Austin Creek State Recreation Area

Recreational area in California
38°34′1″N 123°3′11″W / 38.56694°N 123.05306°W / 38.56694; -123.05306Area5,927 acres (23.99 km2)Established1964Governing bodyCalifornia Department of Parks and Recreation

Austin Creek State Recreation Area is a state park unit of California, United States, encompassing an isolated wilderness area. It is located in Sonoma County, California, adjacent to Armstrong Redwoods State Natural Reserve, with which it shares a common entrance. Its rugged topography includes ravines, grassy hillsides, oak-capped knolls, and rocky summits offering glimpses of the Pacific Ocean. There are 20 miles (30 km) of trails, panoramic wilderness views, and camping (both back-country and vehicle-accessible). The remains of Pond Farm artists' colony (dating from the 1940s) are also included in the Austin Creek SRA.

Ecology

Elevations in Austin Creek SRA range from 150 to 1,500 feet (46 to 457 m), giving rise to a variety of habitats, including riparian area, chaparral, and woodlands of conifers and oaks. The area's 5,927 acres (2,399 ha) include open woodlands, rolling hills, and meadows which contrast sharply with dense redwood forests below.

Wildflowers of the area include Douglas irises, Indian paintbrushes, buttercups, lupins, cluster-lilies, California poppies and shooting stars. Trout, salmon, newts and salamanders inhabit the area's streams, and Bullfrog Pond hosts sunfish, black bass, and bullfrogs. Birds such as wild turkeys, wood ducks, spotted owls, great blue herons, ravens, white-tailed kites, California quail, woodpeckers, hawks, and tyrant-flycatchers are seen there. Native mammals include squirrels, deer, raccoons, foxes, coyotes, skunks, bobcats, black bears, and mountain lions. Feral pigs have also been reported.

Proposed for closure

Austin Creek State Recreation Area was one of 70 California state parks proposed for closure in July 2012 as part of a deficit reduction program.[1] It was previously one of 48 state parks threatened with closure in 2008 by California's Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger[2]

In September 2012, California State Parks gave Stewards of the Coast and Redwoods, a non-profit, permission to run the recreation area.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ "State Parks Announces Closures" (PDF) (Press release). California State Parks. 2011-05-13. Retrieved 2011-09-24.
  2. ^ CBS5.com: List Of Calif. Parks To Close In Budget Proposal Archived 2008-02-23 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Moore, Derek (17 September 2012). "Austin Creek State Recreation Area gets reprieve". The Press Democrat. Retrieved 17 September 2012.

External links

  • Official website
  • v
  • t
  • e
Parks
Preserves
Monuments
Seashores
Historical Parks
Historic Sites
Memorials
Recreation Areas
Parks
Natural Reserves
Marine Reserves
Historic Parks
Beaches
Recreation Areas
Vehicular
Recreation Areas
Other
National Forests and Grasslands
National Forests
and Grasslands
National Wilderness
Preservation System
National Monuments
and Recreation Areas
Wildlife
Areas
  • Antelope Valley
  • Ash Creek
  • Bass Hill
  • Battle Creek
  • Big Lagoon
  • Big Sandy
  • Biscar
  • Butte Valley
  • Buttermilk Country
  • Cache Creek
  • Camp Cady
  • Cantara/Ney Springs
  • Cedar Roughs
  • Cinder Flats
  • Collins Eddy
  • Colusa Bypass
  • Coon Hollow
  • Cottonwood Creek
  • Crescent City Marsh
  • Crocker Meadows
  • Daugherty Hill
  • Decker Island
  • Doyle
  • Dutch Flat
  • Eastlker River
  • Eel River
  • Elk Creek Wetlands
  • Elk River
  • Fay Slough
  • Feather River
  • Fitzhugh Creek
  • Fremont Weir
  • Grass Lake
  • Gray Lodge
  • Green Creek
  • Grizzly Island
  • Hallelujah Junction
  • Heenan Lake
  • Hill Slough
  • Hollenbeck Canyon
  • Honey Lake
  • Hope Valley
  • Horseshoe Ranch
  • Imperial
  • Indian Valley
  • Kelso Peak and Old Dad Mountains
  • Kinsman Flat
  • Knoxville
  • Laguna
  • Lake Berryessa
  • Lake Earl
  • Lake Sonoma
  • Little Panoche Reservoir
  • Los Banos
  • Lower Sherman Island
  • Mad River Slough
  • Marble Mountains
  • Mendota
  • Merrill's Landing
  • Miner Slough
  • Monache Meadows
  • Morro Bay
  • Moss Landing
  • Mouth of Cottonwood Creek
  • Napa-Sonoma Marshes
  • North Grasslands
  • O'Neill Forebay
  • Oroville
  • Petaluma Marsh
  • Pickel Meadow
  • Pine Creek
  • Point Edith
  • Putah Creek
  • Rector Reservoir
  • Red Lake
  • Rhode Island
  • Sacramento River
  • San Felipe Valley
  • San Jacinto
  • San Luis Obispo
  • San Luis Reservoir
  • San Pablo Bay
  • Santa Rosa
  • Shasta Valley
  • Silver Creek
  • Slinkard/Little Antelope
  • Smithneck Creek
  • South Fork
  • Spenceville
  • Surprise Valley
  • Sutter Bypass
  • Tehama
  • Truckee River
  • Upper Butte Basin
  • Volta
  • Warner Valley
  • Waukell Creek
  • West Hilmar
  • Westlker River
  • White Slough
  • Willow Creek
  • Yolo Bypass
Ecological
Reserves
Marine
Protected
Areas
National Monuments
National
Conservation Areas
  • California Desert
  • King Range
Wilderness Areas
Heritage registers
National Natural Landmarks
  • v
  • t
  • e
Russian River Watershed
Tributaries
Communities
Parks and
natural features
Other