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Wednesday, May 24, 2017

Huckleberry Botantic Regional Preserve


Our next East Bay watershed park visit is to Huckleberry Botanic Regional Preserve, located in the hills behind Oakland off Skyline Boulevard, between Sibley and Redwood regional parks. The preserve is relatively small, 240 acres, with a 1.7-mile loop trail that links to the larger Skyline National Trail. I visited the park in early May, on a cool, overcast week end. I was very interested in visiting the park because of its unusual plant collection.
Huckleberry Botanic Regional Preserve Entrance
Picnic area

According to the informative park brochure, written by Ben Johnson, the native plant community is found nowhere else in the East Bay, and represents a relic plant association found only in California areas where ideal soil and climatic conditions exist. The vegetation originated in the southern coast of California when the climate was moister and tempered by cool coastal fog. Similar vegetation is found in the islands off the Santa Barbara coast, and in pockets on the coast between Point Conception and Montara Mountains south of San Francisco.
Huckleberry Path

Per Johnson, the geology belongs to the Claremont shale/chert formation, laid down in a deep ocean basin, pushed up, and then eroded around 12 million years ago. The soil is poor and porous, with little water-holding capability, so the conditions favor pioneering chaparral species, and hold off intrusion of other local species.
Bench with a view of the Oakland Hills
Lush forest with ferns and moss

Upper Huckleberry Path is fairly flat, and passes through a lovely, lush forest of Canyon live oak, Pacific madrone, California hazelnut, and California bay, and an understory of ferns, huckleberries, Iris, currants, and many others. The bay trees give off a wonderful, aromatic scent. Signposts installed along the path serve as keys to brochure descriptions of the vegetation [such as Brittleleaf manzanita, Pallid manzanita, Coast Silktassell, Western leatherwood, Jimbrush (Ceanothus), succession, geology, and more.


Marker 15 - Pallid Manzanita (Arctostaphylos pallida)

View of the Oakland Hills under clearing sky

Along the trail are views of the Oakland hills, which were still green in early May after our very wet winter. A bench provides a wonderful spot to take in the view. I especially enjoyed seeing some of the small woodland plants that grow in the shady understory.

Unidentified

Cow Parsnip

Unidentified

Douglas Iris


This is a small treasure in the East Bay watershed. There are few parking spots at the Huckleberry Main Staging Area, one picnic table that I could see, and dogs and horses are not permitted on the path, so the preserve may not appeal to everyone. But the vegetation and geology are interesting, it's a great place for a short hike, and it gives us a glimpse into how plants might "move north" to survive as environmental conditions change. Be sure to check the website for notices that might affect your visit.


For other parks and preserves in the East Bay watershed, see:  http://edenbythebay.blogspot.com/2017/02/parks-of-east-bay-watershed.html

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