Creek from Santa Clara County. When full, the lake covers about 160 acres and sits at an elevation of 144 feet above sea level. The lake depth is only about three to five feet.  Historically, the lake would recede significantly during the summer and would dry up completely during some years.