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This is part two of a three post series since there were three adventures back to
back:
1.) Game Day 2.) Sloughs on Game Day
3.)The Day after Game Day.
I took my boat out just before high tide so that I could make it to the Guadalupe Slough right at high tide. My charts said there was a channel in the slough, but it's always a safe bet to be there right at high tide in these sloughs. Many people in these sloughs have been stuck needing to be rescued or have had to wait six to eight hours for high tide to come back at full strength. I was in Alviso when some fire trucks pulled up on a cold December day around 5pm, and they were saying that the boater was just going to have to wait for high tide again to come back. I left to launch the boat shortly after kick-off and came back shortly before the game ended. That time is a great time to go boating if the tide is right - the streets were empty.
In any case, there were quite a number of highlights on this adventure, both scenery and the wildlife.
For those not acquainted, this is the four year old boat launch in Alviso Marina County Park, free to launch, free to park. Everyone from sturgeon anglers to duck hunters to litter-picker-uppers on kayaks seems to enjoy this new launch. If you pay the park service a fee, you can even get a gate key card to launch your boat in the wee hours in the morning when the park is otherwise closed.
This is facing south. The stadium is in the very center of this image if you squint. The waterway at the launch is the Alviso Slough connecting to the SF Bay. In this inland direction, it becomes the Guadalupe River.
I don't know the story behind this boat, but it's a distinct landmark heading back to let you know the launch is just up ahead.
Here's some litter I spotted, learning that litter in the sloughs becomes pretty tough to spot after spending sometime there.
There are pretty nice bike trails in the park around the old salt ponds, currently in process of being restored to natural wetlands.
This tug is native to the Alviso Yacht Club.
The herons were out today.
This is one of a pair of electrical towers letting you know you have reached Coyote Creek, the larger creek that feeds into the Bay.
Getting closer to the bay proper, one can see the stadium on the left and the America Center towers on the right.
At high tide, the seals have no option but to bathe since their beach is sunk. In case you are wondering, I keep quite a distance from all the wildlife in the slough, except possibly the seagulls. I was a few hundred feet from the seals here.
A cormorant zips by.
A piece of trash.
A tricycle in the Guadalupe Slough - the San Tomas Aquino Creek turns into this slough, meaning that this tricycle could have been one year's first rain flooding debris. If I decide to brave this slough again, I will have to figure out how I might pull this out, probably a 30-40' extendable hook of sorts would do it.
This heron was just a few hundred feet upstream, looking at the trike.
Some nice people picked up quite a bit of trash on a trail I presume is connected to Sunnyvale's Baylands Park. However, this is quite a ways out from the main park.
Another cleanup pile.
Northern Harriers live around these wetlands - they are fast and few, so getting shots can be tricky.
This is the upstream view of the Guadalupe Slough.
Finally, it's American White Pelican season, and hundreds are landing in the former salt ponds to hang out. These are really neat birds.
So this concludes an adventure from the Alviso Slough to the Guadalupe Slough. I do not recommend trying this unless you have a low-draft boat, know the tides, and have good charts. Most of the South Bay was ~3.5' deep outside of the channels right at high tide then.
Otherwise, I highly recommend taking a trip to Alviso. It is a really neat park for walking, biking, and boating. A lot of people like to use it as a photo-shoot location, too - the sunsets are pretty great.
It does appear that even at highest tide, when everything is covered with water, debris is still visible and leaves bits and pieces all along the way. Having recently seen what other Bay Area creeks look like, this would be regarded as pristine in comparison. Seeing a variety of researchers in the area, like a UC Davis research vessel monitoring fish species and population, people are doing great work to improving this land and restoring to a natural wildlife habitat. However, witnessing the debris from the first rain means something needs to be done upstream of these wetlands to keep them protected and allow the wildlife to migrate upstream as well.