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Bay Area Ridge Trail: The Official Guide for Hikers, Mountain Bikers, and Equestrians

Autor Elizabeth Byers
en Limba Engleză Paperback – mai 2019

Find Solitude and Dramatic Views Around San Francisco Bay

Everyone needs a break from their daily life. Escape to the oak-studded grasslands and tranquil forests of the Bay Area Ridge Trail. Hike, bike, or ride through nine counties with the official guide endorsed by the Bay Area Ridge Trail Council. Discover dramatic coastlines, a range of ecosystems, former Mexican ranchos, vistas that inspired Spanish explorers, and more.

Join author Elizabeth Byers--a founding board member of the council--and Jean Rusmore, and choose from 75 trail segments on a network of paths that ring San Francisco Bay. Make your way through parks and public lands like Mount Tamalpais State Park and Sierra Azul Open Space Preserve. Trips range from a 2.5-mile excursion over the Benicia-Martinez Bridge to a 12.5-mile traverse of Bolinas Ridge. You can also link several trips together to create a continuous trek that is 20, 40, or even 80 miles long.

Each trip includes summary information, like distance, accessibility, regulations, and facilities, as well as an easy-to-read map. Comprehensive trail directions help to ensure that you always know where to go, while details on the region's history and culture entertain you along the way. Grab the updated, full-color edition of Bay Area Ridge Trail and start planning your next adventure. The perfect outing is closer than you think.

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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780899979052
ISBN-10: 089997905X
Pagini: 364
Dimensiuni: 150 x 229 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Ediția:Revised
Editura: WILDERNESS PR

Cuprins

Overview Map

Foreword

An Inspired Vision to Connect People, Parks, and Open Space

Acknowledgments

The San Francisco Bay Area

The Bay Area Ridge Trail

How to Use This Book

Trail Sampler: Trips for Many Reasons

North Bay

  • The Golden Gate Bridge
  • Marin Headlands from the Golden Gate Bridge to Tennessee Valley
  • Marin Headlands from Tennessee Valley to Shoreline Highway
  • Mount Tamalpais State Park and Dias Ridge Trail
  • Mount Tamalpais State Park and Bolinas Ridge
  • Bolinas Ridge and Samuel P. Taylor State Park
  • Samuel P. Taylor State Park to White Hill Open Space Preserve
  • Loma Alta Open Space Preserve and Loma Alta Fire Road
  • Lucas Valley Open Space Preserve
  • Indian Tree Open Space Preserve
  • Stafford Lake Watershed to O'Hair Park
  • Mount Burdell Open Space Preserve
  • Petaluma: Helen Putnam Regional Park and City of Petaluma
  • Jack London State Historic Park and East Slope Sonoma Mountain Ridge Trail
  • Jack London State Historic Park and North Sonoma Mountain Regional Park and Open Space Preserve
  • Spring Lake Regional Park and Trione-Annadel State Park
  • Hood Mountain Regional Park and Open Space Preserve
  • Bothe-Napa Valley State Park
  • Robert Louis Stevenson State Park: Lower Oat Hill Mine Trail
  • Robert Louis Stevenson State Park: Table Rock and Palisades Trails Spur
  • Robert Louis Stevenson State Park: Mount St. Helena Spur
  • Moore Creek Park
  • Skyline Wilderness Park and Napa Solano Ridge Trail
  • Rockville Hills Regional Park and Vintage Valley Trail
  • Lynch Canyon Open Space and McGary Road
  • Hiddenbrooke Open Space
  • Blue Rock Springs Park to Vallejo-Benicia Buffer
  • Vallejo-Benicia Waterfront
  • Benicia-Martinez Bridge

East Bay

  • Carquinez Bridge and Crockett
  • Crockett Hills Regional Park
  • Fernandez Ranch
  • Martinez City Streets
  • Carquinez Strait Regional Shoreline and John Muir National Historic Site
  • Contra Costa Feeder Trail #1
  • Pinole Valley Watershed
  • Pinole Valley Watershed West and Sobrante Ridge Regional Preserve
  • Kennedy Grove Regional Recreation Area to Tilden Regional Park
  • Tilden Regional Park to Redwood Regional Park
  • Redwood and Anthony Chabot Regional Parks
  • Anthony Chabot Regional Park
  • East Bay Municipal Utility District Lands and Cull Canyon Regional Recreation Area
  • Cull Canyon Regional Recreation Area to Five Canyons Parkway
  • Five Canyons Parkway to Garin/Dry Creek Pioneer Regional Parks
  • Vargas Plateau Regional Park
  • Mission Peak Regional Preserve and Ed R. Levin County Park

South Bay

  • Penitencia Creek
  • Alum Rock Park and Sierra Vista Open Space Preserve
  • Sierra Vista Open Space Preserve
  • Joseph D. Grant County Park
  • Coyote Creek Parkway North
  • Coyote Creek Parkway South
  • Coyote Lake-Harvey Bear Ranch County Park
  • Mount Madonna County Park
  • Santa Teresa County Park and Calero Creek/Los Alamitos Creek Trails
  • Almaden Quicksilver County Park
  • Sierra Azul Open Space Preserve and Lexington Reservoir County Park
  • Sierra Azul Open Space Preserve: Mount Umunhum
  • Sanborn County Park: John Nicholas Trail
  • Sanborn County Park and Castle Rock State Park

The Peninsula

  • Saratoga Gap Open Space Preserve to Skyline Ridge Open Space Preserve
  • Skyline Ridge and Russian Ridge Open Space Preserves
  • Windy Hill Open Space Preserve
  • Wunderlich County Park to Huddart County Park
  • Purisima Creek Redwoods Open Space Preserve
  • Skylawn Memorial Park
  • San Francisco Peninsula Watershed
  • Sweeney Ridge
  • Skyline College, Milagra Ridge, and Pacifica
  • Mussel Rock to Lake Merced

San Francisco

  • Lake Merced to Stern Grove
  • Stern Grove to the Presidio
  • San Francisco Presidio

Appendix 1: Information Sources and Contacts for Parks and Watersheds on the Bay Area Ridge Trail Route

Appendix 2: Transportation Agencies That Serve the Bay Area Ridge Trail Route

Index

About the Authors


Notă biografică

A Mill Valley resident and native Northern Californian, Elizabeth Byers has lived in the San Francisco Bay Area for most of her life. As a child and teenager, she explored the beautiful mountains of Carmel Valley and Big Sur near her home. Her love of the outdoors led her to study environmental planning in college and graduate school at the University of California, Berkeley. She began working in the land conservation field in the mid-1980s, for 16 years as a project manager, program director, and writer at the Trust for Public Land (TPL) and then as a consultant for many nonprofits and agencies, including the Garden Conservancy, the Bay Area Ridge Trail Council, and TPL.

In 1988, while at TPL, Elizabeth became one of the founding board members of the Bay Area Ridge Trail Council, and she stayed connected to the organization over the years. She coauthored the second edition of The Conservation Easement Handbook, copublished by TPL and the Land Trust Alliance in 2005, and was a photographer and project coordinator for the 2014 Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy publication Alcatraz Gardens: Remembered, Reclaimed, Reimagined. She is a mom to two children in their 20s who grew up on the lower slopes of Mount Tamalpais.

Elizabeth hiked, biked, and photographed the Ridge Trail to update this guidebook, often with family and friends, and this journey reconfirmed for her the magnificence of the Bay Area landscape.

Jean Rusmore, the author of this book's first three editions, grew up in what was once the small town of Anaheim, California, in the county that boasted orange and lemon groves as its namesake. She took her first backpacking trip at age 16, when she and a cousin ascended the slopes of Mount Wilson in the San Gabriel Mountains with some food and a jacket rolled up in a blanket. Her outdoor experience was enlarged through her husband, Ted, whom she met at the University of California, Berkeley. They skied and backpacked with their six children, and all looked forward to their annual Sierra backpacking trip.

When the Midpeninsula Regional Open Space District was established, Jean and her friend Frances Spangle decided to write a book about the new foothill preserves, Peninsula Trails, followed by South Bay Trails, both published by Wilderness Press. When the first segments of the Ridge Trail opened, they wrote pamphlets about each leg. These were later combined and published as the first edition of this book.