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ALERT Watercraft Owners - Please Help Keep Invasive Mussels Out of Our Water. Lil webbie savage life torrent download. Water Quality Swim Beach is open [PDF] Notice ACWD work along the Alameda Creek Flood Control Channel will have temporary impacts on recreation along the Alameda Creek Trail and at Quarry Lakes Regional Recreation Area. For more information visit the web page or call (510) 668-4410 for project-related questions and information. Fish Planting Schedule For the Quarry Lakes fish planting schedule, see. Thank you for your patience as ACWD addresses the needs of threatened fish species while maintaining local water supplies. Address Fees Parking: $5 per vehicle, $4 per trailered vehicle. Buses: $25 per bus.
Dogs: $2 per dog. Guide/service dogs free Park Curfew 10pm- 5am Gate Hours January 7am - 5pm February - March 6am - 6pm April - May 6am - 7pm Memorial Day - Labor Day 6am - 8pm Day after Labor Day - October 6am - 7pm November - December 7am - 5pm Kiosk Hours January 7am - 4pm February - March 6am - 6pm April - Memorial Day 6am - 6pm Memorial Day - Labor Day 6am - 7pm Day after Labor Day - October 6am - 6pm November - December 7am - 4pm Swim Hours & Fees NOTICE: If parking and or swim capacity is reached, entrance gates may close for the day. Park Entrances > > > > Phone Number Toll Free: 888-EBPARKS (), option 3, extension 4552 Maps > > >. • • • • • • • • • About The Park The park is a beautiful water-oriented recreation area, which offers more intensive recreation such as picnicking, boating, swimming and fishing, but also has room for hiking and wildlife viewing. Quarry Lakes - Wildflower Guide • - 1.3 Mb, 11 x 8.5, 10 pp. [PDF] History History is everywhere in the area of Quarry Lakes Regional Recreation Area in Fremont.
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Native Americans inhabited the region for millennia before the arrival of Europeans, notably in the sites that are now preserved at Coyote Hills Regional Park west of Quarry Lakes. Quarry Lakes incorporates the historic boundaries of two Mexican ranchos and the former Mission San Jose lands. Alameda Creek was the original boundary between Contra Costa and Santa Clara Counties. Alameda County was carved out of these two counties in 1853 and was named after the creek that drains it. The quarries for which Quarry Lakes Regional Recreation Area is named were established in the mid-19th century. Gravel taken from the banks of Alameda Creek was used in the construction of the transcontinental railroad's western section.
After quarrying came to an end, the lakes began to be used for groundwater recharge by the Alameda County Water District, which diverts water from Alameda Creek into the pits. Quarry Lakes Regional Recreation Area is the culmination of many years of planning and partnership between the Water District and the East Bay Regional Park District. The property that now comprises the park was acquired by the two agencies between 1975 and 1992 through purchase, donation and inter-agency agreements. Of the park's 471 acres, some 350 acres are the lakes.
The first phase of park construction began in 1997, when the Alameda County Water District used grading equipment to flatten the slopes of the quarry pit. This minimized erosion and sedimentation, while also creating land contours more suitable for parkland.
Then in August of 2000 the Park District began creating the recreational facilities at Quarry Lakes. These include turfgrass lawns, picnic areas, shade pavilions, a swim beach, a boat launch ramp, and a trail network.
Cost of the project's first phase was $5.8 million, of which $3.65 million was a grant from the City of Fremont Redevelopment Agency. The remainder came from Measure AA, the Park District's open space bond measure approved by voters in 1988. Park Features Recreational and Natural Units The Quarry Lakes Recreation Unit includes Horseshoe Lake and Rainbow Lake and the turf, beach, swimming and picnic areas around those lakes.
Visitors can swim in the designated beach, picnic, play volleyball, fish, and enjoy non-gasoline powered watercraft. Please note boats that are equipped with gasoline engines are not allowed to enter the park even if you don't plan on using the gas motor.
The Natural Unit includes Willow Slough and Lago Los Osos and the surrounding areas, where visitors can hike, observe nature, walk dogs and ride bicycles. No water contact of any type is allowed in these two lakes. Dogs must always be kept on leash throughout the entire park. Park Activities Hiking and Biking The Quarry Lakes Natural Unit provides visitors excellent opportunities to hike and ride bicycles. The park's trail network connects to the Alameda Creek Regional Trail, which extends from Niles Canyon westward all the way to Coyote Hills and the Don Edwards National Wildlife Refuge on San Francisco Bay.